{"id":4880,"date":"2014-01-01T22:21:10","date_gmt":"2014-01-01T22:21:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/jazzusa.com\/an-interview-with-lester-bowie\/"},"modified":"2018-11-04T14:07:37","modified_gmt":"2018-11-04T22:07:37","slug":"an-interview-with-lester-bowie","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/?p=4880","title":{"rendered":"An Interview with Lester Bowie"},"content":{"rendered":"<p align=\"left\">  <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/storypix\/lesterbowie.JPG\" width=\"150\" height=\"142\" alt=\"Lester Bowie\" border=\"0\" align=\"right\"\/><font face=\"Verdana, Helvetica\" size=\"1\" color=\"blue\">A talk with<br \/><\/font>  <font color=\"blue\" face=\"Verdana, Helvetica\" size=\"4\">Lester Bowie<\/font><br \/><font face=\"Verdana, Helvetica\" size=\"1\" style=\"font-face:verdana; font-size:8pt\">  <\/font><font color=\"#000000\" face=\"Verdana, Helvetica\" size=\"1\" style=\"font-face:verdana; font-size:8pt\"> by Fred Jung<\/font>  <\/p>\n<p align=\"left\">  <font size=\"1\" face=\"Verdana\">  Hard-line traditionalists frown on Lester Bowie.  He doesn&#8217;t neatly fit into  any cute categories and he is as anti-establishment as you will get.  After  all, Bowie is a card carrying member of the AACM, making him one of only a  handful of musicians who are doing anything creative in modern music.  It is  too bad that working class musicians like Bowie are slowly being eliminated  all together from jazz, but isn&#8217;t that in line with contemporary society.  Has  anyone not seen the decline of the middle class in America?  I had an  opportunity to sit down with Bowie and he let loose on the current state of  jazz, his new album, and his beginnings as a young man in St. Louis.  This is  his portrait, unedited and in his own words.  <\/font><font size=\"2\" style=\"font-face:verdana; font-size:10pt\" face=\"Verdana\" color=\"maroon\">  <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  Let&#8217;s go back to the start.  <a name=\"more\"\/>  <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  My father was a music teacher and he was a high school band director in  St. Louis for thirty years and then he also played trumpet.  So quite  naturally, all of us learned how to play music from the very beginning.  I  think I started when I was about five years old and I&#8217;ve been playing ever  since.  I turned professional when I was fifteen,   <\/font><font size=\"2\" style=\"font-face:verdana; font-size:10pt\" face=\"Verdana\" color=\"black\">  started doing gigs with  people like Sonny Boy Williamson and Chuck Berry and then I just went on from  there, a lot of rhythm and blues people and eventually jazz.  I always wanted  to be a jazz musician, but it wasn&#8217;t always possible to make a living playing  jazz.  So I got a lot of experience from circuses and carnivals and various  rock and roll and rhythm and blues acts, The Impressions, I was the music  director for Fontella Bass, Jackie Wilson, Albert King, Oliver Sain, Little  Milton, Rufus Thomas, Carla Thomas, Jerry Butler, Gene Chandler, just a whole  host of all of the people that were on the rhythm and blues scene in the early  &#8217;60s.      <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  You stated that you wanted to be a jazz musician from the very beginning,  what attracted you about the music that you wanted to make this your life&#8217;s  endeavor?    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  When I was coming up in the early &#8217;40s, Louis Armstrong was very popular  and some of the records we had around the house was of Louis Armstrong.  And  at that time, jazz was the supreme music.  It was the pop music of that time.  Rhythm and blues was just beginning to, sort of, take hold.  Louis Jordan and  cats like that, in the late &#8217;40s and early &#8217;50s, they started to take hold,  but during that time jazz music was considered the star and I wanted to be a  trumpet player like Louis Armstrong.  Clyde McCoy was another one of my  favorites.  We also had a couple of Clyde McCoy records and at that time he  had a hit called &#8220;The Sugar Blues.&#8221;  The lifestyle attracted me.  I would read  about the jazz musicians and everything about the whole genre just, sort of,  it appealed to me.  My father was a trumpet player and a music teacher and I  don&#8217;t even remember actually when I started.  And I&#8217;ve never played anything  else.  I tried other instruments, bass and fiddled around with the piano, but  I&#8217;ve never really attempted to play anything but trumpet.  It was a favorite  then and now.        <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  Aside from your father, any other influences?    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  When I was coming up, St. Louis was quite a jazz town and there was a lot  of musicians around and I, kind of, followed them around.  I listened to a lot  of records, of course, Miles Davis and Dizzy Gillespie also helped me.  I&#8217;d  like to point out that usually musicians have two sources of influence.  You  have the musicians that you have heard on record or read about.  