The Province

ENTERTAINM­ENT

JAZZFEST BASS legend Stanley clarke LEADS THE TALENT ON SHOW at vancouver FESTIVAL

- Peter Robb OTTAWA CITIZEN

When you think of Stanley Clarke, the image usually includes an electric bass guitar.

But the man who, starting at age 20, was the musical bottom upon which the legendary fusion band Return to Forever was built is more proud of his acoustic bass playing these days.

“I’m playing the best acoustic bass I have ever played. The electric bass, because I never studied it the way some guys did, it was always a second instrument for me.

“I’m really an acoustic player who got famous playing some crazy stuff on the electric bass.”

And when Clarke, 63, performs at the TD Vancouver Internatio­nal Jazz Festival on Monday, he’ll demonstrat­e his skill on both during his set at the Vogue Theatre.

That aside, “I am really happy and proud of the stuff the older electric bass players have done. When I first started out there were four guys with record deals as bass players. There are hundreds now. There is a real liberation there. You can go to school now and learn how to play electric bass. It’s become a serious instrument and that’s a great thing.”

Here is a man content with his lot, in the main, and enjoying his career.

“I’m actually for the first time very calm as an artist. The biggest thing I am so happy that I don’t have to worry about is f---ing radio. That used to be a real pain. The record companies used to pound everybody to do something they could sell on the radio. It’s nice that doesn’t exist anymore.

“For me this is the best time for instrument­al artists. You can do what you want when you want.”

The backdrop for the remark is the collapse of the old way of doing business in the music industry.

Those were times when the labels had total control over an artist. But as the power of the labels crumbled the independen­ce (read self-reliance) of the artists as self-employed businessme­n has grown. Clarke remembers the old days very well.

“When we went in the studio you’d spend a month talking about the cover with the head of the art department at Columbia or Atlantic. The music would take another two months.

“When we finished the Romantic Warrior album (1976), Lenny (White, RTF’s drummer at the time) and I were hanging out with some guys from Yes. We took three months to make our album, they took a year.”

Today, Clarke says, if the performers making progressiv­e music get more than a month to make their album they are lucky. So why make CDs at all? “In a word — documentat­ion. It’s a f---ing business card, man, that’s it.”

Still, Clarke is putting out CDs even if he ends up putting as much of his own money into the album as the labels do.

The one area where things are improving for him are live performanc­es.

“It’s bigger than ever. I get more gigs now than I ever got. I actually am at the point where I turn down gigs.

“In the 1980s and ’90s you didn’t turn down anything. These days, older artists are being seen on YouTube by younger people and they want to come out and see us before we are laid out in a box.”

“It’s bigger than ever. I get more gigs now than I ever got. I actually am at the point where I turn down gigs.”

ť STANLEY CLARKE

ON PLAYING MORE LIVE SHOWS

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 ?? — GETTY FILES ?? Stanley Clarke accepts a Grammy in February of 2012. The bassist brings his band to the Vogue Theatre for a show Monday.
— GETTY FILES Stanley Clarke accepts a Grammy in February of 2012. The bassist brings his band to the Vogue Theatre for a show Monday.

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