Angle(s)

Saturday, December 5, 2015

Sevket Akinci 13 Questions



Guitarist, composer, improviser, arranger, and producer Sevket Akinci, was born in 1972 in Izmir, Turkey. Throughout his musical career he participated in diverse projects varying from jazz to avantgarde, from punk to Turkish Classical Music.



After graduating from Berklee College of Music in 1994, he published his first album in 1996 “Uçurumda Açan“, a collection of folk compositions. And to this day it still has a cult status. Then he went on a totally different direction and led his jazz-rock group "Lifeline" which performed his own compositions for five years. This group published two albums. And then in 2005 he co-founded the audio-visual project "Mugwump" with Korhan Erel.



The same year, he became a member of what would be the longest-standing free improvisation group in Turkey: "Islak Köpek", a free-improvisation ensemble based in Istanbul. It was active between 2005 - 2013 and managed to place Free Improvisation on the Turkish experimental music chart. It played in the Akbank Jazz Festival twice (2006 and 2012) and released two physical and one digital album in 2006, 2009 and 2011. The band got together for two concerts in Istanbul and Berlin to celebrate their 10th anniversary. Şevket Akıncı: electric and acoustic guitars, effects, Korhan Erel: computer, controllers, electronics, Giray Gürkal: electric guitar, effects, Robert Reigle: tenor saxophone, Volkan Terzioğlu: tenor saxophone



Last year, he released a free jazz album called "Century". He's also a founding member of "Mutant", a 7-guitar group which plays compositions of its members. His album which he recorded with the famous guitarist Eugene Chadbourne and other leading Turkish musicians from the free scene in Istanbul, "Dead Country" is released from Konnex Records in June 2010.



Among artists that he's played or recorded with we can name Anthony Coleman, Dave Bryant, Alfred 23 Harth, Michael Moore, Mike Cooper, Robert van Heumen, Wilbert de Joo, Wolter Wierbos, Marc Alban Lotz, Tanya Kalmanovitch, Korhan Futacı, Yasemin Mori, Tanju Okan, Karlheinz Essl, Le Quan Ninh, Richard Nunns, Sussan Deyh I, Luc Ex, Mark O'Leary, Eugene Chadbourne, Kirstie Simpson, Christian Asplund, Saskia Laroo, Richard Horowitz, Ilia Belorukov, Jun Kawasaki, Olga Nosova, Pascal BATTUS, Erkan Ogur, Imer Demirer, Seda Röder, Serra Yilmaz, Art Diktatur, Suzan D. Parker, Teoman Madra, Tom Fryer, Viv Corringham, Warren Byrd, Yiorgis Sakelliro of Jürgen Solothurnmann, Gunnar Lettow, Felicity Türközü, Candaş fat, Tolga Tüzün, Ayşenur Kolivar, Gökçe Akcelik... He has been a radio host since 2006 in a radio program on free jazz and free improvisation. He also composes for films, dance and theater and is a published poet. 




What do you remember about your first guitar?

My first guitar was a not very good classic guitar with the lower E string missing. It stayed that way for several months.



Which was the first and the last record you bought with your own money?

The first record I bought with my own money was Pink Floyd- The Wall. The last one is a box-set of the complete remastered recordings of Cecil Taylor for the Italian label "Black Saint". It contains the excellent "For Olim" and the historic duo of him and Max Roach



What do you expect from music?

Now I expect music to still surprise and move me even after several listenings. Basically when listening or playing I go after my ear, regardless of categories or formulae.  It's not only an emotional and psychological experience but a physical one as well.



Which work of your own are you most surprised by, and why?

I was very surprised when I found a  cassette of a band I was involved with in high school, back in the late 80's. One song is actually a very primitive free improv with several minutes of loud feedback. So maybe now years later I'm back at my roots :)





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

Technique is whatever necessary to transform the abstract into concrete. So if you have a  particular sound in your head and you are able to play it then you have a good technique. Techique for me is more a mental than a phsyical thing. It's about finding what is unique in you. Then you can form your own methodology and technique in order to make your language intelligible. I feel that Derek Bailey or Keith Rowe have a good "technique". Yngwie Malmsteen is not technique it is a formula. I was never interested in playing fast licks, for me speed is a color rather than an end in itself.



What quality do you admire most in an musician?

The ability to listen and the wisdom to accept are necessary for a musician. Also the music has to ' breathe". It's not necessarily about silence. Brötzmann's or Cecil Taylor's music breathe even when they play "all the time". It's about knowing when and how you play, rather than 'what' you play. And that depends largely on how well you listen and interact with what you hear.



