{"id":4874,"date":"2014-01-01T22:21:10","date_gmt":"2014-01-01T22:21:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/jazzusa.com\/an-interview-with-lee-ritenour\/"},"modified":"2018-11-04T14:08:05","modified_gmt":"2018-11-04T22:08:05","slug":"an-interview-with-lee-ritenour","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/?p=4874","title":{"rendered":"An Interview With Lee Ritenour"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/storypix\/lee.gif\" align=\"right\" width=\"276\" height=\"226\"\/><br \/><font size=\"3\" style=\"font-face:verdana; font-size:12pt\" color=\"#0000FF\" face=\"Verdana, Helvetica\"><b>  An Interview With Lee Ritenour<\/b><\/font><br \/><font size=\"1\" color=\"#0000FF\" face=\"Verdana, Helvetica\">  June 28, 1997<br \/>i.e. Music Studio<br \/>by Mark Ruffin<\/p>\n<p><font size=\"1\" color=\"#000000\" face=\"Verdana,Tahoma, Helvetica\">  <a href=\"#go_on\">  [Click Here To Jump To The Story Continuation Point]<\/a><\/p>\n<p><font size=\"2\" style=\"font-face:verdana; font-size:10pt\" color=\"#000000\" face=\"Verdana,Tahoma, Helvetica\">  <b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: How&#8217;s the little one?<br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: Little Wes is fantastic.  He&#8217;s on his way to New York.  He&#8217;s been in  Brazil with my wife. Carmen is down there working on a project.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: How old is he now?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>:  He&#8217;s gonna be four this month.  He loves music.  He&#8217;s got it in the  blood.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: Is your wife a musician too?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: Not really.  But being Brazilian, I think it&#8217;s also in the blood.  They  all play a little percussion and they all sing do music.  When I&#8217;m down in  Brazil, I&#8217;m always amazed just how much music is in the air down there.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: Have you ever met Antonio Carlos Jobim?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: Of course. My wife, curiously enough,  went to high school with Tom  Jobim&#8217;s wife Anna Jobim and they are the closest friends. So whenever Carmen  goes to Brazil and go to Rio she usually stays at Anna house.  I only met  Jobim a couple times.       I can certainly describe my first meeting with Brazil because it was  very influential.  I was 20 years old.  I was at a party at Sergio Mendes  house.   Sergio had a recording studio in the back of his house and there was  a lot of people there that night, and there was a jam session towards the end  of the evening.  Jobim was there and Dave Grusin  was there and I&#8217;m not  absolutely sure if that was the first time I met Dave, but I didn&#8217;t know Dave  very well at that point either.  I was doing some recording for Sergio Mendes  so that&#8217;s why I was there, just starting into my career.  Jobim was there and  sat there and played a new composition that night that turned out to be  Children&#8217;s Game that&#8217;s on the current Twist Of Jobim record.  <a name=\"go_on\"\/>  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: It&#8217;s on Portrait too, right?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: Yes, I&#8217;ve covered that tune twice.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/storypix\/ritenour.gif\" width=\"150\" height=\"39\"\/><\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>:  And Jobim played some piano&#8230;.  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: Yeah, and I played some guitar and Dave played a little Fender Rhodes  and Oscar Castro-Neves was playing some acoustic guitar and I think there was  a drummer there Claudio Sloane.  We had just a good old jam session, but  mostly Jobim would sit there and play tunes for us and we all would just go  gosh, that great.   <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: Did you play with him that night?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: Sure.  I forget what tunes we played.  We all did a little jamming.  It  was something I&#8217;ve never forgot.  I&#8217;ve met him once or twice since then at  shows and different things but nothing like that first time.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: We know how you feel about him now.  How did you feel about  him then?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>:  Very much the same.   I grew up in the 60&#8217;s as a teen-ager and of  course that was the first huge influence of Brazilian music in America with  that infamous Stan Getz, Astrud &amp; Joao Gilberto, Tom Jobim recording,.  So  the year I&#8217;m talking about was sometime in the early 70&#8217;s. By that time they  had already hit the big wave of the bossa nova in the late 60&#8217;s,  So to me  the guy was already an idol because I already knew most of these great tunes  that he had written.  I had fallen in love with Brazilian music in general  and his music as a teen-ager.  I went to Brazil when I was 19, apparently it  was in the blood pretty early on and later I married a Brazilian and a lot of  my records have had a Brazilian feeling.