The
many sounds, and instruments, of Danny Federici
by Josh Davidson
Since
his beginnings with Bruce Springsteen and the E Street band, Danny
Federici’s keyboards have been the atmospheric backdrop to some of
the greatest songs ever written. A member of a band that was a
team, playing for the victory represented by a beautiful song.
Federici, and fellow keyboardist Roy Bittan, sputtered off notes in
the background, giving grasp and added feel to whatever their band
mates offered.
On
his new album, re-issued under the title Danny Federici, the focus
is on him after years of playing behind one of rock's most
attention-drawing musicians. He takes full advantage of his
newly-found spotlight with thoughtful keyboard runs that stand as
proof of his growth and dedication as a musician.
It’s
rare to find a solo artist from any genre so on the same page as his
listeners. Many fight hard to push their own limits, sometimes
loosing the focus of their original vision. On this release,
Federici’s vision is clear, even as his limits are pushed within
the confines of his compositions.
While
a different format than rock music, this smooth-jazz-based album is
one where Federici expands his horizons and broadens some old piano
motifs. The latter is achieved on "Flemington", a song
with a Jersey-rooted melody that scampers and rolls in true Federici
signature style.
Federici
avoids self-indulgent tangents on this effort, avoiding the dull and
emphasizing the interesting. His note selection is melodic,
but remains daring. At this stage of his career, Federici has
honed his use of speed and timing down to a science. Melodic
keyboard sweeps are found on the album, well-placed and used
selectively where appropriate.
Federici
chose to write songs unlike typical solo-based material. The
music builds off hooks and choruses, retaining these themes during
solos. This creates a steadiness that is pleasurable, as well
as sensible. He expand smooth jazz's limits musically, and
also emotionally, with an originality required by this style.
A fun effervescence weaves throughout this release, leaving the
feeling that an upbeat vibe was felt by those involved with the
recording.
Federici
is a master of providing the carnival scenery to Springsteen's
boardwalk tales. On this release, he rides his own carousel.
One filled with spirit, heart and maturity.
What
were the circumstances behind you re-issuing the new CD? I know it
was issued before under the name Flemington?
Right.
What had happened was: I was dealing with a record company, I was
new to the business, I had never released a record before. I had
done Flemington and didn’t really intend to release it.
I
was sort of doing something, like closing a chapter in my life. And,
some friends of mine said, 'Why don't you try to get a deal on
this thing? Because it’s a good record.'
So,
I ended up getting a couple of offers from companies to put the
record out. And, I went with a New Jersey company, Music Masters.
And, what happens is they're mainly a mail-order-based record
company. They do a lot of classical and a lot of jazz mail order,
like Columbia House. But they had just established some connections
with BMG Distribution. So, I figured that I might be the vehicle or
the testing grounds for this new partnership that they had gotten.
And that really didn’t turn out to be the way I thought it would
be. The record really didn’t get out into the stores. It never got
over to Europe. It never really worked.
You
know, I had high hopes for a lot of people hearing this record, and
they never really put it out there for me. So, after about a couple
of years went by, I had been out playing some concerts for the E
Street Band and I ran into this fellow Bruce Resnikoff, who's the
President of Universal.
And
I was telling him, you know, I had a bunch of ideas for a whole
bunch of things. Television, music, some Christmas music, you know,
on accordion. I said, 'You know, and I've got this album, which
nobody's heard.' And, he said, 'You know what. We'd be glad
to put it out for you, if you want. At least we’d get it in the
stores and stuff.'
I
said, 'Well Jeez, that's a whole lot better than it sitting on
my shelf.' Really, you know. And, it's funny, sometimes you
think it is, sometimes it ain’t. Because having a record deal
doesn't mean a whole lot today. Sometimes you can do better on the
internet, than you will with a record. They're so big, that
you're just a little fry. And, unless you really get out there and
work that record, you know, even having it in the stores doesn’t
mean a lot because people aren’t going to go look for it ... on
their own.
So
what happened was, I had been partners with this fellow Michael
Cates for a while, who’s my sax player and producer. I told
Michael about Universal. I said, 'You know, they want to put this
record back out.' So, he goes, 'Well, maybe we should spice it
up a bit. You know, re-master it and write another song.'