You&#8217;ve  listened to their music and their styles influence you and then you have the  musicians that you actually hung out with, actually, that really did help you.  I always admired Miles Davis and Dizzy Gillespie and even though I knew them  briefly, I never knew them that well.  Johnny Coles and Marcus Belgrave were  two people that, we actually ran together.  They really gave me pointers,  literally gave me pointers, so I think they were really influential in my  selection of this music and the trumpet.      <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  Let&#8217;s talk about your association with Roscoe Mitchell.    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  Once we got together, I knew I was home.  For example, I was working as  Fontella&#8217;s director and we were doing a lot of shows.  We were traveling  around a lot, doing a lot of shows.  We finally ended up moving to Chicago.  After about a year in Chicago, doing jingles and playing with various bands in  Chicago, I was getting, kind of, bored, because there was really no challenge  to the music.  And then there was a baritone player that took me to an AACM  (Association for the Advancement of Creative Music) rehearsal and this was  where I met the whole AACM.  Muhal Richard Abrams&#8217; Experimental Band (Eddie  Harris, Roscoe Mitchell, Donald Garrett, and Victor Sproles) was rehearsing  and Roscoe and Muhal and all the AACM members were there, Malachi Favors, they  were all there.  Once I went in that room, I immediately knew that I was home.  I had never seen so many crazy individuals in one space.  I felt immediately,  immediately I felt at home.  By the time I got home from the rehearsal, Roscoe  was calling me on the phone and wanted to start a band and we started  rehearsing the next day and we&#8217;ve been playing together ever since.  It&#8217;s been  about thirty-three, thirty-four years now.         <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  Let&#8217;s talk about your involvement with your Brass Fantasy Band, From the  Root to the Source, and The Art Ensemble of Chicago.    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  All of those three bands almost comprise my total musical personality.  It takes that many different groups to really satisfy my musical curiosity, so  to speak.  The Art Ensemble is the oldest band.  We&#8217;ve been together for  thirty-three years now.  The Art Ensemble is just an art group.  It&#8217;s  experimental and searching and trying to extend the boundaries of the music,  of the techniques, the compositions, the whole thing.  We&#8217;re really searching,  still are searching for a lot of newer things.  Brass Fantasy is what I call  my avant-pop band.  It&#8217;s a show band as opposed to the Art Ensemble.  The Art  Ensemble is an art band.  The Brass Fantasy is a show band.  Instead of my  normal, white lab jacket, I wear a white, sequin lab jacket with Brass  Fantasy, because it&#8217;s a show band.  We try to do is to play popular music, but  in a creative manner and in a way that people have never really heard it  before.  It&#8217;s about reinventing it.  It&#8217;s about taking a sound that was made  popular by singers that sing it and making that same emotional feeling felt  without having a singer, or guitar, or a bass, or keyboards.  It&#8217;s about  extending the language of the brass choir into the popular arena.  The Root to  the Source was a combination of gospel, jazz, and rhythm and blues, a  combination of all of the three.  We have the rhythm and blues, Fontella Bass  singing.  We had Martha Bass, who has recently passed, who was a gospel  singer.  I had a, kind of, standard jazz quintet in the band and it was, kind  of, a combination of all of those elements.  We had the show elements.  We had  the rhythm and blues elements.  We had the gospel elements, I mean that really  focused on those areas and it takes those three to really express myself.  I  couldn&#8217;t really express myself in any one way, or with any one group, or  playing one particular sort of style.  I think the musicians of today are much  broader in scope then they were, let&#8217;s say thirty or forty years ago.  We draw  influences from many places.  We have much more information, just as the  people have much more information.  The audience now is very different from  the audience in the 1950s.  The 1950s were, even before that, when Charlie  Parker and Miles Davis did their thing, when Duke Ellington was popular and  Louis was popular.  Louis was popular, damn near, before flight.  Planes were  made out of fabric, so the times have changed.  People have more information  now.  People have computers.  People are on-line.  The audience now will go to  a jazz concert one day, the ballet the next day, the opera the day after that,  and then a blues concert the day after that.  They are much more informed and  it takes much more music to really impress them or to give them information  they don&#8217;t have and that&#8217;s what I&#8217;ve been concerned with.      <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  The majority of the mainstream media is traditional and the audience, as  you perceive, is hungry for new knowledge, does the mainstream media, critics  and writer, impede on jazz&#8217;s progress into the twenty-first century?    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  Boy, it really does.  It really impedes on it, because what happens is  people, they believe what they read and they, instead of pushing to expand the  horizons of the music, most of the critics have been very conservative about,  conservative that I must say, in a very incorrect way.  It&#8217;s been a complete  misinterpretation of what the tradition of jazz is.  You have this group of  people that are traditionalists and they call themselves in the jazz  tradition, and yet they forget that the jazz tradition is creativity.  It&#8217;s  innovation.  It&#8217;s moving forward.  It&#8217;s a young music that&#8217;s growing and to  impede the growth of that, to stunt the growth of that, to me, is a crime.  And that&#8217;s what has happened.  The writers have really stunted the growth of  the music.  The music now, if it wasn&#8217;t for the few musicians that continue to  push forward, there wouldn&#8217;t even be any music.  The music would have stopped.  It would be dead, just like classical music has been killed off.        <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  There are very few classical composers that are receiving any notoriety,  if fact, you could probably count them on one hand.  Most of what is being  released was composed hundreds of years ago.  You can&#8217;t count the amount of  Beethoven&#8217;s 9th that there are on the market today.  Do you fear that what has  happened with classical music will happen with jazz?      <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  You are right, Fred.  They are trying to do the same thing with the  music.  You see, Fred, once the culture is under control, if we control all  the art in this country, we can control the people.  Music, classical music is  about stimulating the intellect.  Art is about stimulating the intellect, but  once it&#8217;s controlled and killed off like that, they call it canonization and I  call it blowing it up with a cannon.  Instead of developing the music, they  stop the music in it&#8217;s tracks.  That has happened now.  Lincoln Center is  supposed to be the most important thing to happen to jazz.   Nothing has  happened at Lincoln Center.  Nothing has been created there.  There are no  great musicians coming out of there.  Wynton Marsalis is supposed to be the  king of the trumpet.  This is the first time a leader has been elected by  someone other than the musicians themselves.  It is a shame because that is  the attempt, to do exactly the same thing they&#8217;ve done with classical music  and with everything else.  It happens also in painting.  The creative painters  don&#8217;t get a break.  It&#8217;s hard for them to get out of here.  It&#8217;s really very  difficult and that is a problem.      <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  Who are some musicians that are moving the music forward?    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  The most organized of all these musicians has been the AACM, which was an  organization that was dedicated to moving the music forward.  Muhal Richard  Abrams, with his Experimental Orchestra, Henry Threadgill, Anthony Braxton,  Roscoe Mitchell, Leo Smith (Wadada Leo Smith), Leroy Jenkins, there are  countless number of members within that group that are trying to move the  music forward.  And then you have, for example, we were inspired by Ornette  Coleman and Cecil Taylor, who are also still struggling very hard to survive  in this music after all of these years.  You&#8217;ve got a countless number of  other musicians.  You have some musicians in Detroit and in St. Louis, Oliver  Lake, the World Saxophone Quartet, the late Julius Hemphill, all these are  musicians that were writing in an entirely different way, but whose work has  almost been buried or stymied.  I mean, we survive because of our belief in  the spirit of the music, but it&#8217;s been very difficult and I&#8217;m afraid that  after we&#8217;re gone, I don&#8217;t know what&#8217;s going to happen with this music.  Unless  there is a group of people, and I don&#8217;t see it in the younger musicians,  because as you said, Fred, they&#8217;ve been, sort of, scared off.  I don&#8217;t see a  movement of twenty, twenty-five-year-old, thirty-year-old musicians towards  playing creative music.  I just don&#8217;t see that.  The musicians that are  creative are William Parker, oh, and there&#8217;s a drummer named Leon Parker, who  is a younger musician, I really like his work.  He has a different approach to  drums.  And there&#8217;s Olu Dara, who is a guy my age that&#8217;s been out there a long  time.  There another, Graham Haynes, who is a young trumpet player that&#8217;s  trying to do things.  But these guys are having a very, very hard time.  I  would imagine, a worse time than we have had.  It&#8217;s an effort to kill the  music.  I hope for the sake of this society that doesn&#8217;t happen because jazz  is the first music that was representative of the whole planet, of all the  people on the planet.  