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Mike Stern - Voices
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by Michael Bloom
Michael Bloom Media Relations
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How does a guitar hero re-invent himself? After nine albums of
awe-inspiring chops, melodic and lyrical phrasing and sizzling
six-string statements in all manner of contexts, what is there left to
say? Mike Stern answered that question by digging deep and coming up
with the album that has been inside of him for years. Voices,
his tenth recording for Atlantic Jazz, is easily his most inspired
outing to date. By organically melding his formidable guitar prowess
into the fabric of engaging, uplifting vocal tunes, Stern stands
poised to bring his own signature six-string voice to a wider audience
in much the same way that Carlos Santana re-introduced himself to
contemporary pop audiences with Supernatural. Stern's killer guitar
work - previously heard on recordings by Miles Davis, Steps
Ahead, and the Brecker Brothers band - is still very much
intact on Voices. It's just in the service of the celebratory
grooves and remarkably expressive voices that grace this world beat
flavored project.
"I've always wanted to do a record with voices", says the
Grammy-nominated guitarist. "Some of the tunes that I've written
in the past, with tricky kind of beboppish heads, are just unsingable.
But then there are some tunes of mine that singers have always
mentioned to me that they liked very much... the more singable,
lyrical tunes. And so I always thought it would be cool to hook up
with singers and explore that further."
One of the primary inspirations for the project was Cameroonian
bassist and vocalist extraordinaire Richard Bona, whom Mike had
met some years back at a jazz festival in Israel. "I was there
with the Mike Stern/Bob Berg Band and he was there playing with
the Zawinul Syndicate. We ended up jamming that night back at
the hotel room and later when he moved to New York we talked about
getting together on a project. And we've just kept in touch over the
years until we were finally able to realize this
collaboration."
Through multiple overdubbing, Bona creates a triumphant vocal choir
on the buoyant opener, One World. Mike responds in kind with a
typically heroic guitar solo, wailing freely within the densely woven
fabric of this well-crafted piece. Bona also lends his appealing
vocals to the relaxed groove of The River, which is underscored
by producer Jim Beard's churchy piano playing and sparked by
Stern's earthy blues phrasing. Other singers who appear on
Voices are Elizabeth Kontomanou, Arto
Tuncboyaciyan and Philip Hamilton, formerly of Full
Circle, a popular world beat group from the 80's. "The kind of
voices that Richard, Arto and Philip have really appealed to me for
this project", explains Stern. "They all can sing in a kind of
falsetto voice that is so beautiful, like a soprano sax but, of
course, better. There's no comparison to the human voice but I like
that high register for these kind of melodies. And Elizabeth,
interestingly enough, has a very low voice for a woman. So it's
really a rich, soulful voice, which added another quality to the
record."
That sultry quality is perhaps best showcased on Elizabeth's
intimate reading of the elegant Brazilian flavored ballad What
Might Have Been, which is underscored by drummer Vinnie
Colaiuta's gentle brushwork and Stern's nuanced delivery on nylon
string acoustic guitar. Kontomanou also appears on the moody Slow
Change, which features some killer distortion-laced licks from
Stern, and sings alongside Hamilton on two other pieces - the buoyant
African flavored groover Spirit and the bristling Leni's
Smile, an upbeat ode to Mike's singer-songwriter wife Leni
Stern. "I wanted Leni to be on this record too", says
Mike. "I was so inspired by her last record (the symphonic
Kindness of Strangers) that I wanted to work with her on my
project. Usually we prefer to keep our careers separate but this
would've been a perfect opportunity to collaborate. That was kind of
the plan but we just got so swamped with things that it didn't happen.
But we'll have to save that for the future, because I definitely want
to record with vocals again."
Given the exotic tendencies of the featured singers on
Voices, the tunes ended up lending themselves toward a world
beat vibe, which actually surprised and pleased Stern. "Naturally,
the tunes with Richard have an African sounding vibe to them", he
says. "And then there's one called Way Out East, which is a
play on Sonny Rollins' famous album title Way Out West.
That one features Arto on vocals and it's got a distinctly Middle
Eastern quality to it, like something you might associate with Morocco
or Turkey."
Again, not something you'd expect to hear on a Mike Stern album.
Other guests on Voices include tenor sax giant Michael
Brecker, drummer Dennis Chambers, bassists Chris
Doky and Lincoln Goines, guitarist Jon Herington and
the young tenor sax burner in Stern's current working band, Bob
Franseschini.
"We went for more of a live approach than layering it all in the
studio", says Stern. "We could've done this with sequencers
and stuff but then you lose the burn factor from the live performance.
