"It's
hard to find a more fruitful meditation on
American music than
in the compositions of guitarist Bill Frisell.
Mixing rock and
country with jazz and blues, he's found what
connects them:
improvisation and a sense of play. Unlike
other pastichists, who
tend to duck passion, Mr. Frisell plays up
the pleasure in the music
and also takes on another often-avoided subject,
tenderness." - The
New York Times
“Frisell is a revered figure among
musicians – like Miles Davis and
few others, his signature is built from pure
sound and inflection; an
anti-technique that is instantly identifiable.” -
The Philadelphia
Inquirer
"I like to have fun when I play and
I like comedy - but it's not a
conscious thing. I'm basically a pretty shy
person and I don't dance or get into fights.
But there are all
these things inside me that get out when
I perform. It's like a real world when I
play, where I can do all
the things I can't do in real life." -
Bill Frisell to The Village Voice
Over
the years, Frisell has contributed to the work
of such collaborators as Paul Motian, John
Zorn, Elvis Costello, Ginger Baker, The Los
Angeles Philharmonic, Suzanne Vega, Loudon
Wainwright III, Van Dyke
Parks, Vic Chesnutt, Rickie, Lee Jones, Ron
Sexsmith, Vinicius Cantuaria, Marc Johnson
(in "Bass Desires"),
Ronald Shannon Jackson and Melvin Gibbs (in "Power
Tools"), Marianne Faithful, John Scofield,
Jan
Garbarek, Lyle Mays, Vernon Reid, Julius
Hemphill, Paul Bley, Wayne Horvitz, Hal Willner,
Robin Holcomb,
Rinde Eckert, The Frankfurt Ballet, film
director Gus Van Sant, David Sanborn, David
Sylvian, Petra Haden
and numerous others, including Bono, Brian
Eno, Jon Hassell and Daniel Lanois on the
soundtrack for Wim
Wenders’ film Million Dollar Hotel.
This work has established Frisell as one
of the most sought-after guitar voices in
contemporary music. The
breadth of such performing and recording
situations is a testament not only to his
singular guitar conception, but
his musical versatility as well. This, however,
is old news by now. In recent years, it is
Frisell's role as
composer and band leader which has garnered
him increasing notoriety.
"For over ten years Bill Frisell has
quietly been the most brilliant
and unique voice to come along in jazz guitar
since Wes
Montgomery. In light of this, it may be easy
to overlook the fact
that he may also be one of the most promising
composers of American music on the current scene." - Stereophile
"Bill Frisell is the Clark Kent of the
electric guitar. Soft-spoken and
self-effacing in conversation, he apparently
breathes in lungfuls of
raw fire when he straps on his (guitar)...His
music is not what is
typically called jazz, though it turns on
improvisation; it's not rock'n
roll; and it sure ain't that tired dinosaur
called fusion. In one of the
biggest leaps of imagination since the Yardbirds
and Jimi Hendrix,
Frisell coaxes and slams his hovering split-toned
ax into shapes of
things to come...But besides being a guitar
genius, he's turned into a terrific songwriter.
Like Monk,
Frisell's harmonic and melodic ideas form
a succinct, seamless mesh with outer sonic
and rhythmic
ideas about his ax." - Spin
“Frisell just has a knack
for coaxing the most inviting sounds out of
the instrument, and the composition skills
to put them in just the right order. Combine
a Colorado youth given to soul and C&W
with solid jazz training,
abetted by a decade-long residency in the
heart of NYC’s avant scene, multiplied
by a fun factor of X (he has
scored Buster Keaton’s films) and you’ve
got a recipe damn near perfection.” - The
Mirror
Wire, the British music
publication has observed: "What's
really distinctive is Frisell's feel for
the shape of
songs, for their architecture; it's a virtuosity
of deep structure rather than surface." Bill
explains this sensibility
to Guitar Player, "For me, it's really
important to keep the melody going all the
time, whether you are actually
playing it or not, especially when it's some
kind of standard tune or familiar song form.
A lot of people play the
melody and rush right into their solo, almost
with an attitude of 'Whew - that's out of
the way, now let's really
play!' Then they just burn on chord changes,
and it doesn't relate to the song anymore.
