RE: [acid-jazz] AL DI MEOLA IS ON POINT

From: Juan Araya (jaraya_at_bellatlantic.net)
Date: 2003-07-06 13:40:16

  • Next message: Nicolai H.: "Re: [acid-jazz] In My CD Changer"

    Hmmm ... I have always thought of Al DiMeola's playing style as very
    mechanical ...

            Juano

    -----Original Message-----
    From: Bob Davis [mailto:earthjuice_at_prodigy.net]
    Sent: Saturday, July 05, 2003 8:36 PM
    To: soul-patrol_at_davisind.com
    Subject: [acid-jazz] AL DI MEOLA IS ON POINT
    Importance: High

    ----- Original Message -----
    From: "Zeus Fiction nee n0z0" <zeusfiction0_at_yahoo.com>

    > ______________
    > AL DI MEOLA
    > A no-holds-barred look at the state of the music biz
    >
    > http://www.innerviews.org/inner/dimeola.html

    This is an OUTSTANDING interview done by Anil Prasad.
    Everyone here should go and check it out.
    It's quite timely and most everything that Al Di Meloa says here is in
    LOCK STEP with the
    things that Stanley Clarke told us when we interviewed him last week.

    I wanted to repost a portion of the interview here containing some of Al
    Di Meola's
    viewpoints concerning today's music scene.
    They are quite eye opening.
    And don't forget to read the complete article at:
    http://www.innerviews.org/inner/dimeola.html
    ---------------------------------------------------------------

    THE EXPANSIVE NATURE OF YOUR RECENT OUTPUT INTIMATES THAT TELARC GIVES
    YOU QUITE A BIT OF
    ARTISTIC FREEDOM.

    Telarc in no way dictates or tries to manipulate the direction of the
    music, which is
    admirable. They dare not tell me to try to write something for radio.
    They probably secretly
    hate that crap too, but they're in the business of selling records.
    Unlike a lot of other
    artists in the contemporary jazz genre, I'm one that can still sell
    somewhat in that
    environment without getting mass radio play from those easy listening
    bullshit stations.

    In 1998, you tried to mount a campaign to get your fans to request radio
    play for your work.
    How did that go?

    It absolutely did not work. Radio is not going to listen to anyone who
    calls in and asks to
    hear what I do or what they like to personally hear. Radio is going to
    play what the
    consultants tell them to play - what women in hair salons or people in
    malls want to hear.
    They take their surveys in the most asinine places and think they have a
    grasp on what the
    masses want to hear. They couldn't be more dead wrong.

    WHEN YOU RELEASED KISS MY AXE IN 1991, YOU SAID "THE MUSIC INDUSTRY WAS
    CONSPIRING TO KEEP ME
    SILENT." SPECIFICALLY, WHAT DID YOU MEAN BY THAT?

    I got blacklisted. You can ask the person that runs radio at Telarc. She
    won't say it to me,
    but she thinks I've basically created enemies with radio. She couldn't
    be more wrong. In
    fact, when I was speaking out during concerts about radio every night, I
    was being
    complimentary. I was saying "If you like radio and you're not hearing
    what you want, I
    encourage you to call the stations." At the time, radio was influenced
    by listener requests.
    They took note of all that - not solely, because they also went by these
    consulting firms and
    in-depth research. But they really took into account people who called
    in requesting what
    they want to hear. So, I encouraged people to do that and it may have
    rubbed the stations the
    wrong way and now I don't get any play. But you know what? That kind of
    format is so
    God-awful boring that none of my fans listen to it anyway. It's such an
    epidemic. It's so
    sick. That's the way it is, let me tell you.

    Let me give you an example. I had dinner with one of the main people at
    Clear Channel
    Broadcasting the other night. Here's the situation. Clear Channel bought
    out all the
    promoters in the country, but they also own the majority of the radio
    stations that are hot.
    Now, here's the promoter in Phoenix who did my show. He was bought out
    by Clear Channel too.
    But they won't play my record because it doesn't fit their format,
    however they'll play that
    other kind of crap. Now, if they had played my record, the show would
    have been sold out. So,
    the argument was made "Why not play my record?" The program director
    says "Well, it doesn't
    work for our format." But the Clear Channel banner is up at the gig.

    Knuckleheads run those companies and know zero, zip, absolutely nothing
    about music. They're
    just going with the flow of what they think kids want to hear. The music
    business is no
    longer run by people who love music. It's got nothing to do with that.
    Thank God for XM
    digital satellite radio though. That's the future right there.

    YOU RECENTLY SAID "PEOPLE DON'T CARE ABOUT VIRTUOSITY ANYMORE. THEY CARE
    ABOUT RIDICULOUS
    FORMS OF HIP HOP AND PEOPLE LIKE EMINEM, WHO ARE DESTRUCTIVE AND
    ZERO-TALENT." IT SEEMS TO ME
    THAT STATEMENT IS APPLICABLE TO ALL FORMS OF THE ARTS THESE DAYS.

