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Adam Deitch Bringing The Beats To Sco "He's a bad boy,
that's for sure," says guitar star John Scofield of
his talented young
sideman Adam Deitch. On the Sco gig, Deitch comes across like a
composite of two great drummers that
the guitarist has worked with
before'the original funky drummer himself, Clyde Stubblefield, and
highly regarded jazz
drummer Bill Stewart.
"Adam's got a real jazz sensibility on top of this super groove
thing," Scofield says.
"It's hard to find guys who bring that sort of
jazz seriousness, listening, and expertise, because most guys are just
into
hip-hop, funk, or drum 'n' bass. Or you have the jazz kids who
kind of stay strictly with that; they want to be like Roy
Haynes and
Elvin Jones and never even consider investigating the hip-hop thing.
"Adam is unique because he's
got both sides covered," Scofield
continues. "He's a funk drummer circa 2003, meaning hip-hop and also
what he would
call "The new thing," which incorporates the super
uptempo technique of drum 'n' bass. He's part of a whole new
generation
of drummers who are into that kind of music. Plus he's got that jazz
mentality and a "Take no prisoners" type
of creativity - all combined
with the groove of death."
Deitch's deft touch, great ears, and interactive instincts,
together
with a powerful urge to groove, has put him in good standing with the
perennial poll-winning guitarist, bandleader, and
Miles Davis alumnus.
"Adam's just got that thing, you know?" Scofield says. "And I know,
because I look for drummers
all the time. It's sort of the story of my
life. I really feel that if I don't have a great drummer, I can't have
a good
band. I'm just hooked on great drummers, and I found one in
Adam. Plus we get along. We hang out and talk about music.
He plays
hip-hop stuff for me, and I play jazz stuff for him. He really teaches
me about some areas that I'm not that
familiar with."
Deitch was playing with The Average White Band and also gigging around
New York with his own
'70s-styled funk band, Lettuce, when Scofield
first encountered the young drummer a few years back. As Deitch
recalls,
"I was doing some gigs here and there, and sitting in with
Soulive, and my friend Eric [Soulive guitarist Eric Krasnow,
who
attended the Berklee College Of Music with Deitch] told Scofield about
me. John was going through a bunch of different
drummers at the time.
"I finally got to play with John when he sat in with Lettuce at the
Wetlands in New York," Adam
says. "Lettuce did a weekly gig every
Friday night with a different guest, and as it turned out the final
guest during our run
there was John. We all knew he was coming, so we
learned one of his old tunes. We were all psyched to play with him.
And
at one point during the set, he cut the whole band off and said, "Just
me and the drums." And of course I was totally
freaking out, because
he's one of my heroes. Anyway, that night he ended up cutting the whole
band off three more
times, turning around and saying, "Just me and
drums." And each time we'd play together he was smiling."
A
month later Deitch got the call to join Scofield's band. They put in
a whirlwind tour before going into the studio to record
2002's berjam, a monstrous slamfest that followed in the wake of 1998's A Go Go
(the
guitarist's groove-laden recording with Medeski Martin & Wood,
which helped launch Sco on the jamband circuit) and
2000's similarly
funky Bump. And now comes Up All Night, the band's first truly
collaborative outing, in
which Deitch shares composer credit with his
fellow bandmembers on five tracks and also splits a fifty-fifty credit
with Scofield
on the scintillating closer "Every Night Is Ladies Night."
Whereas berjam stayed more focused on funk and
N'awlins-informed grooves, the more urgent and adventurous Up All Night
travels from Meters-inspired funk to dirty
South bounce and Miami bass
grooves, from Fela Kuti's hypnotically pulsating Afro-beat to
retro-disco, from new school
to drum 'n' bass, to old-school soul on a
cover of The Dramatics' "Whatcha See Is Whatcha Get." And Adam
handles
every rhythmic nuance with aplomb.
On record and in concert,
Deitch throws down with uncommon authority
while cutting up the beat in
hip, unpredictable ways. His capacity for coming up with creative fills
while keeping a steady
groove is best exemplified on "Offspring," "Polo
Towers," "Lucky For Her," and the title track from berjam, as well as
practically every track on the supremely funky Up All Night.
Grounded in the slyly syncopated spirit of his
former teacher and
mentor, Tower Of Power's David Garibaldi, while still audaciously
waving the flag for "the new thing,"
Deitch is definitely one of the
neo-groovemeisters on the scene worth watching. Considering that
Scofield has recorded and
played with such great drummers as Al Foster,
Adam Nussbaum, Jack DeJohnette, Omar Hakim, Billy Cobham, Steve
Jordan,
Bill Stewart, Idris Muhammad, Billy Martin, and Dennis Chambers, and is
still excited about playing with
Deitch, that's quite an endorsement.
MD: Does Scofield give you much feedback about your playing?
Adam: Yeah, we always talk music. He's molded me in such a
roundabout way, which I love. His way of
telling you he doesn't like
something or he does like something is so subtle, so cool. He'll tell
you about other guys
and what they did that was corny and that he
wasn't digging'stuff I was doing! But he would never say that
directly
to me.
MD: Talk about the general differences between the first Scofield record you recorded,
berjam, and Up All Night.
Adam: I didn't have a hand in writing berjam. I
wasn't
there for the conception of ninety percent of those grooves. I worked
them out on the road to the point where they
felt comfortable, but I
didn't conceive those grooves with those guys. So it doesn't have the
feeling that this new
record has, even though I love it. I dig the new
record in a different way. berjam has an almost happy-go-lucky sort of vibe
to it. Up All Night is a little darker, and to me that's hipper.
MD: What about working with loops and
samples?
Adam: We've been working a lot with samples. Avi [Bortnik,
rhythm guitarist] is a sample wiz,
and the more we get into doing it,
the more he knows what I like to play along with. He knows where to
drop his stuff out, and
I'm learning where to put my stuff in. It's becoming tighter. And I think a lot of my enjoyment of playing with those
loops can be heard on this record.
MD: Have you ever triggered loops from the kit?
Adam:
No, not yet. I'm sort of old-school when it comes to
that. But I am getting into doing some cool stuff with effects
on
acoustic drums. Our soundman, Patrick Murray, is a genius when it comes
to live sound. He has hundreds of different
sounds that he throws on
the mic's, and he's got them all separated so the snare can run through
a phase shifter,
the bass drum can be distorted, and the hi-hat
something else. He tries different things every night, and then we go
back and
hang out in the hotel room afterwards and listen to it.
MD: So it's a process of trial and error.
Adam: Constantly. What you heard on Up All Night is the
result of a lot of nights of me cutting and
pasting in my mind what
should be there, what shouldn't, what worked, and what didn't. I really
feel like I did more
homework on this record. And that's the way I'm
going to do it from now on - just editing my own stuff in my head -
because
it works for me.
Bill Milkowski
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