It was the first music that could accept influences  from anywhere and it&#8217;s the only music that is in a growth period.  All the  other music has been killed off.  African music has been that way forever,  Chinese music, or Indian music, but jazz is growing.  It&#8217;s going through all  these different things.  It&#8217;s still growing but, like I said, they&#8217;re trying  to stop the development of it.      <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  You mentioned a few names, Oliver Lake, who had to form his own label to  put out his music, and Cecil Taylor, his recording output has diminished  drastically, what happens when these musicians, these standard bearers fall?    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  Well, I would hope that there would be someone, some guy, somewhere that  would continue this work.  It doesn&#8217;t take but a few.  Hopefully, there will  be a small number of musicians that will continue this work.  But the problem  is, will they be heard?  This number is going to continue to get smaller and  smaller, where as, there may be fifty people now that were involved when I was  coming up.  It may go down to ten after we&#8217;re gone.  After that, I just don&#8217;t  know.  I would hope that the music would survive.  I believe that it will  survive, but will it survive, will the society, of which this art is designed  to enhance or to help develop, will it benefit from the music?  I have doubts  about that.  And then what happens is, everyone just goes to sleep.  We&#8217;re  much easier to control if we don&#8217;t think.  Americans have been known through  the world over as a country that doesn&#8217;t want the populous to think too much.  Don&#8217;t think about this.  Do what we tell you to do.   I think it will just get  much worse.                      <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  When I spoke with Phil Woods, he referred to America and Americans as  &#8220;having a lot of growing up to do&#8221;.    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  It does.  A lot more, not just a bit.        <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  Are these growing pains or a conscience effort by those in power to  suppress the music?    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  Well, I do definitely see that it is a conscience effort to, by media, by  the leaders, the people in power, there is definitely, without a doubt, a  conscience effort to suppress this music.  Hopefully, we will get past this.  Hopefully, one day the people will hear what we&#8217;re doing and once we can get,  if we can just crack that door and get a foot in, there&#8217;s a lot that we can  make available.  I think we can really change things, if we are just heard.  For example, the Brass Fantasy, is a group that&#8217;s been together, I&#8217;ve had that  group for eighteen years.  Most people are just becoming aware of that group,  but that group has been surviving for eighteen years.  Here&#8217;s a group that  once you&#8217;ve heard it, you almost fall in love with it and it opens the door  for a lot of other things.  Hopefully, through the work we&#8217;re doing and for  the next few years, we are trying to make sure that this music is available to  the masses.  If that happens, I&#8217;m sure that things will change.  People will,  once people hear a new sound, and people want to hear it.  It&#8217;s not that the  populous doesn&#8217;t want to hear it, it&#8217;s just the people in between us and the  people that don&#8217;t want to get this music heard.  The people are ready to hear  something.  They&#8217;re hungry for it.  I see it everyday.  I see it in their  faces when they hear us play music that they haven&#8217;t heard before.  It will  survive.  I don&#8217;t believe that it&#8217;s going anywhere.  If we can ever get  through, one thing about our generation of music is none of it has ever  cracked through this barrier.  No one has any power.  None of us have any  backing.  None of us are getting grants or anything like that.  We&#8217;re not  getting any sort of funding.  We&#8217;re not even getting support.  We&#8217;re not even  getting heard in this country.  I worked in the U. S. once or twice last year.  Most of the work is done in Europe and in Japan and in Australia, every place  else but here, where the music was born.      <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  Why is it easier to make a living playing the music in Europe?    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  It&#8217;s like what we were saying about this being a very young society.  The  Europeans know that they benefit from art.  They use art to stimulate their  young.  A concert in Germany is half full of people under the age of twenty,  maybe even a tenth of those are under twelve.  The rest are of all ages.  This  is a young society that doesn&#8217;t realize the importance or the connection  between the art and the intellect.  The older societies realize that.  They  realize there is something to learn in this music, there&#8217;s something they can  teach their young.  