The Sunday Guardian

INTERVIEW

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The London- based punk- j azz outfit, WorldServi­ce Project was recently in India to perform at the fourth edition of Giants of Jazz, a 10-day music festival organised by the Piano Man Jazz Club, Delhi. Dave Morecroft is the vocalist and keyboardis­t in the five-member band, and comsposes songs as well. He speaks to Guardian 20 about WorldServi­ce Project and their musical influences.

Q. How did you like performing at the Piano Man Jazz Club in Delhi? A.

It was great. It’s a wonderful venue and a very unique space that lets you connect with the audience. You really feel like you can create an atmosphere by interactin­g with the entire audience because the stage is visible from all angles. It really creates the kind of environmen­t that according to me should be in a jazz club, between the musicians and the audience. It’s really fantastic.

Q. What’s your favourite thing to do when you’re in India? And what do you like the most about this country? A.

Food is definitely very high on the list. We’re all big fans of Indian cuisine. We also happened to visit many temples this time. We went to Old Delhi and visited a Jain temple, a Sikh temple, a Hindu temple— it’s so different from our own culture. I really enjoy observing people living their lives in India. I try to get into their shoes and imagine things from their perspectiv­e, understand how they feel going around their everyday lives. At the temples, you really see people in a very raw way, and it’s very emotional.

Q. What is the story behind your band name, WorldServi­ce Project? A.

It started as a tribute to the BBC World Service, because my father worked there for a number of years and when we first did a demo, he snuck us in the studio one Sunday morning and we managed to record an EP for free in that studio. However, the meaning behind the name to me has changed now because the band has travelled so much and because our new album is called Serve. We are really trying to live up to the name, to be a band that’s trying to serve people wherever we go.

Q. Your band interacts with the audience a lot during performanc­es. How do you think it adds to the overall experience of the gig, for you and for the audience? A.

Well, I hope for the audience we really add something. We are trying to make a show; it’s not just a gig. I have been to so many jazz gigs or concerts that I have found visually boring or have found them to be very unengaging, even if the music was really interestin­g. So I hope it [the interactio­n] really adds something. For me, I think you stimulate one or t wo senses of someone from the audience i f t hey’re sitting and listening to jazz. Obviously you’re mainly stimulatin­g their aural sense, but as soon as you add a story to it or a narrative, or as soon as you add a visual element, or just the costumes that we wear, or the energy that we have on stage— it just immediatel­y stimulates people in a different way, and makes it a more rounded show. I love engaging with people and making our shows theatrical. It’s part of my makeup and background.

Q. Two very different musical genres, punk and jazz, define your style of music? How do you manage to put them together? A.

We think of punk as an attitude and jazz as a genre. So we play jazz with a punk attitude. Our music is very thrashy, it has an anti-establishm­ent vibe to it. It has a heavy sound and there are of course jazz elements to it because there are improvisat­ions and horns blowing solos over a rhythm section.

Q. Who are your musical influences? A.

There are many actually. I’ve grown up studying classical music mainly, so lots of 20th-century music, 21st- century music, and contempora­ry classical composers from [Olivier] Messiaen to [Joseph Maurice] Ravel have influenced me. I listen to a lot of rock and pop music from the ’80s and ’90s because I am that old, unfortunat­ely [ laughs]. Then I got into much more progressiv­e and heavy music. I started to check out more psychedeli­c stuff with Mr Bongo, Mike Patton and others. Then I got a heavy crossover with John Zorn [American composer], and Charles Mingus [American jazz musician] also had a great impact on me. So WorldServi­ce Project is like you take all those ingredient­s and put them in a bowl

“We think of punk as an attitude and jazz as a genre. So we play jazz with a punk attitude. Our music is very thrashy, it has an anti-establishm­ent vibe to it. It has a heavy sound and there are of course jazz elements to it because there are improvisat­ions and horns blowing solos over a rhythm section”

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