I like to keep that
melody going. When you hear Thelonious Monk's
piano playing - or horn players like Ben
Webster, Miles
Davis and Wayne Shorter - you always hear
the melody in there. Sonny Rollins is the
classic example of that -
I've read that he thinks of the words while
he's playing the sax, so the song really
means something to him. It's
not just an excuse to play a bunch of licks
over chord changes."
Much has been made of the uncategorizable
nature of Frisell's music
and the seamlessness with which his bands
have navigated such a
variety of styles.
"Frisell's pals just
happen to be superb musical
chameleons, up to every change of gears and
genre the guitarist's catchall
music throws at them. The band even comfortably
follows the leader
onto Country and Western turf, as Frisell
often approximates the whine
of a lonely steel guitar." - Minneapolis
Star Tribune
Bill's comments
to the same publication: "When I was
in Colorado, I never really
played that country stuff or even liked it
that much, though it was all
over the radio. But as I got older, it crept
into my music a lot." In fact,
the Chicago Tribune observed that "Frisell
possesses not only
impressive compositional skills but also
a remarkable ability to
encompass seemingly antagonistic musical
genres." Commenting on
his eclectic compositional inclinations,
Frisell told DownBeat: "When I
write something, it just sort of comes out.
I'm not thinking, 'Now I'm
going to write a cowboy song'. It just happens,
then I usually think
about what must have influenced it later.
When I sit down to write
something in a certain style, it doesn't
work. I don't know if that's
important or something I need to do, or if
it doesn't matter. I don't care;
I'm just thankful something comes out sometimes."
This musical kinship with Miles Davis has
been cited repeatedly in the music press.
The New Yorker notes: “Bill
Frisell plays the guitar like Miles Davis
played the trumpet: in the hands of such
radical thinkers, their instruments simply
become different animals. And, like Davis,
Frisell loves to have a lot of legroom when
he improvises--the space that terrifies others
quickens his blood."
On
this subject DownBeat has noted: "With
his respectful if improbable eclecticism
and audible ethnic guitar
roots, Frisell is the new music's Ry Cooder...His
engagingly droll sense of humor is never
far from the surface;
no one else's persistent dissonances sound
so consistently congenial."
Sometimes using delays and
distortion and an unmistakably unique touch,
Frisell, as Jazz Times once observed "has
an airbrushed attack, a stunning timbral
palette and a seemingly innate inability
to produce a gratuitous note." Musician
has described his guitar style as "modern
in the best sense of the word, straddling
the electronic ambiance and distortion of
contemporary rock and the nuances of touch
and harmonic sophistication
usually associated with jazz." The guitarist
won the 1990 DownBeat critics' poll. "The
electric guitar sound of the decade - oozing,
cloudy enveloping - belongs to jazz renegade
Bill Frisell…Like the best artists
in any field, Frisell is not a slave to his
tools; he's the creator who gives them new
validity...His guitar sound is unmistakable
- billowing, breathlike, multi-hued, immense
at times, almost
palpable. Frisell's music is accessible and
avant-garde, a lyrical victory of man over
machine, of personality
over mechanics, of message over mathematics." -
Minneapolis Star Tribune
Biography / Recordings:
Born in Baltimore, Bill Frisell played clarinet
throughout his childhood in
Denver, Colorado. His interest in guitar
began with his exposure to pop
music on the radio. Soon, the Chicago Blues
became a passion through the
work of Otis Rush, B.B. King, Paul Butterfield
and Buddy Guy. In high
school, he played in bands covering pop and
soul classics, James Brown
and other dance material. Later, Bill studied
music at the University of
Northern Colorado before attending Berklee
College of Music in Boston
where he studied with John Damian, Herb Pomeroy
and Michael Gibbs. In
1978, Frisell moved for a year to Belgium
where he concentrated on
writing music. In this period, he toured
with Michael Gibbs and first recorded with
German bassist Eberhard
Weber. Bill moved to the New York City area
in 1979 and stayed until 1989. He now lives
in Seattle. "When
I was 16, I was listening to a lot of surfing
music, a lot of English rock. Then I saw
Wes Montgomery and somehow that kind of turned
me around. Later, Jim Hall made a big impression
on me and I took some
lessons with him. I suppose I play the kind
of harmonic things Jim would play but with
a sound that comes
from Jimi Hendrix", Frisell told Wire.
