The John Scofield Interview
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- Опубликовано: 11 апр 2022
- I have been wanting to interview John Scofield since the beginning of my channel. He has been one of my favorite guitarists and biggest influences. The interview is nearly one hour long and packed full of incredible stories and insights I never knew about John. If you want to see more content like this or support my channel you can donate through this link on my website: rickbeato.com/pages/donate
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John Scofield’s guitar work has influenced jazz since the late 70’s and is going strong today. Possessor of a very distinctive sound and stylistic diversity, Scofield is a masterful jazz improviser whose music generally falls somewhere between post-bop, funk edged jazz, and R & B.
Born in Ohio and raised in suburban Connecticut, Scofield took up the guitar at age 11, inspired by both rock and blues players. He attended Berklee College of Music in Boston. After a debut recording with Gerry Mulligan and Chet Baker, Scofield was a member of the Billy Cobham-George Duke band for two years. In 1977 he recorded with Charles Mingus, and joined the Gary Burton quartet. He began his international career as a bandleader and recording artist in 1978. From 1982-1985, Scofield toured and recorded with Miles Davis. His Davis stint placed him firmly in the foreground of jazz consciousness as a player and composer.
Since that time he has prominently led his own groups in the international Jazz scene, recorded over 30 albums as a leader (many already classics) including collaborations with contemporary favorites like Pat Metheny, Charlie Haden, Eddie Harris, Medeski, Martin & Wood, Bill Frisell, Brad Mehldau, Mavis Staples, Government Mule, Jack DeJohnette, Joe Lovano and Phil Lesh. He’s played and recorded with Tony Williams, Jim Hall, Ron Carter, Herbie Hancock, Joe Henderson, Dave Holland, Terumasa Hino among many jazz legends. Throughout his career Scofield has punctuated his traditional jazz offerings with funk-oriented electric music. All along, the guitarist has kept an open musical mind.
Touring the world approximately 200 days per year with his own groups, he is an Adjunct Professor of Music at New York University, a husband, and father of two.
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Thanx for the interview. That was great. When John spoke about his Blues roots and approach I had to think about your argument that Rock had lost its importance due to the disintegration of the Blues. I think that is true.
I love Jazz, Blues and 60s Rock. I can enjoy jazz intellectually and aesthetically, I love 60s rock for its energy but the blues is the most important and fundamental thing.
Didn t B.B.King play 9th and Wes 13th? Man 15th is insane. Did Martino tune his guitar down like SRV?
Some recommendations:
R.L.Burnside "Come on in" from 1995. A blend of Blues end electric music but hard riffs like Sabbath. Top 5 record of the 90s.
Harvey Mendel "Shangranade or Christo Redontor."
Dave Brubeck "Two Generations of Brubeck".
Muddy Waters "Electric Mud" and "After the rain".
Miles Davis live recordings "Agharta" and "Pangaea".
Love your interviews but notice that there aren't many women. Perhaps Tal Wilkenfeld might have some interesting perspectives and history. She's young but started very young and has played with rock and jazz greats. And she's an Aussie! 🙃
You got more concrete details out of John than most interviewers I've heard. John, while being super smart, and big-hearted and open, sometimes seems to not want to bother or bore interviewers or readers/listeners with a lot of detail. He's got sort of an "aw shucks" personality, which is refreshing for someone of his level of fame and accomplishment, and sometimes interviewers aren't willing to dig a little with him and get him off his normal talking points. I'm sure he's done a zillion interviews with newspaper reporters who all ask the exact same shallow questions, and that must get tedious. Good job with your questions and follow-ups!
I love your videos Rick, you remind me of a musical Anthony Bourdain 🎸🎸
@@SteveGouldinSpain library of congress....yeah, great material for younger musicians
Think of how important Rick is. He is the ONLY person out there capturing these long-form oral history records of legendary musicians for posterity. I've been doing research for books using old deteriorating tape interviews that were, unfortunately, not preserved or transferred properly, so these kinds of historical linkages are very fragile and vulnerable. Luckily Rick is doing these in high quality digital on a large platform which helps guarantee their longevity.
What about Cory Wong's podcast. He interviewed Scott field too.
No he isn’t lmao
There are actually some others - check out Pablo Held's "Investigates" series, and the NYU Steinhardt interview series. Scofield has done both, and there are many more with other great musicians in both series.