When
I did the record, I really didn’t think about any conventional
markets. Like, where it's going and who's it's for. When you
play this kind of music that I play, which is instrumental jazz,
unhappily you have to design it for a certain type of radio. Um, the
songs have to be ... they can't be too short. People like to listen
to them for a while. You know, it's a lot of stuff that's in the
background. It's the kind of music you can put on that makes you
feel good when you're at home relaxing.
So,
cutting the song shorter isn't ... There's a little bit of a
formula to it and I didn't do any of that. And so, partnering up
with Michael was really terrific because he said, 'Well, you know,
we can write this song, which has pretty much kind of got all of the
elements of what they're playing on smooth jazz radio.’
And,
so we did that and then Universal sort of gave us carte blanche as
far as changing the cover. And, I took some photos. I mean, we
changed the whole thing around. Re-mastered, it sounds better than
before. And I’ve, no holds barred ... I tell everybody going out
there, that this is Flemington, but we put another song on it and
made it sound better.
Right.
That's
a funny thing, too. I didn't want to [make people think] that I
was trying to pull a fast one.
You
didn't want them to think it was a totally new album?
Right.
But the funny thing about it is, there's a lot of people out there
that bought Flemington, that think this is a whole new album. I
played some shows and they come up to me and they go, 'You know
what, we have your last record, [but this] sounds really good,
it’s even better.'
You
know, sometimes I go into the explanation of, 'Well guys, you know
it's really the same record.' But, sometimes I don't. I say, 'Ok, thank you very
much.' (Laughter.)
Anyway,
so they were kind enough to say, 'You know what, we'll put it
back out there for you.'
How
many units did Flemington sell?
You
know, I don’t think we sold too many. I think maybe a couple
thousand of records. Especially for a small record company ... I
think they had a couple of artists that they tried to do this with
before and had bad luck. So, they were a little leery in printing up
a whole lot of records real fast.
How's
the re-issue doing?
That’s
doing surprisingly well! I mean, plus I have a band. And I go out
and I play. And I sign CD’s. And, that really helps. That's
really a terrific thing.
[As]
a matter of fact, I have had my own band and this is really quite a
really terrific experience.
Can
you talk a little more about that? About having your own band and
going out and touring on your own?
Yeah,
sure. Well, Michael, who's been my producer and sort of, like,
real instrumental at helping me see some of my potential, and also
telling me that you're playing too long or too loud. You know, it
really helps to have another ear.
I
made him the musical director of my band, so he put the whole darn
band together, because I'm probably basically lazy and I
wouldn’t have gotten around to it. And also he gets the privilege
of hiring and firing. I don't have to do that, I'm the good guy.
He's
had a couple of jazz bands himself, so he's been through a lot of
players. He knows the good ones. Not only musically, but ones that
have good personalities, that are fun to work with and fun to be
around. Because I’d rather have that, than a virtuoso who's
ridiculous on stage.
So
he put some people together. We had two guitar players from Texas.
Our drummer and bassist were here in LA. We have another bassist on
the East Coast, which saves a little bit in expenses. Because that
in itself is quite an ordeal. I wasn't used to this.
But,
I mean, for us to go and play, it's quite an expensive ordeal. We
have to fly a couple of guys in from Texas. Other guys have regular
jobs and they have to take off. So you got salaries. You got hotels.
You got airplanes. You know, you got per diem, it's like, wow!
Yeah.
So you kind of have certain musicians waiting in certain regions,
different regions, of the country?
Well,
the only other person we have is the bassist on the East Coast and
if we get some gigs back there it does help with expenses because,
you know, $300 for an airline ticket, a couple hundred bucks for the
night, and a hotel. He lives down the street. It really, really adds
up because it's quite an ordeal to get him there.
I
mean playing is a blast. That's the funny thing about being a
musician. The things you do to actually get on stage are just
incredible.
I
often tell people I don’t get ... I play for free, I get paid to
get there. You know, and put up with all the bull, all the
legalities of everything. Playing is the total benefit of the whole
thing.
What
led you to making a jazz album? [The CD] is predominantly jazz, is
shifting from ... I know the abundance of your work is in the rock
field. What led to the shift?
