Angle(s)

Sunday, February 14, 2016

Omar Tamez 13 Questions

 

Omar TAMEZ is a guitarist/composer/multiinstrumentist from Monterrey, Mexico. He studied composition with Nicandro Tamez and also studied privately with Andre Richard, Daniel Catan, Mario Lavista, Manuel de Elias, Helmut Lachemann, Pierre Boulez and Karlheinz Stockhausen.



He is the founder, producer and artistic director of the International Musicians Meeting. He is currently preparing for the twelve edition that will occur 2016. He attended the NIMES (New Interfaces for Musical Expression) and Résonances Music Technology Convention at the IRCAM - Centre Pompidou, Paris, France. He taughts privately for the last twenty years in Monterrey; as well as giving workshops in different cities in México, Argentina, Brazil, USA & Germany. He was a visiting artist at CalArts, february 2013. He´s a visiting artist/educator in the last CMS (Creative Music Studio) Workshops during 2013, 2014, 2015 and 2016, lead by Karl Berger.

Mr. Tamez has performed in more than 144 countries including Mexico, United States, Italy, France, Germany, Austria, Sweden, Denmark, Holland, Turkey, Canada, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Japan and extensively trough Middle East, Asia & Africa.


with Joe Fonda

He is the founder and leader of Non-Jazz, his twenty-one years group. 
Omar has played / and or recorded with Ramón López, Agustí Fernández, Gebhard Ullmann, Karl Berger, Ingrid Sertso, Conny Bauer, Felix Petry, Gabriele Hasler, Carl Ludwig Hübsch, Almut Kuhne, Frank Köllges, Olaf Rupp, Andreas Willers, Reggie Workman, Wadada Leo Smith, John Lindberg, Pheeroan AkLaff, Rashied Alí, Sonny Fortune, Andrew Cyrille, Sam Rivers, Bruce Arnold, Jonathan Golove, Michael Vlatkovich, John Bacon, Geroge Schuller, Ratzo B. Harris, Steve Baczkowski, Ronnie Burrage, Gerald Cleaver, Alex Coke, Joe Fonda, Harvey Sorgen, Herb Robertson, Steve Rust, Steve Swell, Lou Grassi, Michael Jefry Stevens, Tina Marsh, Jay Rosen, Angelica Sanchez, Vincent Chancey, Badal Roy, Steve Gorn, Ken Wessel, Ken Filliano, John Hollenbeck, Tyshawn Sorey, Marylin Crispell, Peter Mack, Kirk Knuffke, Warren Smith, Karl Berger´s Imrpovisors Orchestra, Ben Gerstein, André Jaume, Beñat Achiary, Sophia Domancich, Bruno Angelini, Rémi Charmasson,  Marc Ducret, Laurent de Wilde, Laure Donnat,  Teppo Ahuta – ahoo, Harri Sjöstrom, Kalle Kalima, Mikko-Ville Luolajan-Mikkola, Marco Colonna, Neil Swainson, Emilio Tamez, Marcos Miranda, Rémi Álvarez, FAS Trío, Hernán Ríos, Gustavo Lorenzatti, Tatsuya Nakatani, Satoshi Takeishi and Arjen Gorter among many others.



Omar Tamez is involved in many projects. Some of his recent works include the project with Wadada´s Leo Smith Golden Quartet/Double Quartet in Buffalo, NY with Wadada Leo Smith, Angélica Sánchez, John Lindberg and Pheeroan AkLaff plus Ubudis Quartet.



He released several cd´s with musicians in the USA including, (Herb Robertson, Karl Berger, Steve Swell, Joe Fonda, Steve Rust, Ratzo B. Harris, Harvey Sorgen, Ben Gerstein, Jay Rosen, Steve Baczkowki, Jonathan Golove and John Bacon) and Europe (Conny Bauer, Harri Sjöström and Olaf Rupp).
Forthcoming is a new series of duets with Ramón López, Milo Tamez, Karl Berger and Tierra Mestiza with Angelica Sanchez.



What do you remember about your first approach to sound?

I born in a musical family and my father as a composer and performer was always listening and exploring sound; so for me sound was always my best friend and a very strong way to communicate and at the same time allow me to “travel” in my own mind.



How's your musical routine practice?

I don´t have a routine first of all.
I spend 20 hours a day working in music, or teaching (always privately and in a very personal way), playing, learning new music, composing, editing, mastering, listening and I never use the same method or process; I believe the mind gets lazy and bored when you use the same ways…like ate everyday the same food. As part of my “codes” I work 52 weeks a year and paused one just to “clean” my spirit.



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

Life with improving tools can be developed…
We are in a very delicate position; humanism depends on us so we have the obligation to work harder and deeper and one of the tools is technique; but not as a mechanism or formula; real technique brings so much challenges because we need many many years to be able to use it for expression and to embrace humanity; my main goal is how we can be more close and better socially speaking. Any technique by itself is useless.



Why do you need music? Can we live without music? 

Because is my way of life. We are music!!!.
I guess humans are living nowadays without music; but are a very flat and inhuman way of life.
We as humans deserve and should work to get a life full of colors, deepest and warm vibrations.



De Grutas y Paisajes by Omar Tamez - Ramón López

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

The challenges are being capable to use is as a tool and a construction technique and not as the way, there are benefits like spread music all over, but also depends on education how we do it and how we deal with as musicians and society.
At the end always the main core is education and how we misunderstand education and replace it with training; as soon as we can recover education as a human structure technology and digital tools will be very useful.



