Home Translation Contributors Features Fotos Q&A Sculpture Wordsmiths Psyche Synesthesia Media Panorama Paintings Dance Fashion Celluloid Art
Views Archives Submissions Contact About
John LeKay: Music is obviously in your blood I don't think that playing the violin the way you do is something that can be easily taught or learned. I know that you were born in St. Petersburg Russia and that both your parents were classical musicians. What instruments did they play and what kind of influence did this have on you taking up the violin and how old were you when you first began playing? Joe Deninzon: My parents are both classical musicians. My father is a violinist with the Cleveland Orchestra, and my mother is a concert pianist, so I started out with music in the womb and in the house as I was growing up. My parents are also busy teachers, so there would be constantly multiple violin and piano lessons going on in the house. I was originally classically trained on the violin, starting at age 6. We emigrated to the states from Russia when I was 4. At around age 8 or 9, I started watching MTV and was seduced by the sights and sounds of Van Halen, Michael Jackson, yes, and just about everything in the pop mainstream that was floating around in the mid eighties. I wanted to be a rock star and started rebelling against my parent's strictly classical teachings. This lead to my later taking up bass, guitar, and writing and singing my own songs. The first instrument I learned to improvise on was the electric bass when I joined my high school jazz band at age 15. My heroes, growing up, were Led Zeppelin, Kiss, Aerosmith, Jaco Pastorius, John Mclaughlin, and Miles Davis. During these years, I still kept on with my classical violin studies, but it was a separate world from my jazz and rock dabblings.
JL: In reference to the two pivotal things that led you to becoming a jazz/rock violinist and composer; how did it feel taking the leap from the world of classical violin to the world of improvisational jazz and rock? Also can you please describe what it is about Django's guitar playing in particular, that has had such an impact on your music? JD: I think what inspires me the most
about Django's playing, besides the immense virtuosity, is the Gypsy spirit and
unique phrasing he brought to the music. Although Jazz is rooted in the history
of Black America, anyone in the world who becomes a jazz musician brings their
own heritage into it, thereby enriching the Jazz tradition. I think Django was
one of the first to bring a European flavor to jazz. His phrasing was very
unique for its time, and his style is such that it spawned a whole school of
guitar playing that continues to this day. There is a distinct French-ness to
compositions such as "Nuage". I respect Django because he did not try to
imitate the great jazz musicians from America, ( although I'm sure he was
influenced by them), but put his stamp on the music. He was proud of where
he came from and who he was. My roots being in Russia, I am a big fan of
Gypsy music from Eastern Europe, and I can relate to the way Django plays, and
probably have adopted some of his phrasing into my playing.
JL: I find it
amazing that Django could not read or write and could not take musical notation
and had to rely on someone do this for him. Also that he never played the same
piece, the same way twice.
When you said there are infinite things you can do with everything you work on, are you also this way in terms of approaching your own work and playing the same piece in different ways. Also do you use a particular method of taking notation or recording, during the early composition and creative stages, especially in terms of harmonic conception and the spontaneous development of melodic and rhythmic ideas and solos etc.? JD: In answer to your
question. I have different ways of writing. Sometimes a whole song
will come to me in a flash, and I'll write it down as if it was always there.
Usually, I get these flashes at random moments. In the middle of the
night, in the shower, when I'm jogging, etc.
JL: What's the musical landscape like out there in terms of playing classical music and how is the highly advanced studio recording technology and computers changing the way music is being recorded and released? Also can you tell me some of the musical tips you use to teach your students? JD: In today's musical landscape, string
players have to be more versatile than ever to survive. Orchestral positions are
few and far between, and increasingly hard With my students, I usually divide the time equally between classical and non-classical styles. We spend a great deal of time working on classical technique and repertoire, which I feel is the foundation for everything else. The second half of the lesson is usually spent working on a variety of things dealing with improvisation. The first thing I teach is the blues, which is the cradle of most popular music in the 20th century and beyond. We learn about jazz theory and harmony, learn as many standards as we can. I also try to educate them on techniques for playing rock and working with effects. I try to encourage my students to write their own songs and give them as much advice as I can. It's fun to to re-create for my students some of the experiences that brought me where I am today.
JD: Stratospheerius is my vehicle to explore
the endless scope of sounds that a violin can create, especially when put
through a variety of effects. I have always been fascinated by sounds and
textures, and am a proud fan of fusion music, especially that which was created
in the early seventies by the likes of Miles Davis, Mahavishnu Orchestra, Frank
Zappa, and Jean Luc Ponty. Jean Luc, who was highly influenced by
Grappelli, was probably the most important jazz violinist of his generation. He
and Jerry Goodman were two of the early players to use distortion, wah, and
delay on the violin. There is an art and a skill to tastefully playing with
effects and not using them as a gimmick. When one listens to guitarists from
Jimi Hendrix to John McLaughlin, Steve Vai to Dave Fiuczynski, and most recently
Oz Noy, one realizes that guitar players and as well as keyboard players have
made leaps and bounds in effectively applying sound effects to music in the last
30 years. String players are still behind in this technique, in my opinion, and
there are plenty of things to explore. Stratospheerius is a 4-piece band
consisting of bass, drums, guitar, and myself on vocals and 4, 6, and 7-string
electric violin. Our music is a mixture of funk, jazz, worldbeat, and
jam-rock. Heavily influenced by the artists I mentioned above, as well as
pop groups like Dave Matthews and Sting.
For more info www.joedeninzon.com
|