Umm
... I started off as a classical accordion player when I was seven
years old. And, my mother basically pulled me around by my ear and
showed me off to the neighbors. I had a whole little career going. I
think she wanted me to be friends with Wayne Newton and play the
Vegas thing, you know? And be the snazzy accordion virtuoso kind of
guy. But I was real good at a real young age. And then, when I
turned into my early teens, she was kind of like my stage mom. She
kind of rented a place, a local hall in the town. Got a couple of
musicians together for me to play with, and we had a little rock n' roll band. And, I was playing the accordion and it wasn't
going over. I say it wasn't going over ... the girls weren't
digging it.
Then,
I bought this thing called the Cordovox. Which was way back when
they had an accordion that sounded like an organ. You didn't have
to squeeze it. You could just turn it on its side and play the keys
like an organ. And I use to turn it over on my amp. And then I could
stand up and I could move around. And that was definitely a big hit
with the ladies, that made it a whole lot better.
So
that's pretty much how the transition happened. But, as I say, I
studied probably eight or ten years classical accordion. Reading and
writing and going to a conservatory in Philadelphia. I was pretty
much on my way to do this classical accordion thing, until the
Beatles and Rolling Stones and all that stuff just hit. I ended up
having a professor come into my school, who was sitting in for
another professor. He said, 'Just sit back, I wanna play something
for you.' And he played me jazz and blues on the accordion. I had
never heard anybody play anything but polkas and Russian and Italian
songs and all kinds of intricate German things on accordion and I
was floored. I quit music lessons in like two weeks after that.
Wow.
I
mean, I always wanted to play between the lines. I always, you know,
I could play the music on the sheets. But I always wanted to be able
to take what I had learned and be able to bend notes and have my own
timing. There’s a lot of people out there that can read like
champs and they can't do that.
So
that's really where my roots are. They're really jazz and bluesy
based. Some of my favorite accordion music I play with a band in LA
every once in a while, Zydeco. That's very, very bluesy rock n'
roll, jazzy, you know, Tex-Mex kind of stuff. It’s really great.
So
it's just ... a chance to return to your roots more? Just to focus
on that?
Yeah,
it is. I get a lot of people when I play live that come and go, 'My
God, you can really play that thing.' You know, I play organ
and I get to play a long time. And I get to front the band and it's
just a whole different thing. People are like, 'Wow, we didn't
know you could do that.'
So,
after all this time, you know, I could go out there and just play
what I want and say what I want. One of my favorite lines is, 'So
this what it feels like to stand in front of the band.' Bruce got
a kick out of that one.
How
much room do you have? Do you pretty much have total freedom to ...
write how you want to and experiment how you want to, like when
you're on stage?
Depending
on the mood of things. You know, if people are digging on it,
we'll play longer. We'll stay longer and let some more people
play. You know, everything has a melody, a chorus and a verse to it,
and we always get back to that. But then we get a little avant-garde
from time to time.
Depending
on the crowd ... I mean, I played this gig at a club called
Spagatini's a couple of weeks ago. And it was my best show ever.
It was really great. I mean, I sat there and it got to the point
where I really connected with the audience, which was only two feet
away. Like I was in their living room. I had my elbow on my keyboard
and I was telling jokes. It was just a fabulous experience!
I
mean, we had this lady who drank too much and came up on stage. And
I told the audience, I said, 'You know, we actually bring her
everywhere we go. Just in case the music is not doing so good, we
can get a few laughs out of you guys.' It was just fantastic. Just
great. It was a great, great thing to do.
So
there's a difference between playing to 20,000 [people] from
playing to a couple of hundred?
It's
quite a difference. I mean, you know, you could hear everybody. I
play a lot of dinner theatres, these kind of jazzy venues. If I play
outside, they bring families and it's outside, and it's people doing
different things. So, in this particular case, you know, they had
dinner. They had friends and they talked. And here I'm playing an
intricate part to what I think to be a mellow part of the song and I
hear this lady telling jokes or something over my left side. But
then the guy next to her is, like, totally into the music. So I
focus on the guy who's totally into the music and try [to] tone
her out. So, there is a lot of dynamics that go on, you know.
But,
then when you get them quiet later on and they're all yours it's
just, you know, it's worth the trip.
It's
kind of a closer way to react, you know, you can see their reactions
a little better.
Yeah.
It's kind of like, you always look to somebody to work off of.
Like a public speaker or something. You try to find somebody
that's working and eventually you work your way around the room.
And you hope that they're all going to look like that first guy, you
know. (Laughter.)