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>:  When you went down there when you were 19, was that to tour?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: No, that was just because I had fallen so much in love with the music  and I had met some Brazilian musicians, Oscar Castro-Neves being one of them.   He was the guitarist in Sergio&#8217;s band at the time and  I decided, with a  friend, to go down to Rio for a little vacation and that ended up being a  very interesting trip as well because I bought my guitar, I ended up doing a  little recording with Oscar Castro-Neves down there. I spent New Years Eve on  the beach down there and going to several major Brazilian musicians houses.   The Brazilians love to jam so in those days you jammed.  It was an  invitation that I couldn&#8217;t resist at the time to go down and it really wasn&#8217;t  for anything specific, it was just a little holiday.  I guess it was  something I was really drawn to. It was great.    <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: Why did you start a record company?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: (laughter)   <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>:  Why throw caution, not to mention money to the wind?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: Yeah, what a crazy idea.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: Yes. Did you think because Dave Grusin got $40 million dollars  you could get it too?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: (Big laugh) I did it more from a musical point a view. I tend to be a  little bit of a control freak.  It&#8217;s interesting, as time goes on, I want  more avenues for my music and the different things that I do in a musical  capacity and I had two partners that sort of showed up on my doorstep that  had been friends for many years, that it seemed to make sense.   One of them  was Mark Wexler who ran GRP  Records for 11 years for Dave Grusin and Larry  Rosen, and from an artist point of view, he was the one that was the  work-aholic, I mean Dave and Larry of course were too, but  Mark was really  the essence of how the day to day things got done at that company.  And all  the artists really appreciated him and he became a buddy.  When he left GRP,  we sort of just glanced off and said maybe we should do something ourselves  one of these days.  At the same time, Michael Faigen, another friend of ours  who owns Jazziz magazine, started talking to Mark and the three of us put our  heads together.  What&#8217;s nice is the synergy in the areas that we cover..  I&#8217;m   the music guy.  Mark is the business guy, Michael is the multi-media and  promotion type man. Between the three entities, we had an interesting  synergy.   At that point we looked for a partner and Polygram really opened  up their doors and they&#8217;ve got a wonderful jazz staff over at Verve.  So far  it has turned out to be a terrific joint venture. It&#8217;s a tremendous amount of  work.  We&#8217;ve already come out with two albums and it&#8217;s not nearly enough.    <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: What kind of work?  Is it different from anything you thought  it would be?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: Probably not.   In a Utopian sense, because I have such good business  partners, I thought that I would mostly be involved with the music, but of  course I&#8217;m involved in everything and that&#8217;s probably, ultimately, the way I  wanted it anyway.  I was also from a musical point of view looking to do two  things.  One I wanted to do more producing, but I didn&#8217;t want to do producing  just for the sake of it, because a lot of people have asked me throughout the  years and I&#8217;ve kind of shied away from it because I wanted to make sure I  kept my artistry in tact and also my guitar playing.  On the other hand, I  felt myself drifting a little more towards production but I thought that if  it was something on my own label, that there was a little extra emphasis and  a extra degree of help I could lend.  Also if I didn&#8217;t have time or I didn&#8217;t  feel I was the right producer, I have the expertise to maybe suggest the  right producer, go find the producer, find the right studio, find the right  engineer, find the right combination of musicians or band.  So you don&#8217;t have  to be totally involved in every project, but you can be involved in the point  that you help.  I found this very intriguing.  Also I wanted to develop some  new artists.  I think that&#8217;s very exciting, to get somebody from the ground  up and then of course, work with some established people.  On a personal  front, it was very challenging and very desirable to eventually bring my  recording career over to i.e. and make my own records there and have a little  more control over as to what happens after the record is made.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>:  I remember a few years ago when we were talking and you were  saying how when you first went to GRP, everything was basically done on a  handshake.  There was no contract until the company was bought, and then you  had a contract.  