Home » Jazz Articles » Interview » Aaron Goldberg: Exploring the Now
Aaron Goldberg: Exploring the Now

Aaron Goldberg
piano
Kurt Rosenwinkel
guitarb.1970

Freddie Hubbard
trumpet1938 - 2008

Wynton Marsalis
trumpetb.1961

Betty Carter
vocals1929 - 1998

Joshua Redman
saxophoneb.1969
All About Jazz: Aaron, thanks so much for being here, how's it going?
Aaron Goldberg: Good, my pleasure, thanks for having me.
AAJ: You've got three concerts at the Sunset coming up, will this be your first time playing there?
AG: No, I've actually been playing on and off at the Sunset for probably fifteen years now.
AAJ: So you know it quite well?
AG: Yeah, it's a little home, a home away from home. It has a unique atmosphere because the audience is literally right in front of the stage, you can reach out and touch them and they can touch the pedals, tinkle on the end of the piano if you're not careful!
AAJ: Do you often come over to Europe to play?
AG: I do yeah, I've been coming more and more, it might be the main touring destination for most American musicians these days.
AAJ: You're doing three nights at the Sunset, you'll be playing with a percussionist,

Leon Parker
drumsb.1965

Yasushi Nakamura
bassAG: Yes, I started a collaboration with Leon about two and a half years ago, he's somebody that I played with in the early 90s, when I first moved to New York, and he was a major figure in NYC, he was performing with basically all the best jazz bands in the city, ranging from masters like

Kenny Barron
pianob.1943

Tom Harrell
trumpetb.1946

Brad Mehldau
pianob.1970

Jacky Terrasson
pianob.1966
AAJ: You got him back onto the jazz scene?
AG: Yeah, at least I can say I helped. Of course his musicianship has continued to grow all these years. He was mostly doing body percussion and vocal percussion work which he now brings into the context of the trio as well. So it's a little extra fun that we have [laughs]! We have a nice musical connection and it's a joy to see him rejuvenate his musical interests and his passion.
AAJ: You mentioned the trio, I'm quite curious about that trio setting because it seems like you favour the trio when you record and perform in your own name. Is there something about that setup that really suits your approach to music?
AG: That's a good question. I think that when I was growing up and learning this music, and when I first started to tour with various bands, it was always in a quartet or a quintet setting. One of the main skills you develop in that kind of setting is accompaniment and the ability to make a band really sound good, so you're one of many factors and you learn how to contribute to the overall group sound such that it's more than the sum of its parts. And that's a major musical skill that I think all the greatest pianists in jazz have had, for example people like

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020
AAJ: The trio that you've recorded and played with the most is with Eric Harland on drums and Reuben Rogers on bass. Some of our listeners will surely know them from their work with the great

Charles Lloyd
saxophoneb.1938
AG: It might even have been earlier. I think that first album might have been recorded in 97 or 98. I actually met Reuben in 1992, the same year I met Leon. I was going to Harvard, he was going to Berklee and we were playing every weekend at a small club in Boston (Massachusetts, United States, not Boston, England [laughs]) called Wally's Cafe. So we've been working together for over twenty five years. Reuben is also a member of Josh Redman's band, so many of the gigs that we've done in our professional lives, we've done together. At some point we were joking that we'd spent more time together than either of us had with any significant other [laughs]. Eric I met in 1997 while I was playing with

Greg Tardy
saxophoneb.1966
AAJ: Plans to reignite that partnership any time soon or is it still pending?
AG: It'll definitely reignite, I'm not sure how long this new project is going to last, but it's interesting and change is good [laughs]. It's bringing out different sides of me. Leon, compared to Eric, is a minimalist, and that puts new focus on the piano. Everybody brings their strengths and I'm interested in exploring those as best I can and seeing what those bring out of me. I'm learning about new sides of myself.
AAJ: You mentioned Boston, the place you met Reuben Rogers and Eric Harland. You live in NYC now which is one of the world capitals of jazz, but you're from Boston and grew up there. It's famous for its great music schools, so I'm curious to know what kind of environment it offered a young musician like yourself in your formative years.
AG: Thanks for that good question. I grew up playing classical piano and then I got hooked on jazz in High School, courtesy of a jazz bassist named Bob Sinicrope, who was a musician by night and a math teacher by day. He would play around Boston, on the scene with various Boston icons. As soon as I started playing jazz I was aware of those local legends like