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

A good instrument will translate into sound what's in your head. It may as well be a very cheap guitar that you found on flea market, which is the case for one my guitars.



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

I'm old school about this maybe. Digital releases seem less 'intimate'. You can't really make a birthday present with them... or when I die I prefer to leave my kids records or cd's rather than a hard disc. Also it seems to me that value diminishes as availability increases. A friend of mine told me that he downloaded every single record that Miles Davis made, but he couldn't name even one. Back in the eighties, in the age of cassettes, when listening to a tape of a band you also had to listen to songs you didn't particularly like, that's how you assimilated the music, that's how you assimilated the band's or artist's vision. Now most of the people of the younger generation listen to a LOT of music without really digesting them. And also what I noticed is that most of them talk about 'songs' rather than albums, even when referring to well known concept rock albums.  Also with LP's or cd's the album's design, the calligraphy, photos, track listing etc... are part of the artist's vision. Mp3's of albums that you download form only a part of what the artist intended.



Define the sound you're still looking for.

I would have loved to be around Albert Ayler, maybe not necessarily play his band but breathing the same air would have sufficed. To be around his creative energy. To talk to him.  Also many of my guitar heroes Derek Bailey, Bill Frisell, Fred Frith, Marc Ribot, Terje Rypdal, David Torn are some of the players I would have loved to work with.



How would you define silence?

Since John Cage wrote a whole book about it it's pointless to repeat the same things. But basically there's music in silence as there is silence in music. Silence is as much part of life as sound. Silence is not at all the same as 'nothing', nothing is death, you are not there, you should be able to witness and contemplate it and therefore you should be alive in order to do that, it doesn't exist without you. Even in total  silence you can hear your heartbeat. And using silence in music especially in improvisation-  not playing- is definitely as much musical contribution  as playing. Silence is as much part of your composition as sound.


 
What are your motivations for playing music?

I'm not very conscious about my motivations for being a musician, because in my musical decisions choices always come before their reasons. Music is a whole state of consciousness by itself, like love, belief, reason...It speaks for itself so I don't try to define it with words and imprison it in a logical cage.... Like Cecil Taylor said "music is everything that you do". I often feel that  music is already there in the air, like an invisible source of energy, and the rare instances when you touch it make life meaningful and worth living.





What's your best musical experience?

I don't think that my musical experiences compete with each other so I have a hard time chosing. But my first free  improv concert outside Turkey, at a concert with the bass player Luc Ex and two Polish musicians at a the Plain festival in Warsaw stand out, although listening to it I don't particularly find that what I played is that good. But that concert and every other concert (including a very memorable concert at achusch with John Tilbury on the organ) at that festival stuck in my memory and helped shape everything I was about to do for the next ten years. And my partnership with Korhan Erel (the electronic-computer artist residing now in Berlin) whom I've been collaborating for ten years now also helped a great deal shape my vision about music.



Şevket Akıncı: electric and acoustic guitars, effects, Korhan Erel: computer, controllers, electronics, Giray Gürkal: electric guitar, effects, Robert Reigle: tenor saxophone , Volkan Terzioğlu: tenor saxophone

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

I just finished an album of compositions based on the lithographs, prints and drawings by Dutch artist M.C Escher. I hope to perform it at the Escher Museum in the Hague. I put a lot of effort into it.



Selected Discography


Lifeline- Nova Express
ADA MÜZIK, 2003

 

Lifeline- New Frontier
AK MÜZIK, 2005


Islak Köpek- Islak Köpek
AK MÜZIK, 2008

 
Century- Şevket Akıncı, Demirhan Baylan, Şenol Küçükyıldırım, Robert Reigle
AK MÜZIK, 2010


Dead Country feat. Eugene Chadbourne
KONNEX RECORDS, 2010


Mutant- Blues In Z
AK MÜZIK, 2011


Mark Lotz & Islak Köpek- Istanbul Improv Sessions May 4th
evil rabbit records, 2011


Şirin Soysal- Bir Şeyler Var
NuDC Records, 2011


Dead Country feat. Alfred Harth- Gestalt Et Death
Al Maslakh Records, 2012


Şirin Soysal- Ziyaret
ADA MÜZIK, 2013


Şevket Akıncı& Celal Kadri Kınoğlu
Müzik Hayvanı, 2013


Weed- Ghostwatch 
AK MÜZIK, 2014


Wolter Wierbos, Wilbert DeJoode, 
Şevket Akıncı, Korhan Erel, Giray Gürkal- Live At Zaal 100
Müzik Hayvanı, 2014

To be released SOON

 
Şevket Akıncı- Escher Chronicles 
AK MÜZIK, 2016

 

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