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: Right.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: I heard that once you started i.e., that you were still under  contract to GRP and that you couldn&#8217;t put your name on A Twist Of Jobim as  the artist. Is that true?         <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>:  It&#8217;s definitely been complicated.  The situation with Tommy LiPuma and  GRP&#8230;.  Tommy is a wonderful person and he has been very understanding that I  wanted to go do this with my own label and at Polygram.  At the same time,  I&#8217;m still a GRP recording artist.  I have a live album coming out.  I&#8217;m very  happy about that project, because that was Tommy&#8217;s idea.  He loves live  albums, he&#8217;s been involved with many of them as a producer and he encouraged  it and I found the right band and the right combination of material I think  to put on that album.  At the same time we worked it out that the next studio  album is going to be on i.e. and then the arrangement is for me to go back to  GRP and do another project for them as well.  Right now, I&#8217;m definitely  splitting my personality and sharing between the two labels.  It is a little  complicated at times, contractually.  The jazz business is very funny because  everyone just in any business is competitive.  Meanwhile we&#8217;re rooting for my  live record at GRP and I&#8217;m rooting for Dave Grusin&#8217;s  Mancini album,  meanwhile Twist of Jobim is killing over here at i.e.  There&#8217;s sort of a  competition of course naturally, but there&#8217;s a very nice relationship,  because I totally respect Tommy and he totally respects me and he and Mark  Wexler had become very good friends  and he&#8217;s very good friends with Michael  Faigen, so the jazz business is too small a business to have too many  enemies. (Laughs) What&#8217;s nice is that we have a bunch of good friends and I  couldn&#8217;t ask for a nicer guy in Tommy LiPuma.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: So it&#8217;s very amenable for you?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: I think that if GRP had their druthers, I&#8217;m sure they&#8217;d been happier if  I&#8217;d just stuck there. But they understand that I had a chance to grow and I  wasn&#8217;t going to have my own record company within GRP, that structure wasn&#8217;t  there, and the Polygram people offered the situation and it worked out well.   It even gets more complicated,  I belong to this group called Fourplay which  is at Warner Brothers.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: Yeah, man, you&#8217;re sort of like George Clinton at his height, a  contract at every major label.  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: (Laughs)  I didn&#8217;t mean for that to happen.  Someone said to me the  other day, &#8216;Lee, you&#8217;re on three labels, isn&#8217;t that a conflict of interest?  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: Well, wouldn&#8217;t it had been easy just to get some live tracks  together and just give it to GRP to satisfy the deal?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: I don&#8217;t think the record sounds like that.  I certainly didn&#8217;t do that  and would never do that.  First of all, it was Tommy&#8217;s suggestion to do the  live record and I thought it was a good one because there&#8217;s one interesting  fact about this album is that I have 25 solo albums, I&#8217;ve never done a live  record.  That&#8217;s why Tommy is such a great producer.  He came up with the idea  for Dave Grusin to do the Mancini tribute.  I think that was a very clever  idea because Dave was very influenced by Henry Mancini.  They&#8217;re both great  film composers.  Dave is very close to Mancini&#8217;s wife Jenny and I think Dave  has a great infinity for Mancini&#8217;s music and knew how to handle it and I  think Tommy saw that.    So, I think that was a very nice idea.  Likewise,  there&#8217;s a lot of live albums out there and people come and go with live  project and for some reason, there&#8217;s some kind of misnomer in the industry  that people put out live albums when they&#8217;re sort of in-between their regular  projects.  That&#8217;s not the way it used to be with live albums.  Live albums  used to be a very serious endeavor for an artist in their career, because it  shows a whole other side of the artist.  So I&#8217;ve never gotten to show that so  I put a lot of work and effort into this album and sonically, it&#8217;s recorded  almost like a studio record, and I picked a very interesting combination of  musicians in  Bill Evans, Alan Pasqua, and  Sonny Emory.  There&#8217;s a great  blend of what I like in contemporary jazz and straight ahead jazz together.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: I&#8217;m really surprised you got Dave Grusin to tour. How long is  this tour you&#8217;re about to embark on?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: The tour for me stretches quite a bit because we&#8217;re going to Europe for  three and half weeks, but the U.S. tour is just about 14 shows, in all the  major cities, and Dave is doing almost all of those.  