Jul 6 2011

Interview from All About Jazz

Today the fantastic All About Jazz website published an interview with me, so I thought I’d re-post it here for you to check out. The original interview can be viewed here, where you can comment on the post.

Meet Simon Little: I’m a session bassist living in London.

I was born in London and started learning the double bass at school in Dorset with Barry Glynn. I went on to study at The Guildhall School of Music & Drama in London (1999-2003) receiving tuition from Kevin Rundell, Jeff Clyne and Steve Watts. I first picked up an electric bass aged 15 and have never looked back…

Most people know me as the bassist with The Divine Comedy and Duke Special. I also tour regularly with Clare Teal and Maggie Reilly. As a jazz bassist I usually play with singers. Most notably Kate Eden, Lea DeLaria, Ian Shaw, and Nina Ferro. I’ve also played and recorded with Nick Cave & Warren Ellis, A Girl Called Eddy, Chris Difford, Jamie Cullum, Liane Carroll, Beth Rowley, Ben Folds, Norma Winstone, Claire Martin, Pee Wee Ellis, Alan Barnes, Polly Gibbons, Newton Faulkner and The Ronnie Scott’s Allstars amongst others.

I have released two solo albums under my own name: Mandala (2010) and The Knowledge of Things To Come (2011)

Instrument(s):
Double Bass, Electric Bass, Sitar

Teachers and/or influences?
I’m influenced by a wide range of music and musicians. Probably my biggest influences as a bassist are Eberhard Weber, Stuart Zender, Scott LaFaro and Jaco Pastorius. At the moment I’m listening to a lot of Les Claypool. I like bass players with a really distinctive style and sound…

I knew I wanted to be a musician when…
I had a go on a bass guitar for the first time.

Your sound and approach to music:
I approach all music with an open mind. It’s important to know where you fit in as a sideman and what you can and can’t do in any given situation. This comes from playing with a wide variety of bands and singers. My sound as a solo artist is very distinctive. You can hear a lot of my influences in my improvisations.

Your teaching approach:
I train my students to teach themselves. I introduce a broad spectrum of learning skills and practice techniques so that students can claim ownership of their development and continue improving independently.

Your dream band:
I would love to play with Prince. I think most people would love to play with Prince…

Road story: Your best or worst experience:
On my 22nd birthday I played a sold out show at the Birmingham Academy with The Divine Comedy in front of about 1500 people. It was also the first time I played live on stage with Ben Folds; he is one of my idols and we played a version of Brick (one of my favourite songs). It was the best birthday ever…

Favorite venue:
The 606 in Chelsea. The best jazz club in the world. And the best sausage and mash you’ll ever have.

Your favorite recording in your discography and why?
Ian Shaw’s Drawn To All Things (2006). Ian and I are both massive Joni Mitchell fans and in 2006 we recorded an entire album of Joni songs with some fantastic arrangements by Janette Mason and Ian. There some great musicians on that record and the bass sounds great. My favorite track is our version of “A Case of You.” It’s my favorite song of all time and Ian and I play it as a duo. Lovely…

The first Jazz album I bought was:
8.30 by Weather Report.

What do you think is the most important thing you are contributing musically?
Personality and presence. I’d like to think you can hear me in whatever music I’m playing.

Did you know…
I play the sitar too. And the musical saw. I just recorded a track on the saw for Newton Faulkner’s new record…

CDs you are listening to now:
Les Claypool & The Holy Mackerel, Highball With The Devil
Marcus Miller, A Night In Monte-Carlo (Deuces/Dreyfus)
Bon Iver, Bon Iver (4AD)
James Blake, James Blake (Lindisfarne/Unluck)
Tom Waits, Orphans (ANTI-)

Desert Island picks:
Joni Mitchell, Hejira
Eberhard Weber, Pendulum
Jaco Pastorius, Jaco
Trilok Gurtu, Kathak
Erykah Badu, Baduizm Live

How would you describe the state of jazz today?
Generally in the UK, I would say the scene is struggling. I’ve been very lucky to have worked with some of the UK best jazz artists over the last ten years and those artists will always have a strong audience. I think it must be very tough for younger players coming through from all the colleges these days. A lot of the smaller venues in London are disappearing….