So
I haven't had any bad ones yet, which is really good. There's
been some tough ones, but I haven't had any bad ones.
Do
you play a variety of different-sized rooms? Maybe just a few people
some nights and a whole load of people another night?
Yeah.
We'll play from ... I guess Spagatini's will have a couple
hundred people maybe. Then we played the Pony which, I don’t know
how many people that place will hold. Then we played a place called
the Conduit in Trenton. That's a pretty big place. And I think
we're booked into a couple small theatres. That's gonna be
interesting in itself.
I'm
doing a benefit for my hometown's school in September. Actually,
I'm the guy, kind of like Bruce in a way. You know, he's famous
in Freehold [New Jersey], I'm kind of famous in Flemington [New
Jersey]. That's my hometown, by the way, that's why the album is
called Flemington.
They're
doing a "Welcome Home, Danny" day over there. So, I'm
going to try and raise some money for the high school and buy some
computers and some other stuff. And, that'll probably be in the
auditorium.
You
know, so that's gonna be different. I’ll be talking to a larger
audience and probably won't see as many faces as I'm use to
seeing now.
So
when you play those huge concerts, it probably isn’t as easy to
connect, I guess. What's the difference there?
You
know, there's always ... You get to see about ten rows and
there's always those people in the first few rows that you can
connect with. You know, some people I don't know how they do it,
but I see a lot of the same faces! At a lot of the shows.
As
a matter of fact, I remember last year, there was a gal and couple
of her friends that came to, it seemed like, every concert. Every
other one. It got to the point where I was, like, I would look at
her and go, 'So you did something with your hair today, it looks
different, it's alright.' Or, you know, 'You’ve got
sunglasses on today, what are you doin'?'
You
get a personal thing going on with some of these people. They're
part of the family.
On
your new CD, it sounds like there's a lot of improvisation going
on. Is that right? Did you guys improvise on the CD?
Yeah,
actually, even Michael tells me, I have the tendency to not repeat
myself. As I say, a lot of people design these songs with a verse,
chorus and all that. I just played it, because I didn’t plan to
put it out.
And
then, after we did it again, I figured, I'm not going to change
anything, it sounds fine. I still like the way it sounds. Yeah,
there’'s definitely that, you know.
Did
you let some of your backup musicians do some improvisation? It kind
of sounds like there's some soloing going on between some of the
other players and stuff like that.
Yeah,
just a little bit. Guitars were actually the hardest thing to do.
Now Nils [Lofgren] was playing on a song and, ah, it was funny
because I put the guitar on last. I really didn't know what to do
with him, I don't play guitar.
A
lot of these ... I played on a lot of these. Like, I have a lot of
aliases on this record. Like Charles Slone [listed as the
percussionist] is me.
Oh,
really!
And,
um, just because I didn't want to seem to self-serving on my one
record, you know, 'Everything by Danny.' Because I played bass,
I played percussion. And, I wrote all the parts and I had people
come in and play them. Pretty much everything, except for the
guitars. And that was the most difficult part to do, because, as I
say, I don't play guitar. But Nils came in and in almost a half an
hour, played his butt off, the most perfect thing.
The
other guitar player, John DeFaria, also played great on it. And some
of the new guys, Todd [Parsnow, guitars] and Juan Van Dunk [bass] on
"Erica," were just players that are used to playing this kind of
music. So they play all the kinds of parts that you hear on smooth
jazz records. Which is like the wah-wah pedal. All these things that
I would never even think to do.
Yeah.
Do you write a lot of songs on Cakewalk or do you just chart them
out the old fashioned way?
I
actually did it on Studio Vision. I recorded a lot of the stuff in
my house. I have a little pool house and I did a lot of it on
ADAT's. A couple of ADAT's and some Mackie boards. I brought the
drummers in. And then we transferred all of the stuff from the
ADAT's to big tape. Gave it a warmer sound. That way, some of
these pieces took forever.
I
mean, some of these pieces were created a long, long time ago. When
I first came to Los Angeles I was trying to get involved in the
movie business and television. So I wrote a lot of instrumental
pieces. And I started hearing very similar stuff on the radio going,
'I could do that, this is what I’m doing already'
So,
that's how the whole idea came about. It was like, 'You know
what, some of the people I hear on the radio, I can do better.'
So, I gave it a shot. It's a very scary process though. It's
like sending your children out into the world and people are going
to tell you, if they're being good or not. Or, you
know, they're
going to critique them. (Laughs.)