Bill also lists Paul Motian, Thelonious Monk,
Aaron Copland, Bob
Dylan, Miles Davis and his teacher, Dale
Brunin, as musical influences.
Bill’s recorded his first two albums
as a leader on ECM, both produced by Manfred
Eicher. Subdued and
lyrical in nature, In Line, the first of
the ECM recordings, employed both electric
and acoustic guitars in a series
of solos (including some overdubbing) and
duets with bassist Arild Andersen. Second
was Rambler, featuring
Kenny Wheeler, Bob Stewart, Jerome Harris
and Paul Motian. About Rambler, Fanfare said: "Bill
Frisell has
built a little masterpiece here - not just
a showcase for his own instrumental creativity
(of which there is much
in evidence), but a clever and poetic whole."
Frisell's third album
and last for ECM, Lookout For Hope, marked
the recording debut of The Bill Frisell Band
featuring Hank Roberts, Kermit Driscoll and
Joey Baron. Produced by Lee Townsend, the
album's diverse
material - ranging from country swing to
reggae, quasi-heavy metal and backbeat rock
with a twist to Monk's "Hackensack" - nevertheless possessed
the cohesive and unmistakable personality
of a working band on to a
sound of its own. High Fidelity called it "the
fullest showing of Frisell's ability to date,
especially his
compositional range." The Chicago Tribune said, "Lookout For Hope offers one of
the most hopeful signs that
contemporary jazz can evolve with dignity,
wit and charm."
Before We Were Born,
Frisell's debut recording for Nonesuch, featured
three musical settings: Peter Scherer
and Arto Lindsay produced, co-arranged and
performed on three Frisell compositions. "Some
Song and
Dance", produced by Lee Townsend, is
a suite of four pieces performed by Frisell's
Band with a saxophone
section featuring Julius Hemphill, Billy
Drewes and Doug Wieselman. Frisell's "Hard
Plains Drifter" is an
extended work shaped, produced and arranged
by John Zorn and played by the Frisell Band.
The New York
Times observed: "By following through
on the implications of his unfettered sounds,
Mr. Frisell has made his
best album."
Frisell's second Nonesuch
album, Is That You?, features nine original
Frisell compositions, one by producer
Wayne Horvitz and two cover tunes - "Chain
of Fools" and "Days of Wine and
Roses". With Frisell playing
guitars, bass, banjo, ukulele and even clarinet,
Is That You? demonstrated with great clarity
his pan-stylistic, yet
strangely unified musical world. Musician
called the album "a very personal vision,
tearing down stylistic
barriers with delicacy and sudden bursts
of emotion."
Frisell's third album
for Nonesuch, Where in the World?, also produced
by Wayne Horvitz, was the band's final
recording with cellist Hank Roberts. The
Philadelphia Inquirer said: "There is
nothing standard about Where in
the World?...Frisell is not only a master
of an unusual guitar-based sonic tapestry,
he's one of the few
composers capable of writing for an interactive
ensemble."
Have a Little Faith,
Frisell's 1992 Nonesuch recording, was something
of a tribute album. Here, he interpreted
the music of a number of American composers
whose music had inspired him - Aaron Copland,
Muddy Waters, Bob Dylan, John Hiatt,
Sonny Rollins, Stephen Foster, Charles Ives,
Victor Young, Madonna and John Philip
Sousa. The extent to which Bill has made
this music his own demonstrates the
completeness of its link to his own compositional
approach. For this recording
Frisell's Band was augmented by Don Byron
(clarinet, bass clarinet) and Guy
Klusevsek (accordion) and produced by Wayne
Horvitz. The San Francisco Bay
Guardian said, "Frisell treats each
piece with typical earnestness and lyricism,
breaking into wrenching distortion and stormy
group improv only after breathing the
original full of a softly glowing life."
