Sunday, June 1, 2014

Andreas Willers 13 Questions



Since his debut solo release for the veteran German avantgarde label FMP in 1981 Andreas Willers has gained a reputation as an exceptional guitar player with an atypically rich stylistic background.  The impressive technical and tonal options at his disposal are carried by a great feeling for form and emotional power. He has worked with Paul Bley, Louis Sclavis a.m.m. and can be heard on more than 35 albums for labels such as Leo and Enja, performed worldwide, taught guitar, wrote articles and reviews and continues to work on different forms of improvised and composed music. Willers started out as a blues- and avantgarde guitarist, first outing in 81 on the FMP label (Hier & Als Auch, solo guitar). He studied electric guitar and composition in Los Angeles, Hamburg and Banff (Canada).


He has played and/or recorded with Paul Bley, Louis Sclavis, Enrico Rava, Bob Stewart, Marvin Smitty Smith, Dave Liebman, Trilok Gurtu, David Murray, Mark Dresser, Bobby Previte, Mark Feldman, Jim Black, Glen Moore, Steve Argüelles, Dominique Pifarély, Marc Ducret, Anders Jormin, Tom Rainey, Herb Robertson, Phil Haynes, Phillip Greenlief, Lauren Newton, Rita Marcotulli, Elvira Plenar, Paul Imm, Kent Carter, Lou Grassi, Petras Vysniauskas, Yves Robert, Nils Landgren, Gabriele Hasler, Frank Köllges, Matthias Schubert, Conny Bauer, Johannes Bauer, Matthias Bauer, E.L. Petrowski, Theo Jörgensmann, Achim Kaufmann, Axel Dörner, Frank Gratkowski, Uwe Kropinski, Willi Kellers, Jörg Huke, Volker Schlott, Dieter Manderscheid, Tim Wells, Fritz Witteck, Lu Hübsch, Thomas Heberer, Claudio Puntin, Tobias Delius, Dieter Ilg, Jan Roder, Olaf Rupp, Hans Lüdemann, Roger Hanschel, Dirk Raulf, Dirk Engelhardt, Frank Schulte, Horst Nonnenmacher, Michael Griener, Franz Bauer, Christof Griese, Andreas Schmidt, Michael Rodach, Thomas Heidepriem, Hugo Read, Gebhard Ullmann, Martin Lillich, Niko Schäuble a.o.,



Andreas Willers combines contrasting techniques, worlds of tones and traditions into a singular, easy-to-identify sound.
Jazz Lexikon

It sounds to me that Mr. Willers is a master of manipulation as he selects the sounds or textures that consistently evoke images or provoke ideas. 'Drowning Migrant' is the most successful experimental solo guitar(s) offering I've heard in recent memory.
Bruce Lee Gallanter, Downtown Music Gallery New York

Willers really is a Stupor Mundi guitarist.
Bad Alchemy 


Andreas  has composed for the Jazz Baltica Ensemble, the NDR Bigband, different New Music ensembles, Several scholarships and awards. Founding member of the musicians cooperative Jazzfront Berlin-Brandenburg, was member of the Initiative Kölner Jazzhaus. He taught electric guitar at the Hochschule für Musik Hanns Eisler, Berlin, from 1991-96.

Which was the first and the last record you bought with your own money?   What were other early records you bought?

Hm, the single 'Ape Man' by the Kinks, must have been 1970. But that was no special moment since I was quite well supplied by my older cousin and older brother with late Beatles, Who and (mostly British) Bluesrock. Also public radio in Germany did a fairly good job in providing the basic nutrition of classical, baroque and also jazz besides airing easy listening and schlager. The period between 64 and 74 was quite a time of cultural growth, a lot of people were curious and wanted to learn about obscure stuff like American folk blues, Indian raga, people like Stockhausen or Schlippenbach. The first steps for me from Pop/Bluesrock came through British bands like Colosseum, Gentle Giant and Soft Machine.