They&#8217;ve got some jazz schools in Europe, and Germany, and  Italy, and they&#8217;ve got some musicians in Italy and France that are just  unbelievable, because they have been learning from these musicians that have  been shunned in the States.  So they understand that.  They&#8217;ve gone past what  we&#8217;re into now and they realize that any new art form, regardless of where it  comes from is of importance and will aid in the stimulation of their  intellect, and thus enhance their society.  They realize that.  We, here,  haven&#8217;t gotten into that yet.      <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  Using the recent example of the American media&#8217;s fixation on the  happenings in the Oval Office and how Americans perceive something such as sex  so differently than Europeans, is this society breeding a society of fear?    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  People are afraid to expand their intellect.  Their mind is not familiar.  It seems as though the American power structure is intent on keeping us  unthinking, that way we will just be consumers, and service, and employees.  It&#8217;s like we don&#8217;t understand that people need to think to develop this  society.  They think that they know.  They think that they&#8217;ve got a safe  percent of people in this country that know which way we should go and they  want to go that way.  They don&#8217;t want to take a chance on anything else  happening.  What it does is it narrows the scope of thoughts of the people  here and it just keeps us more uninformed, which is really a drag because like  you said, Fred, every place else in the world, what&#8217;s going on with Clinton is  a joke.  I mean, it is a complete joke.  Americans are always considered  jokesters anyway.  We were always jokes.  I used to sit up in this caf\u00e9 in  Paris and the Americans will walk by and you see the French giggling, &#8216;Here  comes some Americans.&#8217;  And they laugh.  &#8216;Those Americans, they don&#8217;t even  know how important jazz is.&#8217;  That is happening because the lack of knowledge  of their own music.  Just to give you a quick story, Fred, I was coming back  from Italy on a plane.  On one side of me was this woman with two Ph.D.&#8217;s and  the other side of me was this guy who was an old Italian baker.  So I got to  talking with the lady with the Ph.D.&#8217;s and I was telling her the same problem  and how we are just so uninformed and how we know nothing about the music.  I  said, &#8216;For instance, you, with all your degrees has no idea of the culture of  America.  You know nothing about jazz.&#8217;  She goes, &#8216;Well, I really don&#8217;t know  anything about it.&#8217;  I said, &#8216;Now watch this.  Neither one of us knows this  guy.  Let me ask this guy next to us, old, Italian guy, what he knows about  jazz.&#8217;  I just mentioned jazz and this guy started naming records and naming  people.  He knew all about it.  He was telling me about all the records he  had.  He was coming to the States to visit one of kids, but he was just a  random European that knew more about American music than an educated,  intellectual American, and it just really embarrassed her and it also  illustrated what we&#8217;re talking about now.        <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  Let&#8217;s talk about your new Brass Fantasy album on Atlantic Records, The  Odyssey of Funk &amp; Popular Music &#8211; Volume 1.  Why a Spice Girls tune?    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  You see, Fred, I&#8217;ve got four daughters (laughing).  What we were trying  to do with that particular record and with that group, the Brass Fantasy, is  to play music that is familiar, but in a completely creative manner, in the  way it&#8217;s written and in the way it&#8217;s presented.  The Spice Girls&#8217; song &#8220;Two  Become One&#8221; is really a good song for flugelhorn and brass.  It&#8217;s in a low key  and it&#8217;s kind of mellow and it&#8217;s really a good song.  That&#8217;s the main reason  that I picked that tune.  It really worked perfect for the band.  At the same  time, it was within the idea of what we were trying to do.  We were trying to  show, like the record says, it&#8217;s the odyssey of funk and popular music, and  what a creative approach can do to this music.  I&#8217;ve played these tunes for  kids and these kids go crazy.  They&#8217;ve never heard a song that they knew,  played by a bunch of old men with horns (laughing).  It just knocks them out!  I tell you, I&#8217;ve played at elementary schools and some high schools and it&#8217;s  unbelievable what happens when people actually hear this music.  We&#8217;re trying  to show kids that we appreciate what they&#8217;re doing.  We appreciate the songs  that they appreciate too, but here&#8217;s what we can add to it.  This is what can  happen when you utilize a creative approach.  It can be this way.  This song  can be a million different ways.  That was one of the traditions of jazz.  That&#8217;s one of the things that made jazz popular.  