How do you feel listening to your own music?

Happy…even If I´ll never be full satisfied with the result for the simple reason I can always do it better.
But brings happiness to me be able to play with such a wide variety of musicians; honestly I never thought I´ll be able to play with all this masters from classical music, to jazz, rock, folk and ethnic music.
Also we can´t be selfish If the audience goes after our music is presented back home happy and feeling full of human experiences we must enjoy it and have gratitude for such a wonderful chance to be in this position. Every single record when is sold makes me fell so happy to be in human’s life in ways I´ll never be able to understand; so yes…listening my music brings happiness to myself.




What special or strange techniques do you use?

I use classical fingering in electric guitar, I use tons of electronic devices; there is no one single device I bought without modifications, I use little accessories some made by designers and sculptures for my work…then also I use more than 100 instruments in my music, guitars and all kind of string instruments for places all over the world; as I always say “music is be in the field and become part of the surrounding space so traveling the world is a way to make this experience real”.



Which is the main pleasure of the strings? What is their main limitation?

The strings itself in both ways…strings can be more than strings…strings don´t want to be more than strings.
We don´t need to try to find ways to use them to emulate other instruments; that makes them fell depress; strings are powerful by themselves and we need to understand them and learn from them how to brow together and make the music with strings stringed music.



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

There are few, one was my dad´s music listening him playing, and years later (after he passed away) work in his music and bring life on them.
Another music who change my ways was Derek Bailey´s music, be able to meet him and play few concerts just right before he passed was a huge honor, the way he approach music with such natural way and simplicity at the same time.
Another who pushes my own idea about play just music was meet, listening live (playing Ornette´s and Bach in the same night) and play with is Joachim Kühn´s; just music and not any label or attitude about it.





What quality do you most empathize with in a musician?

Humanity; quality, warmest, and of course full commitment to play and be all-together, full trust and the desire to be always improving.



Which living or dead artist would you like to collaborate with?

Igor Stravinsky, Pina Bausch, Jackson Pollock, Jean Cocteau, my own dad: Nicandro Tamez – he died when I was ten years old -; Duke Ellington, Albert Ayler, Don Cherry, Ornette Coleman, George Adams, Luciano Berio, Akira Kurosawa, Andrei Tarkovsky, Ray Bradbury are some of those dead ones.
About living ones: Wim Wenders, Juan Jose Campanella, Sonny Rollins, Roy Haynes, and any who believes in art as a human expression and way of life and not just as a gig or a job.




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

Once playing with Sonny Fortune he told me “you´re young, you should be more relax about mistakes and play with an open spirit because we don´t expect from you maturity; so you are ok If you make mistakes and do stupid things”. That change my life and now I improve my students to make mistakes and enjoy them so you can really learn with a smile in the process.
That's a very very important aspect in human life today; grow with a smile and really learning; not just trained to be this or that.




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

I believe in bands; so I stay with the same group of people working as long as possible.
I´m releasing seven new records with duos and trios I love (with Karl Berger, Angelica Sanchez, my brother Milo Tamez and Felix Petry), trio with Angie and Vincent Chancey, my quintet with Herb Robertson, Ben Gerstein, Ratzo Harris and Jay Rosen, a new record of my dad´s music with Herb Robertson, Steve Swell, Joe Fonda and Harvey Sorgen plus new music as a composer for guitar and percussion with all the extensions my brother and I use; and also preparing new music for solo guitar (classical, electric and baritone guitars).


Still pushing composers to make new music for electric guitar and develop a bigger repertoire for it; so If is there any composer who wants to make a piece I´ll more than happy to play it and touring all the world with that as part of my music.
 






Selected Discography



With Mexico Trio
Felix Petry, Milo Tamez
Mexican Research (2005)
No Label


With Bruce Arnold & Tom Hamilton
Intersections (2008)
Muse Eek Records


With Jonathan Golove
Voces Internas - Contemporary Mexican Works for Cello (2010)
Albany Records



With Harvey Sorgen
Two Roads One Path (2014)
Non - Jazz Records



With Rey Scott
Unusually Different (2014)
Planetary Lights



With Ramón López
De Grutas y Paisajes (2015)
Non - Jazz Records


With Kaheri Quartet
Angelica Sanchez, Ratzo B. Harris & Satoshi Takeishi
Recuerdos de Monk (2015)
Non - Jazz Records


With Steve Swell
Kanreki (2015)
Not Two Records


With Milo Tamez
Mexicanos (2014)
Non - Jazz Records



 Tameziana (2016)
Non - Jazz Records


With Tierra Mestiza
Días de Sol (2014)
Non - Jazz Records



 Floresta (2016)
Non - Jazz Records


With Karl Berger
Humana  (2016)
Non - Jazz Records


With Felix Petry
Adventures  (2016)
Non - Jazz Records

Quintet
Herb Robertson, Steve Gerstein, Ratzo Harris & Jay Rosen
Mid Summer Day Dream (2016)
Non - Jazz Records

New releases

 
Quintet of One 
Herb Robertson, Steve Swell, Joe Fonda & Harvey Sorgen
Ubudo (2017)
 Albany Records



Hai - Kais: Music for solo guitar (2017)
Non - Jazz Records



Magico Trio 
Vincent Chancey & Angelica Sanchez
Magico (2017)
Limen Music Records

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