This Land, Frisell's
fifth Nonesuch recording, consists of all
original material with the band and a horn
section of Don Byron (clarinets), Billy Drewes
(alto saxophone) and Curtis Fowlkes (trombone).
Produced by Lee
Townsend, the album readily displays the
connection between Frisell's own writing
and the composers' work to
whom he pays tribute on his previous Have
a Little Faith. From the standpoint of synthesizing
his celebrated
composing and arranging talents with exuberant
improvising and spirited band interaction,
it is a landmark
recording, which prompted this description
in Rolling Stone as follows: "Strange
meetings of the mysterious
and the earthy, the melancholy and the giddy,
make perfect sense by Frisell's deliciously
warped way of
thinking. The warpage is catching on and
not a moment too soon."
In 1994, Frisell recorded
a pair of recordings of music that he composed
for three silent Buster Keaton films -
The High Sign, One Week and Go West. The
band premiered this music along with the
films to a spirited and
sold-out audience at St. Ann's in Brooklyn
in May '93. The pairing displayed a natural
affinity between work of
both artists. Their works together possess
an undeniable sense of adventure and penchant
for the unexpected
that only enhances the warmth and humanity
of both the musical elements and the films
themselves. It has
proven to be the rare case where the whole
truly transcends the sum of its parts. Of
the "Go West" recording ,
Billboard noted: "With this set of music
for the classic Buster Keaton film, "Go
West," Bill Frisell has crafted
one of his finest, most evocative albums.
Evincing his best qualities as both guitarist
and composer, he harvests
melancholy Americana from deceptively modest,
episodic themes. Coloring the scenes with
acoustic as well as
his trademark electric, Frisell produces
strangely cinematic motifs on guitar, and
his rhythm cohorts - longtime
bassist Kermit Driscoll and drummer Joey
Baron - provide abundant narrative drive." Both
albums were
produced by Lee Townsend.
Frisell's success with
the Keaton films has led him to other film-related
projects. He scored the music for Gary
Larson's "Tales From the Far Side" animated
television special and Daniele Luchetti's
Italian feature film, "La
Scuola." Some of the music from these
projects has been adapted and recorded by
Frisell on Quartet, Frisell's
Nonesuch recording released in April '96.
The formation of the
Quartet, with Ron Miles (trumpet), Eyvind
Kang (violin) and Curtis Fowlkes (trombone),
was a new working band for Frisell, who had
worked with the telepathic rhythm combination
of Kermit Driscoll
and Joey Baron for nearly ten years. Frisell
told Down Beat: “It’s so different
from the traditional guitar-bassdrum
thing, even though Joey Baron, Kermit Driscoll
and I never played like a typical jazz trio.
This group,
with violin and brass, can play an orchestral
range of sounds. It’s gigantic. It’s
given me a chance to write and
arrange in an even bigger way.” Quartet,
was quickly hailed by critics. The New York
Times declared: “Quartet
may be his masterpiece.”
Nonesuch released Nashville
in April of 1997. Recorded in Nashville and
produced by Wayne Horvitz with
members of Allison Krauss’ Union Station
band - mandolin player Adam Steffey and banjo
player Ron Block -
the project also features her brother and
Lyle Lovett’s bass player Viktor Krauss,
dobro great Jerry Douglas,
vocalist Robin Holcomb and Pat Bergeson on
harmonica. “Comprising acoustic instrumental
folk tunes with
unpredictable stylistic accents, Nashville
boasts a dreamy, seductive grandeur. The
backing
mandolin/dobro/bass interplay simmers…Frisell
himself picks and strings and most of all
floats, laying out
liquid tones that settle over the melodies
like heat haze on a swampy, swimmerless lake.” wrote
the LA Weekly.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution summed it
up simply as, “Frisell’s nod
to Nashville is Americana at its best.”
In January of 1998
Frisell’s next
project Gone, Just Like A Train came out.
On
this exceptionally melodic and rhythmically
vital instrumental collection of
original compositions, Frisell is joined
by Viktor Krauss and by Jim Keltner, all
star drummer of choice for Bob Dylan, Ry
Cooder, T-Bone Burnett, George
Harrison, John Lennon and The Traveling Wilburys.
