Close Enough for Jazz
Guitarist and composer Josh Lopes opens up about the intersection of classical chamber music discipline and underground experimentation. He walks through the collaborative history of Dither, the psychology of working directly under John Zorn, translating Laurie Spiegel’s planetary orbit tracking data to fretted instruments, and how an iPad mechanical failure turned a performance at the Stone into a living nightmare. Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro 00:25 - From Rhode Island to the Avant-Garde Scene 01:46 - Euphoniums, Marching Band, and Transferring Schools 03:44 - William Paterson University and the "Bossa Nova" Trap 05:44 - Unlearning Jazz Robot Habits and Developing Soft Skills 06:39 - Getting Academic Probation for Breaking Into Shea 09:25 - The Difference Between Chamber Musicians and Jazz Players 11:47 - Forming the Electric Guitar Quartet 14:22 - The Intensity of Performing John Zorn's Game Pieces 18:39 - A Shattered iPad During a Solo Bagatelle 20:09 - A Weird Mother's Day Encounter with John Zorn 22:23 - Playing "Rugby" at The Kitchen 23:22 - Translating Laurie Spiegel's Electronic Scores 26:50 - The Pretentious Venice Biennale Concert 28:37 - Blasting White Noise for Sensory Deprivation Music 33:03 - The $100 Vintage Japanese Guitar Project 35:15 - Learning Tuvan Throat Singing in a Trader Joe's Milk Cooler 37:37 - Discovering "Genghis Blues" and Ham Radio Harmonics 41:56 - Teaching Music in Newark to Kids Who Don't Listen to Music 44:29 - Replacing Standard Notation with YouTube QR Codes 49:49 - Why Good Guitarists Secretly Have Mental Disorders 51:13 - Missing the Grit of the Old Stone BIRCH GROVE MEDIA * Web: birchgrove.io * Follow us: @birch.grove.media on Instagram. * Watch on YouTube: youtube.com/@BirchGroveMedia * Get the Record: Shop our current 180g LP and digital releases on our website. Rate and review us on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.
12 episodios
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