I absolutely agree! Rick is a generational bridge for music appreciation and education across multiple genres and eras of music.
hes not the only one at all.. what about broken record or couch riffs podcast? but i agree that its absolutely wonderful and not many people are as qualified as rick to talk freely to these people without reading questions off of cards or just talking about whats written in their wikipedia article
"If I don't practice I'm screwed." What a quote. So emblematic of John Scofield. So refreshing to hear a tall dog like him talking straight, not at all full of himself, completely grounded, humble and honest. Thank you, sir and thank you Rick for capturing this gem of an interview.
Check out his album with Medeski Martin and Wood.
I sympathize with that big time. Some people who are really good are not actually naturals in the sense that they can pick up a guitar their instrument after not touching it in months and play great. They need constantly be grinding to keep up their skill. I get the impression that Scofield is more along the lines of that.
Agreed
Any day not practicing is one day longer to be good Ben hogan
@@HiFiAwardTour Good advice! But I have to point out that it's "albums." They've done at least three together: A Go Go, Out Louder, and Juice. Plus a live album: MSMW Live: In Case the World Changes Its Mind.
John Scofield is a genius....and he sounds like a Jeff Bridges' character.
That's just like your opinion man
Great analogy!
Definitely getting Jeff bridges vibes. The guy is a snappy dresser as well.
The Dude Abides...
Jeff plays guitar as well, so if someone would conjure up a Scofield biopic script...
The humility of this guy is humbling.
We listen to Scofield at dinner every night. My 4 year old son insists on it. He calls it "fancy dinner music". He always knows if i try to play something else. He knows Scofield when he hears it!
Great interview Rick!
Gotta start them young!
That's so cute!
That’s a wonderful thing to hear!
@Kenny -- Dad of the Year!! :)
that's quite a kid you've got
Now that we have Scofield we definitly need Frisell !
Antoine Boyer
Matteo Mancuso
@@intuneorange boyer is phenomenal classical gyspy jazz hybrid fusion..wow. superhuman .
@christopher
yes and check out his Scarlatti. !
Mancuso is very good at electric stuff also.
Yes! And if you are able to get him, please ask him about the making of “Blues Dream”. It’s what got me into him and some parts of that album still give me goosebumps.
@@chrissterrmusic Same...god, that's a great record. And kudos to Rick for these interviews--these guys are my heros, from Sting to Metheny to Scofield to Ron Carter. It would be amazing to see Frisell on here. And if Rick could get Lionel Loueke, who I don't know if a lot of people know about, but should...Karibu is such a great record. That guy is one of a kind too.
Hi Rick, my dad was John Dougherty and he was the guy that invented the Mind' pick (Stone guitar pick) and Pat Martino endorsed them. Pat and my dad were good friends. It made my day to hear someone mention the pick, many people don't remember. When he passed away, he still had the same 2 picks from 1977. My sister has one I I have the other.
Hey, thank you for this comment. This interview is a beautiful link between life stories, people, musicians...
your comment here is something precious!
(I'm sorry for my poor English)
I remember the Mind’ picks and the ads in Guitar Player magazine.
I met John Dougherty when I had my business, Picks and Stones-gemstone guitar picks. I was doing M'ind Pick copies for several of my custom clients, one of whom knew John. He had seen my copies and gave me his blessing as he was no longer making them. I closed my business years ago but I might still have one.
These interviews will be a gold mine for musicologists in decades and centuries to come.
Have you ever read an interview with Mozart?
@@littlethuggie Sadly, no.
@@markvolstad9380 there ya go. Everyone is forgotten, even the best, within 50-100 years.
@@littlethuggie I don't understand your point. Are you suggesting that Mozart has been "forgotten"??
@@markvolstad9380 yes. This guy won't be remembered for "centuries". No one will. Maybe the name will be known in some way if you're amazing, and that's it.
John Scofield is a LEGEND
So is Rick doing all these LEGENDARY interviews!
The best!
Not only is Scofield a worldclass artist - but his self awareness and humility is what was most inspiring. The remark about not wanting to come off as falsely humble was great. Even a musical giant knows to keep a watchful eye on the ego.