 
Moving ahead from Hendrix' live set at Woodstock to Miles 'Live Evil' or late Coltrane was almost natural, from there to Albert Ayler and Derek Bailey a must. In 1975 I felt quite fortunate to pick up a copy of 'Gateway' with John Abercrombie, Dave Holland and Jack deJohnette by chance, John balances so nicely between Jim Hall and Jimi Hendrix-type playing on that one. Along with that yellow 'Circle' live album (Braxton, Corea, Holland, Altschul) it saved me from a lot of funk and fusion stuff I guess. These days I listen a lot to the CD's I exchange when meeting fellow musicians. I like the little ritual of exchanging CD's, like football players with their shirts after a match.


The Scrambling EX: Peter Van Huffel (saxophone, clarinet), Andreas Willers (guitar), Oli Steidle (drums)

What would you ask to another guitarist?

I'd be curious to ask John Scofield about Alvin Lee of 'Ten Years After'. TYA was plain 'young white dudes' bluesrock with sometimes questionable songwriting and vocals but there was a lot of improvisation going on and while at times repetitive and noodly Alvin seems to have been a natural explorer of a bluesy jazz phrasing with an overdriven amp tone early on. I wonder if John ever checked him out, maybe that solo over a modal swing section they jump into on track one of the 'Recorded Live' album? I first heard John on Charles Mingus' 'Three Or Four Shades Of Blues' where also Larry Coryell and Phillipe Catherine were plucking away on their Ovations but John stepped up and just sounded - awesome, irresistible! Jazz guitar had come full circle. I didn't see the connection then, but both of them played a red Gibson 335, so who knows?


Andreas Willers, Mark Dresser, Jim Black

What gear do you use?

I used an old Gibson 335, a sunburst one, for decades and now have a custom made semi-solid by Frank Deimel here from Berlin, also some other guitars like a James Goodall acoustic, a banjo from the 20's etc. I do favour older, straight ahead tube amps and have quite a collection of effects, some of them homemade or self-modified. Like most everybody I sold all of my rackgear from the 90's, but still use the Gibson Echoplex Digital looper a lot. I always try to keep my ever changing pedalboard small enough for easy travelling - which is also a good way to avoid getting lost in too many options and staying true to a woody tube-amp-reacting-to-guitar-input base tone. I do like to prepare my guitar with stuff and am especially fond of two little tools I inherited from my mother and my father respectively. It's great to have a little totem of each of them with me, since they are both gone.



Which work of your own are you most surprised by?

I have a hard time listening back to my own albums. There is a lot to be sonsidered before a release, the mix, sequencing, selecting takes etc. so when the CD is out I put it on maybe once and then tend not to listen back for at least one year. After that I usually don't like the record much and think 'uh, we should've left out this tune, chosen that order etc.' and that impression might stay. Seems I'm just too close to the matter. Recently though I have been listening to some of my stuff from the 80's and enjoyed the fact that it seems to have aged well enough. If I were to pick one good example from each decade from my ca. 40 releases I'd limit it down to possibly 'Rava/Ullmann/Willers/Lillich/Schäuble' (Nabel Records), 'Andreas Willers Octet / The Ground Music' (Enja Records), 'Tin Drum Stories' (between the lines) and one of the recent live recordings by 'Grid Mesh' (Leo Records) or 'AAA' (Creative Sources Records).



What do you need from music?

My friend and fellow guitarist Michael Rodach sometimes says that music is applied philosophy - a nice thought. Anyway, like probably all musicians I feel that music is surrounding me like air and that it is almost as indispensable for survival. There is always sound around - and in our heads.



What quality do you admire most in a musician?

The musical soft skills: a good ear, great timing, awareness of instrumental tone and overall sound, interaction and the intuitive ability to balance cooperative team playing with that extra little kick of 'criminal engery' and inspiration. This is not limited to a genre, era or style of music.