It&#8217;s a pleasure to get  him back out on the road because we really, other than these one off  specialty shows that occasionally we do, he&#8217;s never really gone on a tour  since about 1985, when we had Harlequin out.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: How&#8217;d you get him to do it?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>:  We&#8217;re buddies and he loved playing on A Twist Of Jobim and I think he  felt proud about his Mancini project and the schedule is really not too hard  and he had a little bit of time in June so I caught him at the right moment.   In general, he doesn&#8217;t like to go on the road too much.  There was one  European tour we did one year where, the European tours are always so  difficult because you do 20 one-nighters in 20 different countries, and that  one practically killed him. (Laughs)  That was pretty much the end of it.  I  promised him that this wasn&#8217;t going to be like that.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: There&#8217;s a lot of real positive things to talk to you about in  the making of A Twist Of Jobim, but there&#8217;s one real sad note, and that was  it was the last recording of Art Porter.  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: It was actually Mark Wexler who suggested him because Art was on  Verve\/Forecast and when I was looking for a soprano player to accompany El  DeBarge on that tune, I was actually thinking soprano or maybe alto, and Mark  said what about Art Porter.  I said that&#8217;s interesting, but I don&#8217;t really  know him that well.  I&#8217;ve met him, he&#8217;s opened for me on a show or two.  He  said he would be great on that tune.  So, we arranged it and we flew him out  here and he was so nervous, and he&#8217;s such a sweet guy.  He was nervous  because it was the first time he had worked with me in the studio and he  wanted it to be right.  It was so right.  Like the first take was good  enough.  I think we did two more and it took all of a half-hour and he had  such a sweet sound.  And it turned out to be his last recording.  It was so  shocking that he had that accident, but he left a small legacy and it&#8217;s here  and there&#8217;s such beautiful playing on that track.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>:  Who else kind of nailed things for you and made the album  easier?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: There was so many different kinds of people that did the project.  Oleta  Adams came in and just nailed her stuff very easily.  Almost all the  musicians, you know the Christian McBride&#8217;s , the Ernie Watts&#8217; the Alan  Pasqua&#8217;s, the Harvey Mason&#8217;s they nailed the stuff very easily.  But some  people like to take more time, Dave is like in the middle.  He likes to get  inside the thing and work it a little bit, take his time, but not too much.   Al Jarreau on the other hand, he works late at night.  He only warms up  about three in the morning.  You&#8217;ve got to hang with Al.  We&#8217;ve got to hang,  talk, just get into the music and just vibe it out and around four o&#8217;clock in  the morning is when the good stuff comes out with him and I&#8217;m not quite the  night bird anymore so it was like okay, but he&#8217;s another great artist.   Everybody was totally different.  Art Porter nailed it in a few minutes and  Oleta the same way.  Other people took more time.  But I&#8217;m used to giving  that time because I can definitely take my time to do it too.  Sometimes,  I&#8217;ll get things on the first take but sometimes I find myself still tweaking  something hours later.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: Are you going to have vocalists on the tour?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: We did get El DeBarge for the West Coast, El was not available for that  mid-west swing.  Vesta Williams is singing with us because Oleata Adams was  in the studio doing a record so she was not available, so Vesta is singing.   And then we have a new Brazilian artist that we&#8217;re signing to i.e., a young  lady who&#8217;s a very interesting artist named  Badi Assad.  She&#8217;s a Brazilian  artist.  I actually didn&#8217;t even know she was Brazilian when I first heard  her, bur she&#8217;s an incredible classical guitar player with incredible  classical guitar chops.  She sings like a bird, she looks beautiful and she  plays very different.  She&#8217;ll do things where she&#8217;ll play the guitar rhythm  with her left hand from a very unusual rhythm.  She&#8217;ll start playing the body  of the guitar as a percussion instrument with her right hand or playing her  face or playing her body as a percussion instrument, and at the same time,  singing a melody.  Sometimes, she&#8217;ll play a percussion instrument with her  right hand and play the guitar with her left hand and sing a third melody.   Some of it is actually kind of avant-garde.  It&#8217;s very different.  She&#8217;s  going to be on the tour opening up and also joining us in the middle of the  show.  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>:  Speaking of folks on i.e., I know you have Eric Marienthal,  anything else in the future?