When people talk about someone with an 'ego problem', they usually mean that the person is arrogant, but just as much of an ego problem is someone that can't recognise or acknowledge their own strengths. I'm sick of every comments section being about 'humility' as if the all time greats don't have the right to say "I'm very good at this, you know it, I know it, we all know it". People who excell in one area are often very weak in another, nature is balanced like that. Everyone knows equality is a lie and a pipe dream, people can't and never will be equal, and that's how it is and should be. People that show too much false modesty are worse than people who confidently assert their skills.
100% agree with your comment! Wonderful interview and what a great guy
I emailed him once about some material I saw him play live that I wanted to buy but I didn't know the title,, he answered me personally, cool dude. Signed "old man Sco"
@@vextract4662 Thats super cool :)
Not EVEN a….BECAUSE he is….
I fuggin’ love this guy! He is one of the most unique guitarists ever. That feel, harmonic sense, choice of notes and placement, it’s the person he is. Our time with Miles showed me that John sounds so cool on guitar because he’s such a very cool fellow. I really admire him. Great interview!
True, true and true. Far and away my favorite guitarist. You hear it all in everything he plays, blues, funk, rock and roll, bebop. The hrythm, the lines, the feel, the note choices, the inflections....
Legend!
Both of you!
Such a great interview. I saw you guys with Miles at the Rainbow Music Hall in Denver in '85. What an incredible show that was! One of the most memorable of my lifetime. Have been a huge Schofield fan ever since.
I agree!! I love John!!!!
Nearly 20 years ago when I was an exuberant young jazz student I saw Sco give a masterclass and asked him what he thought about when he played. He said, “where the 1 is.”
One of the greatest guitar players of all time and the finest interviewer on RUclips today in the same room, it doesn't get any better than these two cool cats talking all things music. I love it. Thank you Rick for these amazing interviews with these legends and thank you John for continuing to give us so much beautiful music.
Couldn’t agree more, another stellar interview with another stellar guitarist/musician! Thank you Rick Beato and John. Keep up the great works. 🎶✨🎶
Stella-riffic 🎸
I've been listening to John play for decades and this is the first time I've heard him speak at length. He is humourous, honest and humble. His stories are fascinating. I could easily sit through 10 hours of listening to him speak. And as usual, Rick is beyond brilliant with the questions he asks and his knowledge of his subject and contemporaries. Rick has a natural and seemingly effortless way to make these interviews flow so beautifully and the resulting interviews are pure magic. Thank you Rick Beato.
I thought nothing could top Rick's Peter Frampton and Pat Metheny interviews, but the Scofield interview ranks up there in the pantheon of music history gems. If Miles instructed Sco to "play with space", the key to Rick's interview chops is giving his subjects the space to tell the story. Outstanding job Rick! I tip my hat to you.
Bob: exactly right! There is a interview dude on YT who constantly jumps on his subjects lines, you can see their disappointment on their faces! Space, the key is to give them SPACE! Love you, Rick!
Might be a philosophic point of view, but in the end, it's the space between the notes that creates the rhythm, the groove, the feel - the music.
Rick is excellent....encyclopedic.....the pat Matheny is priceless for me....priceless
I heard this compliment given to Steve Ferrone. That he left a lot of space for the musicians
this dude is just cool personified... remember when musicians were cool? i miss it
Hi Rick, I'm a 47 years old from Switzerland, and I really want to thank you. You're interviewing all my "youth" heroes: from Di Meola, to Metheny to Scofield. Thank you so much. With your channel i feel like i can fullfill all my wishes about interviews and musical taste. Keep goin'!
"You're a pussy unless you play 14's." Man, I almost fell out of my chair laughing! This is one of the greatest musician interviews ever. Loved every minute of it.
@@fingerstyling I'm sorry, I don't think this honest and open interview was meant for overly sensitive guys like you, Lucas. The comment I mention was made some time ago when things weren't so politically correct. I don't condone that kind of language but I still found it funny within the context of the conversation.
@@boogeen1 Don’t apologize. 🙄
@@fingerstyling Stop being one.
@@fingerstyling "one man's belly laugh is another womans slap in the face" is that because both those things are very funny?
@@fingerstyling lol cringe
Scofield’s “A go go” LP is a must. Fan-damn-tastic!