The Rocket in Seattle
wrote that “Frisell has managed to
pull together an ad hoc super trio of
musicians from drastically different pasts,
and they manage to assemble a
machine of colossal proportions: part skewered
jazz, part roadside folk blues,
part gritty rock.…Gone presents Frisell
at a creative apex. He’s integrated
a
thoroughly unique understanding of so much
American Music… And it’s all
gift-wrapped in a lean, unimposing trio framework
that conveys sheer genius in
a million directions… It flies with
shining power.” Produced by Lee
Townsend, the album proved to be one of Frisell’s
most celebrated and popular to date.
Good Dog, Happy Man,
brims full of Frisell’s
shimmering original compositions. Here he
is reunited with the
Gone Just Like a Train rhythm section of
Viktor Krauss on bass and Jim Keltner on
drums and joined by
Wayne Horvitz on Hammond B3 organ, multi-instrumentalist/slide
guitarist Greg Leisz (known for his work
with Joni Mitchell, K.D. Lang, Emmy Lou Harris,
Beck and Jimmie Dale Gilmore, among others)
plus special
guest Ry Cooder on the traditional folk song “Shenendoah”.
Produced by Lee Townsend, Good Dog, Happy
Man celebrates Frisell’s emergence
as a composer who has created a genre unto
himself. The Philadelphia
Inquirer wrote: “The 12 breathtakingly
beautiful originals on Good Dog, Happy Man
resist every obvious
classification… Frisell’s been
doing the undefinable for years – creating
revelatory music from threadbare
accompaniment; finding vital contexts for
jazz improvisation that are worlds away from
bebop; burying shiny
nuggets of melody beneath a gauzy lace-like
surface… Frisell manages to evoke
big worlds with stark single
notes and foreboding sustained tones, conjuring
a richly textured atmosphere that is both
understated and
undeniable. No matter what you call it.”
“Bill Frisell makes such consistently
great records that it would be easy to take
the guitarist for granted. That
would be sad, since no one refracts age-old
Americana through a cutting-edge prism with
the warm-hearted,
fleet-minded individuality of Frisell. With
Good Dog, Happy Man, he has crafted one of
his earthiest essays
yet. Backed by an ultra-hip band, Frisell
has forged originals whose folky melodies
and big-sky grooves make
them seem like old friends in snazzy new
clothes.” - Billboard.
Bill’s solo album, Ghost Town was
described as “moody, articulate music
is a milestone in the career of a true
innovator – enchanting as anything
he has done and a clear window into his muse” (CMJ).
With producer Lee
Townsend, Frisell has created a sonic tapestry
that weaves in and out of original material
and cover songs, some
recorded in multiple layers, others recorded
nakedly solo. According to Billboard, “Ghost
Town sounds like a
classic already”.
For Frisell's acclaimed
CD Blues Dream, released on Nonesuch in early
2001, the New Quartet of Greg Leisz,
David Piltch and Kenny Wollesen is joined
by a horn section of Ron Miles (trumpet),
Billy Drewes (alto
saxophone) and Curtis Fowlkes (trombone).
In many ways it represents a culmination
of the strands running
through many of the recordings in Frisell's
catalogue, combining the homespun lyricism
of Good Dog, Happy
Man, Gone, Just Like a Train and Nashville
with the orchestral timbres of Ouartet and
the expanded tonal
palette and harmonic sophistication afforded
by a larger group (i.e. The Sweetest Punch,
This Land and Before
We Were Born.) Produced by Lee Townsend,
it has been described as "A rich, eclectic
masterpiece." (Blair
Jackson, Mix Magazine).
The Autumn of 2001 saw
the Nonesuch release of Bill Frisell with
Dave Holland and Elvin Jones, on which
Bill was joined by two jazz legends to interpret
a number of the most enduring compositions
from his songbook
as well as Henry Manicini’s “Moon
River” and Stephen Foster’s “Hard
Times” in another Townsend-produced
set. “Holland and Jones warm well to
the folk-inflected material, complimenting
the guitarist’s offbeat charm
and unerring taste with their muscular authority.” – Billboard.