So,
that's why, when I finished the record and didn't put it out, it
was a very easy thing to do. But then, when someone talked me into
putting it out, that was a whole other ball game! Are people going
to like it? What are they going to tell me about this?
So,
and the few people that have heard the record have been very
favorable. I'm lucky.
So
when you first did the record, you weren't planning to release it?
You were just planning to do it for yourself?
Yeah.
I did it and lined it up. I had my own record label at the time
called Deadeye Records. Two of my friends that were involved in
Deadeye, talked me into putting it out.
It's
not an easy process. It's like building something. You need people
around you to help you do that. To keep your enthusiasm going.
That's what Michael's great for, with me. When I have downtimes,
he'll just pick me up and vice versa.
So,
I work well with partners. You've got to force me to work. I
don't like to work. It's very hard for a musician. To do just
stop what you're doing, go in the studio and just start writing
music. Bruce does it all the time. It's an unbelievable amount of
discipline.
To
kind of psyche yourself into that, I guess, emotional mood that you
want to create the album as?
Well,
not even that. In the beginning just, 'Let's get some ideas.'
Then you have those days when you go in and you can't think of
nothing. And then you have those days where you come in and what you
thought of ain't all that good. So, it could be very hard.
You're
going in, you think you know what you're doing and you can't
remember a damn thing. And it just ain't jelling that day and
you're like, 'Ay, yi, yi!'
So,
Michael was pretty helpful there? In kind of helping to get some
ideas out.
You
know, I think the best thing is. Is, you know, just to ... I put
stuff down all the time. That way you can go back and say, 'Well,
we’ve got a lot to choose from.' And then you can go, 'Well,
that one's not so great, but this one here, this is real good.'
So,
as a matter of fact, we've probably got six or seven tunes done
for a new album already.
So,
do you plan on releasing a new one soon?
You
know, Michael wants that to happen, but I'm lazy again.
(Laughter.) He's been really on me to do this. I would like to be
able to do this before the fall.
How
much of a challenge is it writing songs that don't have words in
them? Just writing instrumentals? Is there something you try to
convey when you don't have words?
That's
a very interesting question. It's easier for me, because I'm
more instrumental ... I'm one that never really listens to lyrics.
People will say, 'You know what Bruce is talking about?' And
I'll go, 'I'm not sure what he means, but ...' I just
don't listen to lyrics. I listen to the music. I don't have a
hard time putting music together. But the hard part is ... Some
songs that I write, the only way I can recognize them is to give
them a number. Like, say, number 35. And then, people say, 'Well,
you know, what's that song about? Where were you and what were you
thinking?'
And,
I gotta tell you the truth. Sometimes, I just give them a story.
Like ... It was a really nice day and I was thinking about my
father. You know, sometimes I'll make up a story, because some
people want a story. But some of them are totally created in four
walls and they need a name. You've gotta give them a name.
I
did "My Little Cow", which is a story about my first daughter.
This is a true story. And I was in Wisconsin ... Well, what happened
is, I did the song and I thought to myself, 'I should have a song
about my daughter.' You know, most guys that write lyrics can put
their name in the song. I couldn't do that. So, I just happened to
be in Wisconsin. And we went over to see this Indian cow, that
supposedly is the next calling by the Indians. Anyway, this Albino
cow, out in the middle of nowhere. And I'm thinking of my
daughter, which she's going to hate me for down the road. And she
was just so little and so cute and I thought, 'Oh, my little cow
is a cute little thing.' And there we go, number 35 ended up being,
"My Little Cow."
And
now, I'm probably going to have to do one for ... I have another
daughter. I'm going to have to do one for Harley. Because when
they get old enough to understand that Harley doesn't have her own
song, they're going to be really upset with me. And the two girls
are that way.
But
that's the truth of the matter. It's easy to write the music,
it's just hard to title it.
So
there's not always a meaning to the songs, sometimes they're
just kind of something that poured out of you?
Unfortunately,
that's the truth of the matter. (Laughs.)
There's
nothing wrong with that, though.
But
it doesn't give you much to talk about, when you go on the radio.
Yeah.
You
know, 'How did you come up with this song?'
When
you go out live, do you actually tell some stories about the songs
that do have certain meanings?