I’ll never forget discovering that record in a music store back in the 90s. I was already a fan of MMW but I had no idea they’d played with Sco. I had gone specifically to look for more Scofield albums, and then I find A Go Go and flip it over to see who the other players are, and I see John, Billy, and Chris’s names and just about fell on my ass in shock. I rushed to the counter to pay for the album just to get it home and listen to it as fast as possible. I knew it couldn’t help but be amazing with players of that caliber, but I never could’ve predicted how cohesive and complementary the four of them would sound together. They’re a match made in heaven, for sure.
@@superjay42 yes, I’ll Bluetooth it in the car & binge listen to it for weeks on end, stop for a bit then eventually return. Been a pattern since the CD era! Lol
Top tier collab
He doesn't think he gets a good guitar sound?! His guitar is one of the most distinct and identifiable sounds ever. Legend. Great interview Rick!
I'm not a fan of his tone on earlier recordings, but his tone in the last 15 years or so is as good as it gets.
I agree about his tone, as far as his 80's stuff - early 90's, too. But, ever since he dropped the stereo chorus on "A Go Go," his tone has been as great as every other aspect of his playing - and he's been my favorite guitarist since the late '80's, so that's high praise.
John talked a lot about his strong blues-based characteristic, but I think that what sets him apart the most is how FUNKY his playing is.
Yep, there is a bunch of great blues influenced players, but most of them just don't give you stank face like Sco does.
Learned a LOT from Scofield's phrasing . It seems like he's late , but it works and builds the tension and the melody
@@roncondon4679 I usually describe Sco’s phrasing as “kind of slippery”, but in a good way of course.
@@roncondon4679 That quality of his phrasing plus his tone really make his playing magical. I never get tired of Sco.
He just swings and swings
I was actually raised on "Sco" growing up because Jazz and Jazz Fusion was really strong in my family. Appreciate this, and I will certainly cherish the interview, Rick.
Been a Scofield fan for 40+ years - I couldn't break away from this interview ... totally awesome. He's really just like the rest of us - work really hard and maybe you'll get somewhere ... imagine that. Rick - you bring out the best in your subjects ... you know, they know you know, but you let them tell the story. I'm an old newspaperman and that's how you get a good interview. Golden.
I had the immense privilege of sitting about 5 feet away from John Scofield (and about 4 feet away from his amp) at the Kuumbwa jazz club in Santa Cruz almost 20 years ago. A transcendental experience.
I was at that show! The Kuumba is a very special gig. No matter where you are in the room, you're almost "5 feet away"! I saw Michel Petruccianni there in 1984 (I think?) with Dave Holland on bass - OH MY! That was extremely surreal. I also got to see Scofield with MMW for the A Go Go album at Yoshi's Oakland. THAT was a smokin' gig!
It sounds like you measured the distance
This guy is amazing. 70 years on this planet and he remembers every one of them. What a life. He reminds me of The Dude if he was a great musician and could remember stuff.
Great interview! First Metheny, then DiMeola, now Scofield! All we need now is McLaughlin, Stern, and Frissel!
En Julian Lage
George Benson too
These are valuable. Need to get these guys while they are still around. Players like Allan Holdsworth come to mind would have been great before he passed. How about Bill Nelson?
@@ansiemusie I agree! And Kurt Rosenwinkel
I had classes with John at the New School back in 1973. He was a great teacher.
46:46 That one finger, Jazz Blues solo - and you can still hear John Scofield's feel and sound!
Rick, Thank you for putting up these precious interviews!
‘Sound is probably everything, you know’ -John Scofield
“I just want to play good” man i feel that. I feel like musicians, sort of like athletes, really feel time (both literally and figuratively). You are constantly riding time, having good nights, bad nights, great nights, always trying to be present and in the moment.
Listening to him talk like a regular, down-to-earth cat, you’d never suspect what a total badass he is. Gotta love that genuine humility!
"With guitar, we don't have to breath, do we?" -- a masterclass in one sentence. If what you are playing doesn't have any breaths in it, you may impress people today but no one will be humming that song to themself decades later.
Hey!!! How great this advice is!
Been playing for 20 years and he basically changed everything for me when he said that. I picked up my guitar right after the interview with what he said in mind and I never sounded better.
