Angle(s)

Sunday, November 9, 2014

David Tronzo 13 questions


 David Tronzo: 01-18-14 SubCulture (2014 The Alternative Guitar Summit) Photo Scott Friedlander

David Tronzo has devoted most of his life to music since he first became mesmerized by it as a youthful rock-influenced teenager in the summer of 1972. He has literally and figuratively “traveled far” from his beginnings in rural Rochester, New York, where he was born in 1957, steadily honing his skills as a self-taught student to his modern-day evolution to becoming a world-renowned slide guitar musician and teacher. He was drawn to music at age eleven and decided on guitar by age thirteen and taught himself. By age fifteen he was playing gigs. "When I was 11, I heard a live band and it was kind of an epiphany. I couldn't believe the effect the music was having on my surroundings, not just on me. And I thought, 'I have got to explore this.' I'd had no music training at that point, but by the time I was 13 I figured out that I wanted to play guitar. I was completely self-taught. By the age of 15, I was playing five nights a week, though I really just had three good notes and five good chords."


Spanish Fly with Steven Bernstein, David Tronzo, Marcus Rojas and Ben Perowsky: 12-29-12 ShapeShifter Lab.Photo Scott Friedlander


"I specialize in a specific technical area of guitar playing known as slide or bottleneck guitar. When I first started to play, I figured out how to advance this area of guitar playing, particularly the technical aspect, to bring it into different kinds of music. I ended up developing systematic innovations in the technical repertoire."
Tronzo has received the distinction of being voted one of the “Top 100 Guitarists of the 20th Century” by Musician Magazine (September, 1993 issue). In addition, the pundits in New York City bestowed their long-time resident (1979-2002) with more accolades (“Best Guitarist in N.Y.C.-1993” by the New York Press). Musician Magazine honored him with the distinction of being one of the “Top Ten Jazz Guitarists.”



"I started playing gigs even before I felt I was ready. But that's the beauty of the music business—there's so much on-the-job development. The constant discomfort from taking on things before you're ready can be corrosive, though—you need to be able to manage it. The balancing factor is when the task itself is exciting and inspiring, and you know it's right. Then it just becomes a question of how much approval you need, and in what form."



Tronzo’s unquenchable thirst for mastering his craft has provided him with a diversified taste in music, which can be seen in his unique playing style. Essentially, Tronzo envisions a style ranging widely in emotion and technique, weaving freely through all of the music he plays. The result is a startlingly innovative body of extended techniques for the slide guitar for which he is credited with creating: fluid single lines, finger-behind-the-slide chords, and harmonic slaps, using unconventional slide accoutrements such as plastic cups, rags, pencils and wires.




Tronzo has toured extensively in Europe and the United States, gracing the stages of the most renowned international music festivals in the world. He has teamed up with acclaimed musicians in various duos e.g. the Tronzo/Herbert Duo with bassist Peter Herbert, and projects under his name (Tronzo Quartet/Tronzo Project), as well as others: the Tronzo Trio, Spanish Fly, V-16 (with Jerry Granelli), Slow Poke (with Michael Blake), Club D'Elf,  GTG, The Savage Wanderers and Ned Rothenberg. Tronzo’s slide guitar can also be heard in the soundtracks to director Robert Altman’s film “Shortcuts” and Marco Brambilla’s “Excess Baggage.” He has also recorded and toured with Wayne Horvitz and The President, John Hiatt, John Lurie and The Lounge Lizards, John Cale, Marshall Crenshaw, Foday Muso Suso, Hassan Hakmoun, Gavin Friday, The Jazz Passengers, Mike Manieri, Stephen Vitiello, David Sanborn, John Hiatt, Ray Anderson, Medeski, Martin & Wood, Reeves Gabrels, Sex Mob, Elliot Sharp, Warren Haynes; and others.



"A lot of the experiences I've had on the job are what I call 'threshold experiences,' meaning that I'm on a threshold I cannot cross over myself; someone on the other side has to pull me across. When I do cross over, my music is verifiably different."
Tronzo is currently an Associate Professor at Berklee College of Music in Boston, an Artist in Residence at Haystack Mountain in Deer Isle, Maine, and a Visiting Artist at HDK in Berlin, Germany.



Can you describe a sound experience that you believe contributed to your becoming a musician?

Hearing a live rock band in a church hall and electric slide guitar on a record




Steven Bernstein- Trumpet and Slide Trumpet, Marcus Rojas- Tuba, David Tronzo- Slide and Prepared Guitar, Ben Perowsky- Drums 

What do you recall about your playing learning process?