Yeah,
I do. As a matter of fact, I talk about "My Little Cow," and
"A Doorman's Life," which was about my father. My father was a
doorman, when he was really young, in New York City.
A
couple of little things I talk about. I don't talk a lot about
that stuff. I just sort of try to ... Every night's different, you
get to feel off the audience and they sort of lead. They lead the
show, really.
How
have the songs developed live? Have they changed a lot live? Since
you've played them out, have they developed at all or have they
kind of stayed the same format as the CD?
Oh,
no, they're a little different to perform. Whether it's certainly
louder and up tempo. The players that we have are different than the
ones that are on the record. With some of the other songs that I do,
they're spiced a bit. I mean, we go and we play in these places that
have, vocal bands and rock bands. We get up there and we just turn
it up and kick some butt. Even though it's instrumental, it still
kicks butt. You know, I think our hardest thing is probably to play
in a little jazz club and keep it quiet.
When
you're writing, how do you decide ... because you [have] played a
whole bunch of instruments and a lot [of] keyboard instruments, how
do you decide what to put where? Is it more spontaneous or do you
plan it out a little?
The
tones of instruments are real important. In other words, I'll
probably write a song ... I'll fool around with a synthesizer and
the tone, I'll hear a tone that'll make me start writing a song.
Whether it be a piano or a some kind of synthy sound or something. I
mean, I just play around with a synthesizer for, oh, I don't know,
maybe in the first ten minutes of me playing around is usually when
I get the idea. And if it doesn't come to me then, then I gotta walk
away.
But
the sounds will dictate what the song is going to be. Say you put a
sound that sounds like an acoustic Spanish guitar. It's kind of
makes you play with a little Spanish kind of feel to it. Or then I'll
put a bass on it and I'll just start thumping around on a bass.
They're
all built differently, depending on what I pull out for a sound. I
mean, I could start with the bass first and then start building it.
Then you could start building this house and get halfway through it
and then you realize, 'You know what, this ain’t going anywhere.'
And,
it's just a lot of experimentation. And then I'm lucky enough to
put the accordion on top of stuff. You know, if it works or not, it
sort of gives it a continental flair. Which I kind of like.
You
know, bringing some acoustic instruments into some of the electronic
instruments. That's why I pretty much use a real drummer on
my album, because most of these smooth jazz records are all
machines.
How
has your keyboard playing developed, since you first started
playing? And maybe your earlier days playing; how do you compare
them?
I
think I've gotten tastier in my old age. I don't play as fast.
This is what happens. Even when our band first started, we used to
be like, you know these hot rod guys. Who could play faster?
And
as you get older, and you play more, you tend to think about your
notes a little more. It's like talking. You think about what
you're going to say. If somebody says something, you sit back and
think about it for a second. And then, you choose your words. Well,
it's the same kind of thing. And ultimately, you can create more
with ten notes, than you can with 50. If they're just those right
ten notes.
Have
you ever thought of making a solo album with vocals?
No.
(Laughter.) No, I used to sing background stuff in a couple of
bands. You know, when I was a kid, I probably sang a couple of songs
here and there. Here's the thing where you have to consider down
the road. You gotta look at the whole picture. You gotta think about,
'Well, if I do this, then I gotta go out and sing it. And I
gotta remember the words.'
There's
a whole lot more that goes on with that. (Laughs.) Yeah, as I said,
I'm basically lazy. So, you know, I'm like, 'Oh, let's try
to get the easy way out here.'
Who
are some of your musical influences?
I
like a lot of the old R&B players like Junior Walker. [David]
Sanborn I love, saxophone player. I actually like some country
music. I work out a lot in the gym and all I listen to is country
music on my little radio because of the beats. Man, there are some
really happening country people these days.
Oh,
let me think ... you know I'll tell ya, lately I've been
listening to a lot of the smooth jazz radio and it gets a little
tiring. I mean, they tend to, I don’t know, just play some of the
same stuff too many times. It’s becoming a little too commercial
for me. I've been hearing a lot of talk about satellite radio.
Apparently,
for a lot of genres, it's suppose to be really good. So, I have to
investigate that.
As
far as instrumental music, do you listen to a lot of stuff that's
longer and solo-based or just a lot of melodic, shorter material?