The Willies is Frisell’s characteristically
inimitable and modern take on bluegrass and
country blues with Danny
Barnes (from The Bad Livers) on banjo and
guitar and Keith Lowe, (known for his work
with Fiona Apple,
David Sylvian, Kelly Joe Phelps and Wayne
Horvitz) on bass. Produced by Lee Townsend
and released in
June, 2002 on Nonesuch, the material consists
of such traditional songs as “Cluck
Old Hen”, “John Hardy”,
“Single Girl”, “Sugar Baby”, “Blackberry
Blossom”, “Sitting on Top of
the World”, “Good Night Irene”,
“Cold, Cold Heart” and a number
of Frisell’s original compositions.
John Cratchley, in The Wire described it
as follows: “This is music that you
feel you have known yet you have never heard
before, like some treasured
memory of an event that hasn’t happened
yet .… It is firmly rooted in the
simplest of musical gestures yet
manages to build, intricate layer by intricate
layer into a manifestation of cultural timelessness ….
This is
composition of the highest order masquerading
as back-porch rambling”.
Frisell’s encounters with such Malian
musicians as singer and guitarist Boubacar
Traore and percussionist
Sidiki Camara, who has played with many of
Mali’s most renowned performers, left
him eager to further
explore the commonalities of African and
American roots musics. His grammy-nominated
2003 Nonesuch
release, The Intercontinentals, produced
by Lee Townsend, is evidence of those impulses.
In late 2001, Frisell
assembled an intriguing quartet with Brazilian
composer, singer, guitarist and percussionist
Vinicius Cantuária,
Greek-Macedonian musician Christos Govetas
on oud, bouzouki and vocals and Mali’s
Camara on percussion
and vocals. The debut concerts at Seattle's
Earshot Festival created quite a stir. Downbeat
described the
group's music as possessing "fine webs
of guitar interlacings, swaying momentum,
dense textures and rhythmic
urgency." The group was soon expanded
to include Greg Leisz (on pedal steel and
various slide guitars) and
Jenny Scheinman (violin). The material on
the album consists of Frisell compositions
plus songs by Boubacar
Traore, Cantuaria, Gilberto Gil and Govetas.
It is an album that combines Frisell’s
own brand of American
roots music and his unmistakable improvisational
style with the influences of Brazilian, Greek
and Malian
sounds. The Washington Post called it, "A
remarkable achievement - a hybrid that somehow
both respects and
transcends the styles involved..... with
a sort of earthy, relaxed feeling - it's
country music from the global
village."
Frisell’s 2003 recording with Petra
Haden, the self-titled Petra Haden and Bill
Frisell, is a collection of their
interpretations – some sparsely arranged
and others more lushly orchestrated - of
songs by Elliot Smith, Foo
Fighters, Tom Waits, George Gershwin, Henry
Mancini, Stevie Wonder, traditional material,
as well as songs
written by Frisell and Haden. Frisell, who
had known and played with Petra’s father
Charlie Haden for many
years, was captivated when he went to see
Petra perform in Seattle. The two began talking,
occasionally
performing together, and eventually they
began work on their CD, produced by Lee Townsend.
Frisell’s 2004 Nonesuch release, Unspeakable,
featuring his long-time rhythm section of
Tony Scherr and
Kenny Wollesen as well as percussionist Don
Alias, horn arrangements by Steven Bernstein,
and Frisell’s string
writing for the 858 strings of Jenny Scheinman,
Eyvind Kang and Hank Roberts is “a
revisiting of an old
friendship that stretches back 20 years:
a partnership with producer Hal Willner.
Taking fragments of obscure
vinyl records as a launching point, the duo
traverses a landscape that passes, in an
almost hallucinatory way,
through myriad styles.” – Billboard.