Miles Davis got popular  playing songs from &#8220;Oklahoma,&#8221; you know, &#8220;Surrey With the Fringe on Top,&#8221; &#8220;Bye  Bye Blackbird,&#8221; &#8220;When I Fall in Love.&#8221;  All these were show tunes and this is  what enabled him to reach out and get the popularity.  I&#8217;m trying to do that  same sort of thing with Brass Fantasy.  It&#8217;s my last reach out saying, &#8216;Please  somebody, please hear this music.  Hear what the possibilities are.&#8217;  And once  you hear the possibilities, we can open this whole new world of creative  music.             <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  What is jazz to you?    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  Jazz is really a creative music.  I think it is the best way to really  describe what it is.  It&#8217;s a very creative and innovative music, with the  emphasis on creativity, creative compositions, creative instrumentation,  creative approaches to the music.  I think it&#8217;s very important that we listen  to this, because being creative and innovative is very important to our lives,  very important.        <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  What would you say is your musical goal?    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  I&#8217;m trying to be creative, but I have a very broad scope, a very broad  idea of what the possibilities are for this music.  The main thing is to be  creative, to be innovative.        <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  I don&#8217;t think many traditionalists and critics have a clue who Notorious  B-I-G is.      <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  I know it (laughing).  I know that they&#8217;re going to be upset with me, but  I don&#8217;t care.  It&#8217;s OK.  They can be upset.  We&#8217;re trying to do that to show  that there is so much separation in the music, and jazz is the music that  brings everything together.  It brings all the people together.  I was talking  to some group about racism and I said, &#8216;One thing that I&#8217;ve noticed is we  don&#8217;t have that in jazz.&#8217;  Jazz fans seem to be cool.  Somehow the music has  elevated them above that.  The music can elevate us above a lot of things if  we just let it.  And that&#8217;s what we&#8217;re trying to do, elevate the people.      <\/p>\n<p><b>JazzUSA:<\/b>  And the future?    <\/p>\n<p><b>LB:<\/b>  Hopefully, this record will get heard and if it gets heard here in the  States, you can expect a lot from me.  I&#8217;ve got so many projects in mind.  The  problem is, we all are getting much older.  I am a sixty-year-old, almost  sixty-year-old grandfather.  I&#8217;ve got eight grandkids and two more grandkids  on the way.  I&#8217;m going to have ten grandkids in the next few months and so I  hope people will pick up on this quickly, while we&#8217;re still around.  If they  do, we can show them things in music and combinations of music that they  haven&#8217;t even heard yet.  For example, in the States, they&#8217;ve never heard the  Art Ensemble&#8217;s tribute to Chicago blues.  We did a tour of that.  They&#8217;ve  never heard the Brass Fantasy, I did a brass\/steel tour, which is the Brass  Fantasy with a world champion steel band.  We&#8217;ve done projects that no one  here even knows about.  If we can get through, if we can get enough attention,  we can start to make these things available here.  We can make them available.  If we can get the people to hear the music, I&#8217;m sure there will be no more  problems.  The problem is only in getting heard.  Like you said, you go to  Yoshi&#8217;s (San Francisco) and there&#8217;s a line around the block.  That&#8217;s because  we&#8217;ve been going out there and they&#8217;ve heard the music.  They know what to  expect.  They know it&#8217;s going to be exciting.  It used to be a time that you  go to a jazz concert and you were excited about the musicianship, excited by  the music that they were playing, excited by the way they looked.  We want to  bring all of that back.     <\/font><\/p>\n<p align=\"center\"><font face=\"Verdana, Helvetica\" size=\"1\" style=\"font-face:verdana; font-size:8pt\"><cfinclude template=\"adbanner.asp\"\/><\/font><\/p>\n<p align=\"center\">\n<p>  <?php require($DOCUMENT_ROOT . \"_footer.htm\");   ??><\/body><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>A talk with Lester Bowie by Fred Jung Hard-line traditionalists<\/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-4880","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-interviews"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4880","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=4880"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4880\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":11200,"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4880\/revisions\/11200"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=4880"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=4880"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/jazzusa.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=4880"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}