    Yeah, kids are growing up with bullsh*t. There's no two ways about it.
    I'm not trying to
    sound like my Dad. He may not have liked the rock and roll thing when it
    came in, but God, I
    have a 13-year-old daughter who listens with her friends to that Eminem
    crap and stuff
    similar to it. They like it because of the peer pressure thing to a
    degree. But what if she
    was turned on to some of the stuff I grew up with like the Beatles?
    Hello? It's, like way
    better.

    We're in a dangerous time. We're in a time when bullsh*t sells more than
    ever. It's getting a
    bit scary. How much bullcrap was there when I was her age? Not much in
    comparison. Society is
    really getting screwed up. It gets worse and worse. It just is. There's
    a lot more anger.
    There's a lot more divorce. There's a lot more everything that seems to
    be negative. The
    business people who run the record business are using all of that as an
    excuse to glorify
    these artists - they have the audacity to call them artists. They're not
    artists. They're
    thugs, basically. These guys have zero talent. Nothing. Not a bit. They
    can't sing. They can'
    t write music. They don't play an instrument. They can't even dance!
    They just have this
    little poetry thing going. [laughs]

    JOE ZAWINUL PUT IT IN AN INTERESTING WAY. HE SAID THE NET RESULT IS
    THERE ARE FAR FEWER
    STORYTELLERS THAN THERE USED TO BE.

    That's only part of it Joe. Joe should come out and say that basically
    they are glorifying
    zero-talents that can't play an instrument or sing. What's all this
    about? Why are kids
    relating to this? How come the Stevie Wonders - who are still brilliant
    - are being pushed
    into the background? Because kids can't relate? Well, what can't they
    relate to? They can't
    relate to music? This has very little to do with music. It's about what
    is hot and popular.
    Look at Eminem. There's no music. It's just a kind of angry view he has
    put into some
    pseudo-poetic form. That's it. It's amazing. It baffles me beyond belief
    that this guy can
    sell out arenas with that kind of crap. But that's where it's at.

    GIVEN YOUR PERSPECTIVES ON THE LOSS OF INTEGRITY IN THE MUSIC BUSINESS,
    HOW DO YOU JUSTIFY
    THE POP PROJECT YOU'RE WORKING ON WITH THE SWEDISH PRODUCTION DUO MUSIC
    MIKE AND ROMY ROME?

    Well, those are the stupid names that they use. The interviewer from
    Jazziz wanted to know
    what names they go by. That's not what I call them. I think they were
    trying to be funny.
    This has nothing to do with what we were just talking about.

    THE JAZZIZ ARTICLE CHARACTERIZED YOU AS GOING AFTER THE COMMERCIAL
    MAINSTREAM WITH THIS
    PROJECT.

    Well, there's music and there's not music and sometimes there's a
    thinner line than one can
    imagine. But this is not rap that I'm talking about. The interviewer
    heard two seconds of
    music. The article was not only unfair, it was downright mean.

    SET THE RECORD STRAIGHT. DESCRIBE THE MUSIC IN YOUR OWN WORDS.

    It's a pop, hip hop, R&B project. That's the way I view it. It's cool.
    It's very today. It's
    very happening. There are guest vocalists on every track. I like some of
    the rhythms that
    exist in the pop world, but with music, harmony, soul, melody and some
    good singing attached
    to it. I grew up with pop music, so pop, R&B and hip hop, if they're
    done well, can be
    musical. There's nothing wrong with it. So, this project is me
    definitely stepping into a
    world in which people may never have heard of me before. But, let me
    tell you, if my world
    diminishes any more, I'm over. I'm barely able to go on tour anymore
    because of the lack of
    radio and support - and I don't mean from the record company, although
    these are no longer
    the days of getting 50 times the budget that a Telarc's got from a
    Columbia or Warner
    Brothers. All of us in this genre are watching our sales go all the way
    down - straight down
    like a rock - because of the lack of support and the image that our
    music is a thing of the
    past. I can't exist on 200-to-300 people a night coming to see a show.
    It's an economically
    losing proposition. Same for Joe Zawinul. Same for Chick Corea. Same for
    every artist in this
    genre.

    I see this as a way to build up an audience. I see Santana sell 30
    million records and I go
    "Wait a minute. Why not expand a little bit if I believe in it?" First
    and foremost, I have
    to dig it. From another point of view, this can be a lot of fun. Is it
    me? Well, I have a lot
    more admiration in a way for Flesh on Flesh. I'm very proud of that
    record. But I also like
    this other record. It's a completely different point of view. I'm also
    proud of it, because I
    'm not trying to water down what I do to get on easy listening jazz
    stations. I'm totally
    bypassing that kind of stuff. If I'm gonna do it, I'm gonna go right
    down the middle. It's
    either gonna be fu*king humungous or it's gonna go down the tubes.
    [laughs]

    -----------------------------------------

    Remember to go to:

    http://www.innerviews.org/inner/dimeola.html

    and read the rest of this.

    Al gives some of the same insight that Stanley covered with us, with
    respect to a potential
    RTF reunion...

    (good sastuff indeed)

    _________
    Bob Davis
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