Guitar World

Ava Mendoza

THE WEST-COAST JAZZ SUPREMO DETAILS HER FAR-FROMTRADIT­IONAL APPROACH ON NEW RELEASE ECHOLOCATI­ON

- By Andrew Daly

AS A 40-YEAR-OLD mainstay of the New York City jazz scene, Ava Mendoza has been around the block a time or three. But that doesn’t mean she lacks passion. “Music is my religion,” she says, “It’s important to me to be around people who are devoted to it.”

But Mendoza isn’t only a disciple of jazz. Hell, she doesn’t even consider herself a true “jazz musician.” Growing up in Southern California, she was exposed to everything from Latin American to classical music before latching onto off-kilter alternativ­e sounds, including Black Flag and Sonic Youth.

With influences taken from so many genres, it’s fair to wonder what’s kept Mendoza interested enough in jazz to release her latest creation, Echolocati­on, with the help of bassist Devin Hoff under the moniker Mendoza Hoff Revels. “Devin and I met in Oakland,” she says. “We’ve had one foot in punk and one in jazz. So we talked about this imaginary four-piece, formed it, and started writing music. It progressed from there.”

The duo’s punk-meets-jazz roots are smeared all over Echolocati­on’s eight tracks, but Mendoza’s fretwork carries the load. “I love alternativ­e tunings,” she says. “I love interestin­g chord voicings and finding ways to use open strings for resonance. I like to use an intuitive approach that’s modern, unique and adventurou­s. The truth is that guitar-less jazz — with horns — inspires me more these days. That affects how I use pedals for timbral changes on guitar; it’s like a horn where your breath affects the tone. But ultimately, melody has to be present.”

Tracks like “Interwhini­ng” and “Echolocati­on” show an approach that finds Mendoza’s guitar carrying the melody while

“I’ll continue to write music my way rather than focus on whatever is considered ‘traditiona­l’”

sharing harmony lines with funky free-jazz sax. It’s an example of Mendoza’s intentiona­l deviation from all things considered “normal’ in jazz, a realm she feels funny taking up space in. “I call my music ‘jazz’ for lack of a better word,” she says. “It has always been tricky for me to define myself.

“What I do is different,” she adds. “I don’t play standards. I respect traditiona­l jazz, but it’s not my path. I’ve always wanted to use all my guitar’s sonic possibilit­ies. So I’ll continue to write music my way rather than focus on whatever is considered ‘traditiona­l.’”

 ?? ?? “I like to use an intuitive approach that’s modern, unique and adventurou­s,” Ava Mendoza says
“I like to use an intuitive approach that’s modern, unique and adventurou­s,” Ava Mendoza says

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