Home » Jazz Articles » Profile » Rob Luft: Burning the Candle at Both Ends
Rob Luft: Burning the Candle at Both Ends

Courtesy Website image
Keep smiling—you’re gonna get booked!
Rob Luft
Well, somehow or other, UK guitarist

Rob Luft
guitarb.1993

Kenny Wheeler
flugelhorn1930 - 2014

John McLaughlin
guitarb.1942

Dave Holland
bassb.1946

Avishai Cohen
bassb.1970
Even for the constantly-traveling Luft, 2023 has been an exceptionally busy year. In the Spring, ECM Records released A Time to Remember, the second album from his project with the singer

Elina Duni
vocalsb.1981
Rob Luft's stepfather Ian is a guitarist and jazz lover, although not a jazz player. "He took me to see the

Allan Holdsworth
guitar, electric1948 - 2017

Pat Metheny
guitarb.1954
By the age of 15, Luft had joined the UK's

Tom McCredie
bass, acoustic
Corrie Dick
drumsb.1990
Luft stayed with NYJO for eight years, occasionally arranging pieces for them. "It was a very transient banddrummers would come in, bass players would come in, and you'd get to know lots of people doing that. And when you're very young, it's fantastic."
By his early twenties he had become an inveterate traveler for his work, with about half of his performances outside the UK, much of it in Scandinavia. It began in 2017 when he toured Sweden, Finland, and Denmark with

Django Bates
pianob.1960

John Surman
saxophoneb.1944

Jan Garbarek
saxophoneb.1947

Keith Jarrett
pianob.1945

Arild Andersen
bass, acousticb.1945

John Abercrombie
guitar1944 - 2017

Norma Winstone
vocalsb.1941
He has yet to conquer the USA, although he and Elina Duni played in New York in April 2022 at Le Poisson Rouge (previously the Village Gate). Isn't it a little surprising that he isn't better known in the US? "Well, it's a long game with the United States, because of the visa issues. It's very hard for me to go and play there without a visa. I had an 01 visa, which is a tier below the green card, but it was valid from March 2020 to March 2022." In other words, slap in the middle of the pandemic. "We got offered gigs in Boston, Harvard University, and elsewhere, but unfortunately we only managed one gig at Le Poisson Rouge, because it takes a lot of organizing to go over there."
Luft is outspoken about what he perceives as American isolationism, which he believes is damaging to the country's appreciation of world culture. "If they're not getting lots of international nourishment, they how can they expect their own citizens to be open-minded about culture and the arts and stuff? There's a whole sound of European jazzspacious, beautiful, very minimal, atmospheric jazzthat American artists often have no idea about at all. The likes of Keith Jarrett and

Bill Frisell
guitar, electricb.1951
Busy as Luft is, it remains very hard even for him to make a living as a jazz musician. "It's deeply fraught with strife and mental battles and personal mountains to climb, especially at the beginning. You have to go to jam sessions, and stay until the bitter end to get your 15 minutes to play with the other musicians and meet the guys at the end of the night." This observation prompts another question, which is what advice he would offer to young jazz musicians? "Meet the guys, and introduce yourself to the organizers of these jam sessions. I was a very frequent attender at Ronnie Scott's upstairs and downstairs jam sessions when I was in my late teens. I was there all the time and I was a real night owl. I would even say I burnt the candle at both ends, because I was studying at [London's] Royal Academy of Music on the jazz course. That meant 9am starts. I had harmony lessons with

Gareth Lockrane
flute
Iain Ballamy
saxophone, tenorb.1964

Tom Cawley
pianob.1975
The social side of jazz contrasts with the world of rock bands, who are often quite insular, just doing their thing away from other people. That really doesn't work with jazz, where mingling with others is central to the culture. "It's such a social, democratic music. You need to meet people and you need to put yourself in places where you can listen to other musicians and get their number, and say, hey, I love your playing, would you like to jam? Because you also never know who's going to be there. I've been at jams where John McLaughlin has been present, or

Jeff Beck
guitar1944 - 2023

Thundercat
bass, electricb.1984

Larry Goldings
organ, Hammond B3b.1968

Robert Glasper
pianob.1978

Roy Hargrove
trumpet1969 - 2018
"People now think it's all about social media and Instagram and YouTube and Facebook, and that plays a huge part, I'm not trying to play that down..." But social media is more about marketing than creativity, and as well as going to jams and meeting fellow musicians and putting rehearsals together, Luft believes it's essential to simply be a nice guy. "There are so many killer players these days, and I think being a nice, positive energy in a group context is really important.

Billy Higgins
drums1936 - 2001

Jack DeJohnette
drumsb.1942
Tags
London Calling
Rob Luft
Peter Jones
Kenny Wheeler
john mclaughlin
Dave Holland
Avishai Cohen
Elina Duni
Allan Holdsworth
pat metheny
National Youth Jazz Orchestra
Tom McCredie
Corrie Dick
Django Bates
Ellen Andrea Wang
John Surman
Jan Garbarek
Keith Jarrett
Arild Andersen
John Abercrombie
norma winstone
Bill Frisell
Gareth Lockrane
Ian Bellamy
Tom Cawley
jeff beck
Thundercat
Larry Goldings
Robert Glasper
Roy Hargrove
Billy Higgins
Jack DeJohnette
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