John Scofield: Probably the coolest guitar player on earth rn
Rick Beato: The cool uncle we all wanted to have
Amazing Interview Rick!!! Keep em coming!!
25 years ago I had heard of Scofield but not very familiar with his sound. When I got the opportunity to play with him during a jazz clinic in college I was so impressed with the variety of his playing I became an instant fan for life. Such a phenomenal musician.
This is the best thing ever happened on internet. I'm just an amateur musician but just listening to these giants, and your questions, always relevant.... a real treat. We need more of this. Thank you.
Nice to see that Rick wore his finest Canadian Tuxedo to the Scofield interview. Can't wait to watch this one.
He is just the man. Period.
John is so humble, witty, great sense of humour. This interview was great Rick. Johns truly an originator, and fantastic artist.
I'll never forget the first time I saw John Scofield play live. It was at Estival Jazz in Lugano, Switzerland. I've always been a massive fan of the album Bump. I was studying abroad in Italy in 2007, and when I heard that Medeski, Scofield, Martin and Wood were playing this FREE jazz festival a couple train rides north, I instantly decided to go. It was incredible and kind of insane. The piazza was packed and you could barely move, but that was some of the coolest live music I've ever seen. We got there early enough to see them soundcheck. Lugano is one of the most beautiful places I've ever been, as well. The whole trip left an indelible mark in my psyche. I think John Scofield is the most inventive guitar player I've ever heard. He's my all-time favorite. Dude definitely BUMPS.
These interviews are some of the best I have ever heard, regardless of subject. Rick, your knowledge of the music, history and the work of those you speak with make these incredibly special. Your style of letting the musicians talk - playing the space - is just amazing and leaves us all with these gifts of insight and history. Thank you.
Rick, I have to say that this interview with John is probably one of the best. This is mostly due to the honesty, sincerity and humility that John is able to relate. I also enjoyed your conversation with Pat Metheny, especially when he mentioned that he used to visit the Corso and just hang by the bandstand (stage)and absorb the experience. I used to do the same thing in my late teens, I'm 73 years old now, and still love Latin Jazz. Congrats on your great interviews.
When the man himself John Scofield talked about P Funk I almost fell out my chair, when you think about it it makes perfect sense but it legit blew my mind away! so happy my favorites listened to my favorites 🙏🏾🤙🏾
That rug really ties the room together
One of only a few guys with such a unique style I know who’s playing just from hearing two notes.
I got to see John play with Miles in Atlanta somewhere around 1983 (Marcus Miller on bass!). I was going to Ga St for their newly formed Jazz Guitar studies program and Pete Hennes said listen to Scofield's Rough House album. I had to work to like it. I also got to be intimidated by Sonny Emory in Jazz Lab for two years. I'm old. Love Sco!!
Could not get into The Satriani Surfing with The Alien show at the Roxy, so I went back to Westwood- the moon was full and blue. I heard some interesting leads blowing out of a bar downtown. It was this dude, small intimate setting- could touch him, jamming his ass off. I was glad I missed the other show.
Top! One of those neverending interviews you never wanna stop.
"You can bend STEEL!" 🤣
Living legend, he's got groove, funk, feel and...everything a guitarplayer need
His playing with MMW is sublime. The best live band in America for two decades and only a few knew. Scofield is the awesome. Thank you for this
Whaaaat? Awesome Rick
John's personality matches his playing style. What a humble and good dude. Great interview!
"I was kind of a chorus addict... and then I went to 'chorus anonymous' and realized I had to stop." lmao
Incredible interview, Rick! Sco fan here since the mid 80's. Here's a good Sco/Metheny story; Hanging in The Village in 1991. 1am at NW corner of McDougal & W 3rd st at Visiones (now the Groove). Bill Stewart's jazz band is playing their last encore. It was killing! I turn around, and behind us standing inside the door is Metheny & Scofield together checking out the up & coming Stewart. I'll never forget it.
I used to see Sco at 55 Grand street, when Mike Stern Lived upstairs. He mentions it in the interview…
Tremendous interview! Get Bill Frisell on the show!🙏♥️
Please please please ask John back - I’ve loved his music forever and having seen this interview I also love his personality, humility and insight. Thank you sooo much!
The prototypical humble genius. I keep being fascinating with Scofield.