Probably
shorter, more melodic. I'm trying to give people something to come
back to. In other words, you have a nice melody and you have a nice
chorus. Then, you can always take that somewhere else for a little
while, but always come back. Where, if it were real avant-garde
jazz, it's hard for people to follow it sometimes.
If
it sounds good and it's nice, I think people want more of it. Just
as much as it can be a little tiring for the musicians, I think
it's the way to go. It's the old, give 'em what they want.
[In
reference to the Holiday Shows at Convention Hall last Christmas
with Bruce Springsteen and the Max Weinberg 7.] When you guys go up
on stage, is any of that planned out, or is it more spontaneous?
For
me it's spontaneous. I think for Max and his band, they rehearse
all that stuff. They're pretty much the back-up band, so some of
the other players can just walk in and jump on.
I
love to do that too. I don't have to think about it much. I can
just be part of the fun and show up. And walk off and take a break.
Oh, I love it! It’s great! (Laughs.)
Supposing
I happen to know everything.
Cool.
So it's kind of a fun thing for you to just kind of get up and
play a little bit?
Yeah,
it is. It is. If you're up there all the time, you're not so
special. So I can kind of get up and everybody says, 'Hey, yeah,
great!' And then, I can go away and go have a soda and come back.
Do
you do a lot of spectating too? Like watching the other guys?
Oh,
yeah. Oh yeah. That's a lot of fun, going out and watching
what's going on.
Who
are some of your favorite local, or even Max Weinberg musicians,
that you watch?
Max's
guys? Well, that whole band he has on Conan, was pretty much our
horn section.
Yeah.
Many,
many years ago. And, you know, Mark Pender and Richie "La Bamba"
[Rosenberg]. All those guys are really part of the whole big family
and they're just excellent. Max has turned himself into a hell of
a drummer too. Playing on that thing every night. I think he's one
of the strongest players in the band today. He definitely turned
that last tour around, big time!
What
was it like playing on that tour? What was it like getting back
together and reuniting?
It's
the best one we ever did.
Really?
Wow!
The
fact that people are older. People know what's important. When
you're in the thick of it, you tend to forget what you've got.
How good it is.
But,
when you don't do it for a while and you come back. You realize
what's important. It hits the right notes. You don't have egos
to deal with anymore. We had kids on the tour. We took our children
all around the world.
We'd
be in a whole city for a week. So we'd plan activity for the kids
to go to. Museums, different shows. Just really, really nice! No
hurry, you know, take our time. Have a good time. It was just
wonderful! I can't say anything bad about it. You know, everybody
is healthy. We still move ok. (Laughs.)
You
know, I'm lucky, I'm one of the guys who gets to sit down. You
know, Bruce has to go out there and bust his ass every night. I'm
like, wow, I'm glad I picked the organ.
Do
you think the crowd's growing along with you? You know, they've
been watching you guys play for years.
Well,
we've brought in a lot of new audiences. We have quite a range.
15-year-olds to 55, 60-year-olds. We have some older people I see
once in a while. And they're certain fans that are older, that
haven't gotten out of their house in many years. And they've
waited to see this. And, I think it made it really, really special
for them to get out and do a little, 'Wow, you know I can still
move! OK!' So, it was fun for everybody.
How
do you think the band's grown? Since playing with them before,
have you noticed a lot of changes and stuff like that?
I've
noticed people playing better now, than they did before. I think it
has a lot to do with personal projects, people doing their own
stuff.
Because,
when we were a band, that was playing all the time and so closely
connected, I myself didn't listen to a lot of other music and then
hang out with a lot of other rock n' roll people. Pretty much
self-contained.
Being
on our own, we're out there playing our own music. Making our own
CD's. Really getting a chance to push our own stuff. I don't
mean musically, but just our limits. Then we came back into this
thing and we all added something different and better to it.
What
other musical projects were you doing in between this time period?
I
do all kinds of little things. I'm actually putting a CD together
right now of some accordion music. All kinds of different accordion
styles for television. In other words, if someone is looking for an
Italian Restaurant. They can pull out a Danny Federici CD, with me
playing a little something like "The Godfather," if they needed
the background. And, I do German, I do Italian, I do French,
Austrian. It’s all different types. Zydeco.
It's
all different types of sounds and different kinds of playing on the
accordion. It's a popular instrument again. And I'm working on
another record. Occasionally, I look at other talent. But not so
much.
Source:
www.chorusandverse.com
|