I didn't want there to be a computer on stage. When I see people with computers on stage, I think, 'Are you sending e-mail?' That's so corny.Collection: Computers
The beauty of jazz is that it's malleable. People are addressing it to suit their own personalities.Collection: Beauty
My older brother Mike is an excellent trumpet player. By the time he was 12, he was playing around Kansas City in classical situations. He was already an amazing talent.Collection: Amazing
I'm always trying to find 'connections' between things. That art is the juxtaposition of a lot of things that seem unrelated but add up to something recognizable.
The guitar for me is a translation device. It's not a goal. And in some ways, jazz isn't a destination for me. For me, jazz is a vehicle that takes you to the true destination - a musical one that describes all kinds of stuff about the human condition and the way music works.
Jazz is not something that can be defined through blunt instruments. It is much more poetic than that.
When talking about writing, I often use the analogy of archaeology. There are these great tunes all around. Your skill as a musician allows you to pick them out without breaking them.
I can't really say enough about Chris Potter. He is one of the greatest musicians I have ever known, and every second I have been on the band stand with him has been an absolute pleasure.
People sometimes say it takes a long time to become a jazz fan, but for me it took about five seconds.
I don't know if I would qualify as mainstream. I think I have managed to function pretty successfully on the fringes of the music world and have been able to play exactly what I have wanted the way I have wanted.
I don't worry too much about the fundamentalist principles that are in almost any discussion about jazz.
If you come to my house, you won't see a wall of trophies or things like that. I'm sort of 'on to the next thing' all the time.
There are musicians who go through their lives sort of shedding their skins. For me, I've always felt backward-compatible to Version 1.0.
For me, let's keep jazz as folk music. Let's not make jazz classical music. Let's keep it as street music, as people's everyday-life music. Let's see jazz musicians continue to use the materials, the tools, the spirit of the actual time that they're living in, as what they build their lives as musicians around.
No two notes are ever the same volume. With the guitar, you really have to model in your mind this wider thing; you're trying to create the illusion of a bigger dynamic range.
I would always contend that talent is an element, but over the long run, ultimately, a minor part of it all; it is mostly hard work.
There are some musicians who are talented and see themselves as some kind of natural geniuses or something because of a certain amount of natural ability. But that is often rarely the case over the long term.
A lot of jazz artists think people should like what they're doing just because it's jazz. I don't buy that.
I used to love going and playing jam sessions, doing things spontaneously. I can't do that anymore. Everything you do is documented, nothing is casual anymore.
I'm triggering acoustic instruments. I'm literally beating, smacking, hitting, blowing, doing physical things. It's an incredibly exciting way to make music.
Someone who knew me when I was 14 said I was the oldest 14-year-old on the planet. Now I'm a 14-year-old who is 60.
If we are going to list guitar influences, the biggest one by far is Wes Montgomery. Also, Gary Burton was obviously huge for me in a number of ways. But beyond that, Clifford Brown, Miles Davis and Freddie Hubbard.
I think jazz is actually quite unforgiving in its disdain for nostalgia. It demands creativity and change at its highest level.
I love playing and working on music. It is something that I feel really lucky to be able to spend my life doing. And I don't sleep much!
One of the things jazz has always excelled at is translating the reality of the times through its musical prism.
The pianist Cecil Taylor is extremely melodic; the guitarist Derek Bailey is extremely melodic, and Ornette Coleman.
'The Unity Band' project has been life-changing for me. I have led many groups of talented musicians, but this is unlike anything else.
The best musicians are not the best players, they're the best listeners.Collection: Player
One very fundamental thing has not changed and I realized that it will never change... is that I really need to go home and practice.Collection: Change
Learning to play is mostly about learning to hear, and learning to really listen deeply to sound in a musical way is a lifetime's worth of work.Collection: Play
My first relationship to any kind of musical situation is as a listener.Collection: Music
Most guys at Berklee are going to wind up truck drivers.Collection: Wind
Music is what you notice when it's no longer in your presence.Collection: Jazz