 Geezer = Martin Klingeberg, Edward McLean, Andreas Willers, Christian Marien. Aufgenommen von Dietmar Liste am 11.11.11


Do you prefer play alone or in a group? What is the difference for you?

When I'm playing the guitar by myself I am merely practising, trying out things, maybe experimenting. I never know how to go about rehearsing for solo performances because without the audience the music doesn't work, esp. the improv stuff. So I do enjoy solo work but being in a band is more easy going, especially on tour. On the other hand I feel there is absolutely no room for experimentation on stage, be it with the music or with any kind of gear one might bring to the gig. Experimentation has to happen beforehand.


PAO Trio - Berlin may 2012 - play "Case of Need". Peter van Huffel - sax, Andreas Willers - guit, Oliver Steidle - dr

What are the challenges and benefits of today's digital music scene?

I'm just as clueless as everyone I speak to. Looks like the CD is going to stay with us for some more months. In the future we need a transparent and fair solution for any kind of download/streaming tool people might come up with, especially with regard to the independent non-mainstream artists.



Depict the sound you're still looking for.

Generally I'm more into 'finding' than into 'searching', following basic intuition. Also I've been around for a while and am pretty content with my pallette of artistic expression. I particularily enjoy creating harmonic structures with and without the addition of noise in an improvised ensemble setting, something that works exceptionally well (but not exclusively) in a purely acoustic setting.



Which do you translate into music from other disciplines such as theater, painting, architecture, ballet...?

I recorded two albums that have a connection to literature: 'Tin Drum Stories' was partially inspired by Günter Grass' novel 'Die Blechtrommel', and 'Montauk' by the book of the same name by Max Frisch. I think all arts aim at the same things, the celebration of life and the search for insight and human growth, but on different levels. While I admire all of these forms of course I like music best to make that trip.



What is some valuable advice that someone has given to you in the past?

What I learned from working with experienced players like Paul Bley and Louis Sclavis is staying relaxed and confident as a human being while being religiously focussed when it's about the music, the essence, the real thing. I don't believe that pressure or angst helps making good music. Saxophonist Gordon Brisker, who was my theory teacher at GIT in Los Angeles, financed a demo recording of me playing solo improv guitar when I finished that school, which finally led to my first release on the FMP label in Germany. It wasn't his style of jazz really, having worked with Anita O'Day on Gerry Mulligan, but he must have heard something there that stirred his altruism. He told me: 'Do your thing and be patient, everything else is open to negotiation.'


Grid Mash Live in Berlin

Tell me one musical work which has provoked a change in your music.

Igor Stravinski's 'Sacre du Printemps', because it contains the application of odd-meter rock riffs on European orchestra music way before rock was invented. Now that's being ahead of your time. Beethoven seems to have been a rocker too - and a quite stiff one to boot.


Voodoo Chile - Reggie Worthy, Andreas Willers, Th. Wagn
 
What projects are you working on now and what does the future hold?

I have always fought for the freedom to work in different musical languages. While previously I was concentrating on sanding or grinding down different stilistic elements into a polystilistic musical gestalt, these days it's more about working on different musical projects that are more distinct and less trying to be universal but becoming just that by leaving out ornamentation, reducing idiomatics and getting down to the core of the music. I'll continue to do so, like a novelist choosing to be his/her own translator.


 
Selected Discography

 

Dörner / Willers / Kaufmann AAA. live Creative Sources Recordings (P) 2014
Grid Mesh live in Madrid w. Johannes Bauer, Frank Paul Schubert, Willi Kellers, Leo Rec. (UK) 2013
Willers/Kneer/Marien, Nulli Secundus Creative Sources Recordings (P) 2012
Geezer (12“ vinyl maxi) w. Martin Klingeberg, Thomy Jordi, Christian Marien, Souls United Rec. (D) 2011




Grid Mesh, Coordinates w. Frank Paul Schubert & Rudi Fischerlehner, FMR (UK) 2010
Not Applicable Collective, A Further Insight live in London w. Tom Arthurs a.m.m., NOT0 (UK) (download only), 2010
Andreas Willers, Drowning Migrant solo, Leo Records (UK) 2009




