Arclight, Julian Lage’s Mack Avenue
debut, marks his first recorded outing on electric guitar and in a trio format,
backed by double bassist Scott Colley and drummer Kenny Wollesen. Like that
titular intense white light, Lage is a performer who burns brightly: The pace
he sets is brisk, the mood often upbeat, the playing so quick-witted and
offhandedly dazzling that one is compelled to immediately press “repeat,”
especially when tracks like “Persian Rug” and “Activate” whiz by in under two
and a half minutes. For a thoughtful artist like Lage, who will research and
ruminate on a project long before he sets foot in a studio, this was a
liberating experience, plugging in and playing with a kind of abandon. He was
encouraged along the way by his producer and friend, the eclectic
singer-songwriter Jesse Harris, who helped maintain an air of spontaneity and
discovery throughout the trio’s three-day stint at Brooklyn Recording.
Lage has long been heralded for his
virtuosic ability as an acoustic guitarist. In fact, he was well known in
musician circles as a guitar prodigy whose early genius was captured in a 1997
Oscar-nominated documentary short, Jules At Eight. As an adult, he’s fulfilled
the promise of his extraordinary youthful talent. The New Yorker’s Alec
Wilkinson declared, “He is in the highest category of improvising musicians,
those who can enact thoughts and impulses as they receive them.” Nate Chinen of
The New York Times called Lage “one of jazz’s breezier virtuosos, possessed of
an unflappable technical facility and a seemingly boundless curiosity.” After
independently releasing a solo acoustic set of largely original material called
World’s Fair in 2014, that curiosity prompted Lage to reconsider the electric
guitar—specifically a Fender Telecaster, “the most refined embodiment of the
modern guitar,” as he puts it.
“The Telecaster has been around for more
than 60 years,” says Lage, “and it’s still so present. I took that as a
parameter: Arclight focuses on my love of the electric guitar, specifically the
Telecaster. And even more specifically, it’s centered on a jazz trio. It’s
basically a realization of this recessive obsession I’ve had for a long time,
but had never followed. I wanted to do songs that I feel maybe fell through the
cracks for me when I was growing up, but now feel like a brand new kind of
music.”
Though up to now Lage has largely
recorded and performed original material, he wanted to explore his interpretive
skills on Arclight, concentrating on music from the early to mid-20th century,
“jazz before be-bop.” This was a period that had also inspired his composing
for World’s Fair. As he did then, Lage consulted Brooklyn-based guitarist,
banjo player and music scholar Matt Munistiri, who had already pored over the
more obscure pages of the American Songbook. Explains Lage, “I had this
conundrum. I was looking for minor songs and slightly more melancholy music
from the ‘20s. Matt sent me about 20 songs that ranged from Willard Robison to
Sidney Bechet to Jack Teagarden, Bix Beiderbecke and Spike Hughes, a British
band leader who had a recording of a song called ‘Nocturne’ that ended up on
our record. He nailed this melancholy zone of jazz that I felt was kind of
forgotten. It was really poignant, melodic music that had a quirk to it. I
think of it as the pre-be-bop generation, when country music and jazz and swing
were in this weird wild-west period.”
Along with “Nocturne,” Lage tackles W.C.
Handy’s “Harlem Blues,” a Gus Kahn-Neil Moret piano roll number called “Persian
Rug,” and “I’ll Be Seeing You,” which starts off tenderly but gives way to a
lively improvisational mid-section before finding its way back to the gentle,
classic melody. The rest of the album consists of originals, which, notes Lage,
“celebrate the other period I’m obsessed with, the Keith Jarrett American
quartet period, an improvisational jazz era that had such a rich connection to
songs and to folk music. This was the concept for the album.”
Playing a Telecaster is also an
affectionate nod to Lage’s childhood: When he was four years old, his dad, a
visual artist, had made him a plywood guitar based on a Fender Esquire he’d
traced from a Bruce Springsteen poster. Lage “played” that guitar until his dad
bought him a real electric guitar a year later, and they started practicing
blues progressions and improvisation together. Similarly, Lage’s all-star
rhythm section on Arclight recalls the sounds, the bands and the gigs that
inspired him as a young musician. Lage remembers seeing Colley and Wollesen at
famed Bay Area jazz club Yoshi’s backing his hero, the late guitar icon Jim
Hall, as well as his early mentor, Gary Burton: “I would go to these shows, sit
up front, put my head on the stage and watch. They were the most formative jazz
guitar experiences of my life. And they were with these guys. I didn’t
specifically intend to reassemble that dream crew but then I thought I had a
chance, why not call them? I love them, I know their sounds; they would get my
vision. And that’s what tied everything together. This was not only a band
where I could get to play all this stuff that I’ve come up with, this is a band
of people I love listening to. And that was so refreshing coming from the solo
guitar thing, which was a very personal quest to build a solid individual
foundation of music on the guitar.”
Jesse Harris became both observer and
arbiter as the sessions unfolded, an invaluable role. While Lage would perceive
a take as merely the first in a series,Harris, as Lage recounts, would say:
“‘That’s it! Do you hear the spirit, the narrative, the build? Do you see how
you struggle there but nail it here? That’s the ebb and flow.’ I absolutely
loved it. This was very different than the solo guitar record, where Ifelt as
though only I knew when it was done. I was outnumbered on this one, and by all
my favorite people and musicians. Arclight also has a spirit to it, this
raucous energy, a thing that I felt was so strongly connected to this music and
this band. There was a concept, a philosophy, a tonal palette; but that kind of
energy, that almost dance-bandvibe—Jesse could see it a mile away. It was so
much fun to turn it up loud in the studio, and feel the music that way.”
Concludes Lage, “I feel like I’ve been on
this very focused mission to make certain things a part of my musical life, and
the electric guitar was one of the things that was missing. I’m very excited to
share this.”
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