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Bill Bruford Quotes


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Bill Bruford
May 17, 1949 -
Nationality: British
Category: Musician
Subcategory: British Musician

At the end of the whole day of working with people you want some privacy.

   

I seldom play in a trio, but acoustic music is likely to be lighter, quicker, and quieter.

   

I mean, Chris is, I'm sure, a wonderful guy. But in those days he also very, very late. For all appointments and departures and arrivals and sound checks and anything.

   

I saw it as a challenge to play with Pat and we put hours and hours into it, usually on the bus. The trick was to find something that we both wanted to play within our different styles which would add up to being greater than the sum of its parts.

   

My harmony is passable but is usually made more eloquent at the hands of Steve Hamilton.

   

And I like messing around in the engine room of music. Seeing what happens in the rhythm section area.

   

Whatever I have come to offer, I have come to offer and it may or may not be connected to anything that has happened in the past.

   

Sometimes I had to room with Tony Kaye and that was awful.

   

So I have the classic amateur's technique; I know some very tricky bits and I have large gaping holes.

   

I do remember the whole thing as being very argumentative, hot blooded... a permanent state of friction between Jon and Chris, Chris and me, me and Jon.

   

This amateurism however, can sometimes be helpful in forging a style; you have to work around your weaknesses.

   

If it's fast, no I don't have enough piano technique. In that case, it's probably been done on some kind of synthesizer or sequencer. Then the score can then be printed out and so forth.

   

But what I think my emphasis is, is on the fact that I like music a lot.

   

The best practice you can get is on the bandstand, but in between gigs I feel I have to stay in shape.

   

I have been steadily exchanging a rock audience who were nervous about what they had just bought for a jazz audience who not only were happy with their purchase, but are increasingly coming again.

   

And we'd drink huge amounts of scotch and coke, which is a ghastly sweet drink... And now people don't drink nearly as much, for good reason. We're all a little wiser.

   

We all lived in the same house, or most of us did. And as far as I can make out we were confined to the property, because at twenty-four hours' notice we'd have to do a gig somewhere. So you couldn't leave the building for more than twelve hours in case a gig came through.

   

We were from totally different social backgrounds. This is what is very hard for an American to understand, but we could have been five guys from Mars.

   

I didn't write any music at all, and then, I remember Jon Anderson being very insistent saying that there were two kinds of musicians: the ones who wrote music and the ones who didn't.

   

We used to drink an awful lot of alcohol.

   

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