What are some of the essential requirements to keep jazz alive and growing?
The music needs to remain relevant. It should embrace other styles of music more openly. Jazz used to be pop music back in the day. The only thing that separates it from modern day pop music now is improvisation. You can blow over anything if you want to…

If the music was more relevant and more people connected with it, we wouldn’t need to worry so much about funding. Most of the people I play with would never need an Arts Council grant to go on tour…

What is in the near future?As well as maintaining a busy touring schedule with Clare Teal, I’m also currently working on a new duo project with drummer Steve Alexander called Little Alex. We are combining my live looping with Steve’s live drums and electronics. We should have an album out by the end of this year.Also am about to start working on a new production at The National Theatre with Ben Castle. This runs all through August and September so I’ve got a busy couple of months ahead!

If I weren’t a jazz musician, I would be a:
Writer.

Big thanks to everybody at All About Jazz for helping spread the word of the new album. Hoping to have the album reviewed by them at some point in the near future. In the meantime, you can check out the most recent review at eBurban.

 


May 24 2011

Video from This Morning with Clare Teal

Hello folks,

Thought I’d post this video of us playing on This Morning on the blog. It’s up on my videos page too just in case…

We had a fun morning over at ITV and were well looked after by the lovely crew there. And it’s always good to see Eamonn and Ruth.

Also think his is probably the only video i have of me playing The Beast. I shall have to rectify this soon. Thinking it might be time to film some live-looping stuff for you, especially now I’ve got my little Flipcam. I’ll get on the case and let you know when I have something good…


May 4 2011

News Update.. Maggie, Clare & The New Solo EP

Hello folks,

Thought I should drop a quick post to keep you up to date with the various goings ons…

Just got back from a whistlestop trip to Poland. We were revisiting the little festival we played a few years ago (in fact, I blogged about it at the time). We were playing again at the Amfiteatre Dolina Charlotta near the town of Slupsk (which is apparently pronounced ‘swoopsk’ I discovered). It’s a lovely little place by a lake and this time we got to stay in the lovely hotel next to the gig that they were still building last time.

The rest of the band arrived in Poland the night before but I left the house at 5am to catch the early flight. we soundchecked in the afternoon, which is when it became apparent that the weather in Slupsk is much much colder than at home…

Gordon was provided with exactly the wrong kind of Nord keyboard and spent a lot of the soundcheck trying to program up a few sounds for the gig. We were playing before Bonnie Tyler, which was great. We had to reshuffle the stage completely as her drummer flatly refused to share the (hired) drumkit. But we got there in the end…

The gig was a lot of fun and the crowd were fantastic. The only problem was the temperature onstage. It was absolutely freezing and pretty windy. None of us managed to warm up all all through the 90-minute set, and I’m pretty sure the cold I’m suffering with right now is as a result of that gig…

We’ll be returning to Poland in June for another show. Not sure where it is yet but it’s quite near Krakow apparently.

In other news, Clare Teal’s new album Hey Ho comes out May 9th. Featuring me (mostly) on bass with Grant and Ben. We’re working our way through the ‘Great British Songbook’ with songs from Noel Coward to Moloko and Snow Patrol. You can preorder the album at Amazon if you simply can’t bear the wait…

We’ll be playing in Jersey this Sunday and we’ll also be only This Morning on Friday with Eamonn Holmes and Ruth Langsford, so don’t forget to tune in…

And finally, as I mentioned in my last post here; my new EP Rejectamenta is available for download on the music page, where you can also stream the whole EP in full. Hope you like it. I’ve had some great feedback so far. In fact, here’s the player embedded from Bandcamp so you can stream it right here. I’d love to hear your comments…