The Observer describes it this way: “The
brilliant 53-year old guitarist
embraces a jazzy kind of post-rock whose
most immediate point of reference is the
electric Miles Davis. It's a
multi-textured, multi-hued disc that never
sees Frisell sacrifice his impeccable technique,
or neglect the deep
structure of his songs, but never sees him
forget to have fun either." And the
Sunday Independent had this to say
about it: "'Unspeakable' radiates the
kind of authority that only absolute confidence
in the primacy of melody
and feel in music can confer." Unspeakable
won a Grammy award in 2005 for Best Contemporary
Jazz
recording.
East/West is a double-live
CD featuring Frisell's two working trios. "West" features
Bill's trio with Viktor
Krauss and Kenny Wollesen and was recorded
at Yoshi's in Oakland. "East" features
Frisell's other working trio
with Tony Scherr and Kenny Wollesen. It was
recorded at the Village Vanguard in New York
City. Further
East/Further West offers additional material
by these two trios vailable in download
format only. Produced by
Lee Townsend, Salon.com described it as follows. "The
two trios are vastly different. In general
terms, the Krauss trio works by accumulation
and aims to mesmerize, while the Scherr trio
operates much closer to traditional jazz...
Wolleson, essentially a groove player
in the Krauss trio (and a monstrously good
one), becomes an interactive, improvising
presence in the Scherr
trio..... In both settings Frisell is a wonder....
For any skeptics of modern jazz, this should
be required listening...
one of the best of his career."
Other projects include
a Burt Bacharach – Elvis
Costello CD, The Sweetest Punch, on Decca
which features
Frisell’s arrangements of the same
12 tunes Elvis and Burt recorded together
on their pop record for Mercury,
Painted From Memory. The record was produced
by Lee Townsend and features Bill on guitar,
Viktor Krauss
on bass, Brian Blade on drums and a horn
section comprised of Curtis Fowlkes on trombone,
Ron Miles on
trumpet, Don Byron on clarinet and Billy
Drewes on saxophone. Cassandra Wilson and
Elvis Costello lend
vocals to a couple of tracks.
In September 1998 Nonesuch released a duo
recording of jazz standards by Frisell and
labelmate pianist Fred
Hersch entitled Songs We Know. Downbeat‘s
1998 Critics’ poll recognized Bill’s
Nashville album awarding it the “Album
Of The Year,” and his
Quartet record won the German equivalent
of a Grammy, the prestigious Deutsche Schallplatten
Preis.
Meanwhile, he has been lauded as “Guitarist
of the Year” by numerous publications
and organizations over the
span of many years.
In 2002, Frisell was
appointed the musical director of "Century of Song” " by
artistic director Gerard Mortier
and Chief Dramaturg Thomas Woerdehoff for
the 2003-2004 seasons at the Ruhr Triennale
Arts festival in
Germany. The celebrated series of programs
featured guest songwriters, interpreters
and performers in
collaboration with Frisell not only to investigate
their own bodies of work, but to bring a
fresh perspective to
songs and songwriters that have been influential
upon their own music, as well. Guests included
Elvis
Costello, Suzanne Vega, Van Dyke Parks, Loudon
Wainwright III, Rickie Lee Jones, Vinicius
Cantuaria, Vic
Chesnutt, Ron Sexsmith, Jesse Harris, Petra
Haden and Marc Ribot with band members being
specially
selected for each program. With Lee Townsend
producing, the concerts took place in former
industrial spaces
that have been converted into performance
venues in the Ruhr region of Northern Germany.
Moviegoers will hear
Frisell playing alongside Bono, Brian Eno,
Jon Hassell and Daniel Lanois on the soundtrack
of Wim Wenders’ film,
Million Dollar Hotel,
starring Mel Gibson with a screenplay by
Bono. He also composed and recorded
original soundtrack music for four recent
productions including American
Hollow, an HBO documentary special by Rory
Kennedy about an Appalachian
family, a public radio program about the
human genome called The DNA Files,
the music for two Gus Van Sant films - Finding
Forrester and the remake of
Psycho, and the music for Gary Larson's second
animated television project “Tales From The Far Side II.” Unspeakable
won a 2005 Grammy for Best
Contemporary Jazz Album.
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Saturday Night
- September 20, 2008 / 10:30pm |
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Night Club Stage |
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