Imaging the sound and reverse engineering it back to where I was : I gave myself a goal to achieve each week and would test myself at week’s end. Slow and incremental progress. Each day getting closer.



Dream about a perfect instrument.

I rather enjoy deeply imperfect instruments- like having a partner in the effort.


David Tronzo- slide guitar, Michael Blake- saxophones, Tony Scherr- bass and acoustic guitar, Kenny Wollesen- drums/percussion

What is your relationship with other disciplines such as painting, literature, dance, theater ...?

I sculpted and drew before I  played music ( still drawing and print making today).
I worked with a lot of dancers, some theater. Enjoy it all….



What are your motivations for playing and composing music?

I am mostly interested in the process and the action of both, not so much the outcome.


David Tronzo: Slide and Prepared Guitars, Stephen Vitiello: Electronics, Michael J. Schumacher: Piano

What’s the difference between a good player and a bad one?

The good player can imitate a bad player whenever they wish. The great player maybe unable to do this and the phenomenal player returns to the beginning..


Hannes Loeschel- piano, electronics, David Tronzo- slide guitar, Achim Tang- bass

What do you remember about your first guitar?

1965 Fender Mustang ( belonged to my brother Michael), robin’s egg blue, my father and I sawed a bicycle handle bar into slides.



What's the relevance of technique in music, in your opinion?

Every technique creates a sound of some type, all are needed eventually.


Steven Bernstein-trumpet, slide trumpet, cornet, flugelhorn and voice, Marcus Rojas-tuba, tuba percussion, tuba singing 
Tronzo-slide guitar, Ben Perowsky- drums and percussion

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

Take all the aspects of my playing that I think I should change, keep these and magnify them until they are huge, and get rid of everything else! 
Make sure that I give every note that I play a face!


Reeves Gabrels: electric and nylon string guitars, loopage and toys, David Tronzo: slide guitar, prepared guitar, dobro, baritone guitar, Matthew Greunberg: fretless bass, Michael Levesque: drums, Jay Bellerose: percussion, Tom Dube: producer, engineer and mix engineer

What instruments or tools do you use?

I utilize a wide variety of slides : metal, glass, wood , plastic- every size and shape as well as objects to “prepare” the string with : clips, corks, sticks, springs etc



What do you need from music?

I try not to put much demand on music to give back to me, but rather approach it as it is my task to give to it, to serve the music in the ways that I can.


Jerry Granelli, David Tronzo & J.Anthony Granelli

What quality do you admire most in an musician?

Joy accompanied by relative fearlessness.


Club d'Elf w/ Hakmoun and Fribgane

What projects are you working on now and what does the future hold?

I am developing a project called “Solo Circle” involving the exploration of varieties of solo guitar expression among a wide range of players, and creating a course on the same topic(s) to introduce to my students.
Recording a solo record series, and two new group recordings…..



bout




2013
Scott Tarulli
Anythime Anywhere
2011
2009
2008
2007
Ned Rothenberg / Tony Buck / Stomu Takeishi with Tronzo
The Fell Clutch
2007
2006
2006
2005
2005
2005
Loeschel / Tang / Tronzo 
Kinds: The Very Life Of Art          
2005
2005
2005
2005
2004
2003
2003
2003
2003
2003
2003
2002
2002
David Tronzo
The Brass Hand
2002
2001
2001
2001
2001
2001
VV.AA.
2000
2000
2000
Tronzo/Herbert Duo  
Segmente
2000
1999
1999
1999




1999
1999
1998
1998
1998
1998
1998
1998
1997
1997
Spanish Fly
Fly By Night (for San Francisco Ballet)
1997
1997
Marco Brambilla
1997
1996
VV.AA.
1996
VV.AA.
1996
1996
1996
1995
VV.AA.
1995
VV.AA.



1995
David Tronzo / Reeves Gabrels
Night in Amnesia
1995
1995
VV.AA.
1995
VV.AA.
1995
1995
1994
1994
1994
David Tronzo
1994




1993
Robert Altman
1993
1992 Gavin Friday Adam and Eve
1992
VV.AA.
1992
1991
1991
1991
VV.AA.
1990
VV.AA.
1990
David Tronzo / Michael Lee Firkins
Untitled ‎(Flexi, 7", Shape) Guitar Player Magazine 1990
1989
1988

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