“Play with space.” Best advice.
Great conversation! He’s a gem.
Sco has NO ego. Such a humble and down to earth guy (who just happens to be a monstrous legendary player).
John Scofield is my favorite musician, ever. He is the one who taught me A LOT about guitar improvisation and music.
Interview Bill Frisell would be sweet. Another good one Rick.
Damn it Rick! Yesterday evening while falling asleep, I was thinking, maybe I should just write Rick Beato an E-Mail that he has to interview my hero!
The next day… Tadaa!
And man, what a great humble beautiful human being he is. Thank you so much! You made my dream come true. I bet that guitar sound was overwhelming. Lots of love from Germany. You made my day.
Another great interview; I appreciate the fact that you let people talk, it is the equivalent of adding space to one’s playing.
Thank you for bringing us insights on these fantastic musicians which don’t get the visibility they should.
John's parents lived across the street from me as retirees when I was a kid in the 70s and early 80s. The first I heard of Miles Davis was when Mrs. S. mentioned that John was playing with him, with justifiable pride.
Humble to a fault, Sco is one of the greatest guitarists to walk the earth.
Scofield's work with Medeski, Martin & Wood and dj Logic changed my life in the 90's. 🏆❤️
An interview with Bill frisell would compliment this and the Metheny interview. These interviews give great insight to the history of the music and personalities of the interviewees. What a great resource to have for jazz fans and musicians. Keep up the great work Rick
Man….Sco-Mule were some of the best Gov’t Mule shows I’ve ever seen.
The Dude and John Scofield have never been seen in the same room together.
One of the most uniquely amazing guitarists around.
Every note this man plays is a gem.
It’s cool hearing John Scofield admiring Leslie West.
IAJE festival ‘97 in Chicago. John walks up to the mic, “This evening we will be playing chords AND scales.” Ha…And then they just killed it. John’s a national treasure.
Fantastic interview! Would love to see an interview with George Benson.
Sco! Hell yeah!
For those intrigued that Scofield drops into "Louie, Louie" at 50:30, Scofield covered the tune with Medeski, Martin and Wood under the title "Juicy Lucy"
I was wondering about that!
I knew practically just rock and metal, someone showed me Pharmacology from Scofield and I went nuts for jazz... So nuts practiced my ass of for a year to get into music school, jazz major... And made it out alive hahaha. I love the man
I love John Scofield. He has always struck me as a musician of the highest caliber, but with the humility of someone who is always reaching to be better. Can't wait to see him here in Portland on the 23rd.
One more thing, I love him talking about practicing..... "If I don't practice I'm screwed!". That's one of the same things that I liked about the Tommy Emmanuel interview. They don't hide that fact that there's a commitment required to being a good musician. So many times you hear musicians say things like, "well I just pick up the guitar now and then"... and if you're someone just starting out playing, that's the last thing you need to hear.
ARE YOU KIDDING ME?!?!?!
My hero, John Scofield!!!! O, I can’t wait to see this! 😃❤️
O man, you had no idea how much I needed something like this to lift me up.
Edit: I just finished watching the video. It was even better than I hoped for. Thank you Rick, thank you John! ❤️
OMG, Pat Matheney and now John Scofiel! Thank you Rick!!! I’m so happy!
You're doing great work Rick.... great series of interviews. The 'Sco' is awesome....
Fantastic interview! I love story time! My keyboard player writes tunes for the band, and the guitar charts say, “play like Scofield”. We always get a good laugh.
John Scofield is such a wonderful player and seems like an all around nice guy. I had the privilege of picking John up once from his hotel to drive him to a session with Lee Ritenour. He was incredible friendly and we talked about different ways of using diminished triads against different chords. A real class act.
J.S...
in 1974 Walt Fowler, (trumpet - Zappa, Billy Cobham, Steve Gadd etc. ), and I had gone to see Deep Throat (!) at some dump on Santa Monica Blvd. then gotten raked over the coals by this massage parlor next door - (silly kid stuff) - then, dejected and humiliated walked out of this joint when Walt remembered that Scofield was staying at a motel right down the street. So we headed over there for a more salutary turn of events. As we approached his room, the closer we got the louder "Chasin' The Trane" emanated from behind the door... this is about 11 at night. We knocked and J.S. answered the door with his guitar hiked up around his neck, playing along - transfixed - "Trane man!" and continued literally without missing a beat. Every time I hear him I think of this... of course😄 Great interview.