Andreas Willers, Orange Years solo, Jazzwerkstatt (D) 2009
Grid Mesh w. Frank Paul Schubert, Rudi Fischerlehner, Farai Rec. (A) 2007

Andreas Schmidt / Dave Liebman, In Berlin w. Peter Weniger a.m.m., JazzHausMusik (D) 2007
Dirk Engelhardt, Radio Marrakesch Konnex (D) 2006



Andreas Willers‘ Montauk w. Dominique Pifarély, Alain Grange & Michael Griener, BTL (D) 2005

 
Andreas Willers, In the North w. Paul Bley, Yves Robert & Horst Nonnenmacher, BTL (D) 2003

 

Andreas Willers, Tin Drum Stories (nach Motiven von G. Grass) w. Horst Nonnenmacher & Michael Griener, BTL (D) 2000


Andreas Willers Octet, The Ground Music w. Tom Rainey, Dieter Ilg, Jörg Huke, Arkady Shilkloper, Matthias Schubert, Claudio Puntin & Dominique Pifarély, Enja Rec. (D) 2000
 

Blue Collar, Diary Of A Working Band w. Horst Nonnenmacher & Michael Griener, JHM (D) 1997




Ullmann/Willers/Haynes, Trad Corrosion w. Phil Haynes, Nabel (D) 1997


Gabriele Hasler, Familienglück w. Hans Lüdemann, Foolish Music (D) 1997

Delbroux Bass Society, Circle Mr.D/Laika (D) 1997


Andreas Willers & Friends play Jimi Hendrix w. Jim Black a.m.m., Nabel (D) 1995


Dirk Raulf Orchestra, Friedrich Hollaender New Classic Colours (D) 1996


Andreas Willers, Can I Go Like This? solo, JazzHausMusik (D) 1994



Jazz Baltica Ensemble w. David Murray a.m.m., Gowi Rec. (PL) 1993


 Gabriele Hasler, Sonetburger w. Elvira Plenar, Foolish Music (D) 1993
Ullmann/Willers, Playful 93 w. Gebhard Ullmann, Nabel (D) 1993



Andreas Willers, Cityscape w.Mark Dresser & Bobby Previte, Jim Black & Horst Nonnenmacher, Sound Aspects (D) 1993



Ullmann/Willers, Suite Noire w. ‚Smitty‘ Smith & Bob Stewart, Nabel (D) 1992
Acoustic Guitar Orchestra, Odyssee w. Franz de Byl, Uwe Kropinski a.m.m., Blue Song (ex-Amiga) (D) 1991



Andreas Willers, The Private Ear w.Louis Sclavis, Gabriele Hasler, Sound Aspects (D) 1990
Rava, Ullmann, Willers, Lillich, Schäuble Out to Lunch feat. Enrico Rava, Nabel (D) 1989



Gabriele Hasler, Das Projekt w. Hugo Read, Thomas Heidepriem & Jörn Schipper, Foolish Music (D) 1988
Minimal Kidds, No Age w. Gebhard Ullmann, Niko Schäuble, Trilok Gurtu, Glen Moore, Hans Lüdemann a.o., Intuition/Capitol (D) 1987
Out To Lunch w. Gebhard Ullmann, H.D. Lorenz & Niko Schäuble, Nabel (D) 1986



Willers/Ullmann, Playful Biber Rec. (D)1985
Pop 83 Nachwuchs-Festival Willers/Ullmann Duo & various artists, Dt. Phono-Akademie/WEA (D)1984

 
Schreckschuss, Verrückt nach Dir w. Gebhard Ullmann a.m.m, MMG (D) 1983



Schreckschuss, Jeden Tag hab ich den Blues MMG (D) 1982
Andreas Willers, Hier & Als Auch solo, Free Music Production (D) 1981