We wanted to just play. And actually, it all went down smoothly in
three days - two days with Vinnie Colaiuta and one day with
Dennis Chambers. The only things I overdubbed was one tune
where I broke a string in the middle of the solo and another tune
where a microphone fell from one of my amps during my solo, so I had
to play that one over. Everything else is just live. And that's
really what I wanted for this album - the live vibe with real drums
and piano in the same room and a little bit of leakage so that it
sounds real."
Stern reveals that Voices actually represents a return to
his roots, in a sense. "In a weird way, this project is really
about coming full circle for me. I actually was in an opera when I
was little and was also singing in the church choir. So the voice was
kind of the first instrument I had even before guitar."
Born on January 10, 1953, Stern began playing guitar at age 12,
emulating his boyhood idols like B.B. King, Eric Clapton
and Jimi Hendrix. "I liked the feel of the guitar and I got
hooked on it, he recalls. But I didn't really get serious about it
until I went to Berklee in 1971." At the Berklee College of Music
in Boston, Mike's focus shifted from rock and blues to jazz as he
enterted into an intensive woodshedding period of absorbing classic
recordings by Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Wes
Montgomery, Jim Hall, McCoy Tyner and Bill
Evans while also studying with guitarists Mick Goodrick and
Pat Metheny. On a recommendation from Metheny, Stern landed a
gig with Blood, Sweat & Tears in 1976 and remained with the
band for two years, appearing on BS&T's More Than Ever and
Brand New Day. That gig is also significant for introducing
Mike to two musicians who would later figure prominently in his life -
percussionist Don Alias and bassist Jaco Pastorius.
Following his stint with BS&T, Stern returned to Boston and
began studying privately with local jazz guru Charlie Banacos.
In 1979, Mike joined Billy Cobham's powerhouse fusion band,
replacing John Scofield in the lineup. Two years later, he got
the call from Miles Davis. Mike made his public debut with
Miles' band on June 27, 1981 at the Kix nightclub in Boston (a
performance that was documented and later released by CBS as We Want Miles). Mike
remained with Miles through 1983, also appearing on Man With The Horn
and Star People. From
1983 to 1984, he toured with Jaco Pastorius' Word of
Mouth band and in 1985 returned to Miles' lineup for a second tour
of duty that lasted close to a year.
In the summer of 1986, Stern went out on the road with David
Sanborn and later joined a powerhouse line-up of Steps
Ahead, which also featured the vibist Mike Mainieri,
saxophonist Michael Brecker, bassist Darryl Jones and
drummer Steve Smith. His 1986 debut on Atlantic Records, Upside Downside ,
featured such celebrated colleagues as Sanborn,
Pastorius, saxophonist Bob Berg, bassists Mark
Egan and Jeff Andrews, keyboardist Mitch Forman and
drummers Dave Weckl and Steve Jordan. From 1986 through
1988, Mike was a member of Michael Brecker's potent quintet and
appeared on Don't Try
This At Home.
Stern's second Atlantic album, 1988's Time In Place, continued
the promise of his debut. He followed that up with 1989's Jigsaw and 1991's Odds Or Evens. During
this period he also formed a touring group with saxophonist
Berg that included drummer Dennis Chambers and bassist
Lincoln Goines. They remained a working unit from 1989 to
1992, at which point Stern joined a reunited Brecker Brothers
Band (he appears on 1992's
Return of the
Brecker Brothers). Mike's acclaimed 1993 Atlantic Jazz
release, Standards (And Other
Songs), led to him being named Best Jazz Guitarist of the Year
by the readers and critics of Guitar Player magazine. He followed
that up with two hard-hitting offerings in 1994's
Is What It Is and 1996's
Between The Lines,
both of which received Grammy nominations.
In 1997, Stern recorded Give
And Take with bassist John Patitucci, drummer Jack
DeJohnette, percussionist Don Alias and special guests
Michael Brecker and David Sanborn. Their freewheeling
covers of Sonny Rollins' Oleo, John Coltrane's
Giant Steps, Cole Porter's I Love You and Jimi
Hendrix's Who Knows helped Mike earn the Orville W. Gibson
Award for Best Jazz Guitarist that year.
Stern's ninth release for Atlantic jazz was a six-string summit
meeting with colleagues Bill Frisell and John Scofield
that was appropriately titled Play. And now with
Voices, Mike carves out a new niche for himself while still
showcasing the chops that have marked him as one of the true guitar
greats of his generation.
Release September 4th, 2001
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