Jerry Bergonzi
saxophone, tenorb.1947

George Garzone
saxophone, tenorb.1950

Bill Pierce
saxophone, tenorb.1948

Barry Harris
piano1929 - 2021

Cedar Walton
piano1934 - 2013

Chick Corea
piano1941 - 2021
AAJ: Do you still go back to play there a lot?
AG: Yeah, I go back, my folks are still there, I go back to play and to do workshops. It still feels like home you know. I've been a New Yorker for twenty years full time, and twenty-five years since I first came to New York. I know in my mind I'm a New Yorker, but there's a little part of my heart that still feels like I'm a Bostonian.
AAJ: Let's talk about your album The Now, the last album you released as leader with your own trio. In your description of the album, you talk about that ephemeral, transient aspect of the music being created. You mention navigating what you call 'the dynamic plane of the present' which is the idea encapsulated in the title. Could you elaborate on that, and in particular how you feel you were able to translate that in the music?
AG: Yeah, my pleasure [laughs]! There's many ways I could try to answer this question, but I'll try to keep it as prosaic as possible and non-philosophical. The simplest way to talk about what I meant by calling the album The Now is just to return people's consciousness to the fact, the unappreciated fact, that all of the greatest jazz albums were improvised, meaning that if they had been recorded five seconds later, they would sound totally different. Each take of all those classic tunes, assuming there was more than one, sounds extraordinarily different from the last one. The songs are the same, the mood is the same, the solos are all different. And so what we love most about those albums, all those solos that we can sing along with, are just literally one moment in time. And they become definitive, they become canonical, but they're made in that exact moment of the unknown present. That's the nature, the magical nature of our art. I think it's very unlike all other forms of music. There are improvisational musics from all the world, but jazz is in my opinion the highest level of improvisational music. When it becomes recorded music, people tend to forget the improvisational element involved in making it. The art of making an album is very much tied up with how you go into the studio, with your band of course, and capture some kind of transcendent magic in what is essentially just one moment in time, and allow it to become the definitive version of whatever song you're playing. There's something a little bit artificial about a studio environment, as opposed to a concert environment, because we mostly play concerts. So the psychological trick is to put yourself in the mode of just going for it as if you were playing a concert, all the while in the back of your mind knowing that actually this is the version that you're going to live with forever. I was just wanting to prod people's memory. Serious jazz fans know this, but even jazz musicians sometimes forget it. We listen to these albums, and it's extraordinary that we would be singing along to completely different solos if they had been recorded just a few seconds later. I wanted to just hold that thought in front of people as they were listening.
AAJ: As you say, a jazz album is very much an instant in time, but it also builds on the musical influences of the people who are there, there's a heritage behind that moment in time. Which brings me to my next question about the musical influences behind the album, because they're quite broad. There's a clear Brazilian influence which we've already seen in some of your previous albums, there are covers of Djavan, of
Chico Buarque
guitar and vocalsAG: One thing I've always been interested in and firmly believed is that a jazz musician's artistry is his improvisational voice. If you take someone like

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

Joe Henderson
saxophone1937 - 2001

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991
AAJ: You've collaborated with many different artists. I mentioned a few at the beginning but the list goes on,

Al Foster
drums1944 - 2025

Nicholas Payton
trumpetb.1973

Stefon Harris
vibraphoneb.1973
AG: Absolutely. I realise that there's something I was meaning to say in relation to the last question you asked. There's another way to answer that question. I fall in love with certain kinds of material for unknown, magical reasons [laughs]. I get moved listening to

Lee Konitz
saxophone, alto1927 - 2020
My longest standing musical relationships are the ones that have influenced me most. For sure, my relationship with Reuben and Eric, and also

Gregory Hutchinson
drumsb.1970

Ali Jackson
drums
Omer Avital
bass, acousticAAJ: We're running out of time, but I'd like to ask you one last question. Just generally, upcoming projects? Is there an album in the making? Are you going to be collaborating with Leon on something?
AG: We have a new album, we actually recorded it and it's all finished. It's gonna come out some time in 2018, I'm not sure exactly what month yet. It's with Leon and the bassist is Matt Penman, another guy I've been playing with for twenty-something years, who went to Berklee in the early '90s. He's one of my best friends off the bandstand as well. We have a nice project with Leon and Matt that I look forward to putting out and hopefully touring as well.
Tags
Interview
Aaron Goldberg
Luke Seabright
Kurt Rosenwinkel
Freddie Hubbard
Wynton Marsalis
Betty Carter
Joshua Redman
Leon Parker
Yasushi Nakamura
Kenny Barron
Tom Harrell
Brad Mehldau
Jacky Terrasson
Herbie Hancock
McCoy Tyner
charles lloyd
Greg Tardy
Bob Sinicrope
Jerry Bergonzi
George Garzone
Bill Pierce
Hal Crook
Barry Harris
Cedar Walton
Chick Corea
Djavan
Chico Buarque
Joe Henderson
Stan Getz
Al Foster
Nicholas Payton
Steffon Harris
Lee Konitz
Greg Hutchinson
Ali Jackson
Omer Avital
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