John looks amazing for 70 wow. He could pass for 60 easily . Incredible player
Wow, what an honor to even be in the same room with Scofield.
I'm a Metheny man first, but Sco runs him a close, and the phrasing and dynamics is sublime.
Disagree on that
This gets my attention. Scofield,
I’m crying 3/4 of the way through. With my guitar in hand. There is so much more communicated in the music medium than words alone.
Scofield is giving us a very big lesson in "being yourself".
Not a huge jazz guy but i like some jazz adjacent music and absolutely love Scofield . Probably the most approachable jazz guy I'm aware of and has such a unique and creative sound. His Medeski Martin and Wood albums are some of my favorite.
16:45 reminds me of bonus features on the Blues Brothers movie: "Blue" Lou Marini quotes Cab Calloway as saying, "if you have great musicians, you don't have to say anything; if you have bad musicians, there's nothing you can say"
WOW! I somehow missed that this interview was happening! Not only do we get this marvelous insight & conversation from Sco, but I've been really wanting to know if artists such as Bill Frisell, John Medeski, and Joey Baron are on Rick's radar! Seems ridiculous to me now that I underestimated Mr. Beato.
Great interview Rick! You are doing such a service to the music community as a whole with this channel.
I'm 100% sure that Rick has been aware of Frisell, Medeski, and Baron for years. I also understand why up until now he hasn't prioritized featuring living jazz artists from the last 30-40 years, given the way he grew his audience with breakdown videos of classic rock and 80s pop tunes. I'm excited that he's willing to move a bit in this direction now that he's got close to 3 million subscribers and his business is pretty solid. An hour-long or even half-hour video with Joey Baron (who I love! or..with Bill Stewart for that matter) would probably not be that captivating for a big chunk of Rick's audience, as jazz (and more particularly, jazz drumming), takes a few years to really get into. The Ron Carter interview video did pretty well for Rick, but it still only has half the viewers that a recent sit-down with Adam Neely has (and Neely is great...but Ron Carter!)
But Metheny and Sco and figures like Christian McBride or Branford Marsalis, jazz players with a pretty high profile, I bet we see more of this as Rick goes forward.
@@jimdixon3470 You been under a rock? Rich has been doing jazz artist interviews and jazz song/album analyzations as long as he's been doing everything else. You must not have been paying attention.
I would be incredibly excited to see a Joey Baron interview! What an amazing guy, what a phenomenal drummer.
The world is a richer place with John Scofield ❤️
I forgot. Thank you J. Scofield for the music! I am 62. Started with Deep Purple around -74. Chased rock for 15 years. Now I listen to whatever if there is groove and excactly! (sorry, bad language. I´m from Sweden), haha.
Very very enjoyable from beginning to the very end of the interview!!! Thank you Rick Beato & John Scofield. 😄😄👍👍👍👍👍✨✨😍😍😍
John Scofield (whom I was lucky to see play at the Montreux Jazz Festival, back in the 80s) has been part of my musical education. I was intoduced to his style with Miles Davis' "Star people", which blew my mind. It didn't sound like anything I'd heard before (I was into 60s and 70s pop and rock, and a bit of blues).
He plays BEHIND the beat, sometimes almost dragging behind, and then catching up very creatively. And it was smooth and not predictable.
And he left an amazing amount of space, not filling every second with useless notes, and then suddenly erupting in cascades...
Later, I heard some of his solo material, and for 40 years his music has been like an on/off romantic story, with the occasional sparkles illuminating my day...
A very important artist, if ever there was one in the music world.
For whoever is not familiar with his style, I suggest you listen to a track of his called "Twang" (form his album "Grace under pressure"). You'll understand what I mean, along the way... ;-)
John looks great for 70.
Absolutely brilliant. Rick’s interviews are capturing stories and information that will be a priceless resource for future generations of musicians and music lovers. Well done Rick.
Love that early fusion. I could listen to him all day. So real. Nice in todays era of music.
The bit of playing during this interview was so cool. The tone of that guitar and that amp , WOW !
I like the way Rick lets the guest speak without interrupting.