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: We&#8217;re talking to Miss Vesta, it&#8217;s not a done deal yet, but we&#8217;re  talking.  You know she did a song on Eric Marienthal&#8217;s new record.  A great  version of Until You Come Back To Me.   <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: What about Fourplay?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: This is a Lee Ritenour year for recordings because I&#8217;ve got them coming  out all over the place.  Fourplay coming out right around the corner with a  best of album with two new tracks.  One of the new tracks is with Take Six  and it&#8217;s the Stevie tune Higher Ground.  Harvey Mason, our drummer,  did most  of the production on it and then there&#8217;s a new tune of mine that&#8217;s also on  the recording.  It seems a little early for a best of after only three albums  but again, that group has a problem getting together and a lot of it these  days has to do with my schedule. (laughs)  Hopefully, we&#8217;ll get together  early next year for a new recording.   <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>:  You know one of my favorite solos of yours was on a early  Patrice Rushen album called Before The Dawn.  I can think of countless  others, after all of these sessions, is it over 2,000 or something&#8230;  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: You know there was this Japanese fan about six years ago,  a Japanese  fan came up to me in Tokyo one day and he said I&#8217;d like to give you something  Mr. Ritenour and  I said ok.  I figured it was a tape or a photo I was going  to sign and he pulled out this book almost and it was pages after pages of  everything I&#8217;ve ever recorded and it added up to almost 3,000 sessions.  I  looked at it and I don&#8217;t think he missed anything.  I think it was all there.   I had my dad put it in a scrapbook.(laughs)  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: Any memorable sessions in any of those?  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>:  I love to tell this story to my friends, I&#8217;ve never told it in an  interview.  One night we were recording George Benson&#8217;s album Give Me The  Night and Quincy was producing.  This was many years ago and the cast of  characters in that room was George playing guitar, I was playing rhythm  guitar.  We had Harvey Mason.  We had Louis Johnson on bass.  We had Greg  Phillanganes and we also had Ray Parker Jr.  So there was a bunch of guitar  players and Herbie (Hancock) was playing piano that night.  It was quite a  cast of people.  I forget which song we recorded that night, but Quincy said,  Stevie Wonder is coming down later.  He wrote a song for George and he&#8217;s  coming down around midnight.  So we&#8217;ll finish this song and we&#8217;ll have some  dinner and wait for Stevie.  Okay, great.  So we all wait.  We wait, we wait.   Now it&#8217;s two o&#8217;clock in the morning, then three.  They get a call,&#8217;Stevie&#8217;s  coming, just wait.&#8217;  Now Quincy&#8217;s real nervous because he&#8217;s got all these  expensive musicians who are on the clock here and we&#8217;re all just hanging out  doing nothing.  Finally, Stevie Wonder shows up.  He shows up with this huge  entourage, so then you got to hang out for an hour.  Now it&#8217;s four o&#8217;clock in  the morning and Quincy finally get Stevie over to the piano. &#8216;Stevie come on,  show the guys your song.  Let&#8217;s do your song.&#8217;  And so Stevie walks over to the piano and everyone&#8217;s anxious to here the song  and Stevie sits down.  He starts to play the song.  He starts the intro and  man it sounds great.  He stops after the intro and he says &#8216;Q, what do you  think man?&#8217;  And Q says &#8216;aw man that&#8217;s beautiful Stevie, go on.&#8217;  And Stevie  says &#8216;well give me a few more minutes and I&#8217;ll finish the tune.&#8217;  (big  laughter) You should have seen the look on Quincy&#8217;s face.  We were on the  floor man.   .<\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA &#8216;Zine<\/b>: Well as a producer, I hope you&#8217;re never faced with anything  like that.  <br \/><b>RIT<\/b>: (laughter) Maybe Q could afford it, but I can&#8217;t.  That was the end of  that session.       <\/p>\n<p>End            <\/font>  <?php require($DOCUMENT_ROOT . \"_footer.htm\");   ??><\/font><\/font><\/body><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>An Interview With Lee Ritenour June 28, 1997i.e. Music Studioby<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-4874","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-interviews"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4874","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=4874"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4874\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":11198,"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4874\/revisions\/11198"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=4874"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=4874"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=4874"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}