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  • Melding of Musicians

    Tucson Weekly, AZ
    July 14 2004

    Melding of Musicians

    Jesse Cook travels to multiple continents for collaborators on his
    latest album

    By JOAN SCHUMAN


    Jesse Cook


    I've almost burnt a hole in Jesse Cook's newest CD, returning again
    and again to the seamless transition between the first and second
    tracks.
    "Prelude" slams into "Qadukka-l-Mayyas" with a punch of violins and
    cymbals and deep, deep drums banging against each other before Cook's
    signature flamenco guitar bursts forth. And then, 25 seconds into the
    second track, Maryem Tollar blares the lyrics of this traditional
    Andalusian tune in a subterranean alto. An Egyptian string ensemble
    headed by Hossam Ramzy in Cairo is responsible for haunting threads,
    while back home in Toronto, Cook has enlisted Chris Church to
    electrify the violin on the first track.

    "It didn't start as a master plan," explains Cook of his aptly dubbed
    fifth album, Nomad. We spoke by phone between gigs on his 14-city
    U.S./Canada tour, which brings him and his Toronto-based band through
    Tucson on July 24.

    "I usually record at home in my own little studio. I tend to do all
    the writing, arranging and producing myself. But I wanted to be far
    enough away to get perspective."

    Cook was determined not to let distance drag down his dream of
    incorporating musicians on several continents into the 12 tracks that
    make up his Juno (Canada's Grammy equivalent) award-winning album.

    "I also was dying to work with Simon (Emmerson) of the Afro Celt
    Sound System. So we called him in London and he loved the idea. He's
    the one who introduced me to Hossam who said, 'Man, you need some
    strings on here.'"

    In the end, Cook grabbed musicians from London, Madrid, Cairo,
    Toronto, Nova Scotia and, in the States, Milwaukee, Austin and Los
    Angeles.

    Paris-born and Toronto-raised, Cook already had four albums under his
    belt before embarking on his latest project. Since 1995, he's
    produced CDs that have soared to the top of Billboard's World Music
    charts in the United States and gone gold in Canada--albums with
    quirky one-word titles mostly on the Narada label (Tempest in 1995;
    Gravity a year later; Vertigo in 1998; and finally Freefall in 2000).
    His last two albums featured musicians from further reaches--like
    Djivan Gasparyan (dubbed the god of Armenian Duduk) and Danny Wilde
    of the Rembrandts, among others.

    The Gypsy Kings influence is noticeable, as are hues of the Afro
    Celts' arrangement. At Narada, he shares a lineup with a litany of
    world musicians including Lila Downs, Shelia Chandra, Jai Uttal and
    Baka Beyond--all mavericks fusing their own styles into new genres.

    Danny Wilde comes back for a cameo on Nomad, and Cook's masterful
    guitar yields its fiery, familiar taste--a smorgasbord of expressive
    rumba and flamenco arrangements--a gypsy amalgam if there ever was
    one.

    "Montsé Cortés is a legend in gypsy music," Cook says, discussing the
    singer's willingness to lend her vocals to "Toca Orilla," the last
    track on Nomad.

    "Gypsy is a very guarded music. Sharing it with a foreigner like
    me--a mungicake--is amazing," concedes Cook of his admittedly "white
    bread" status.

    As for any fears of putting together an album with musicians living
    far away from each other, Cook says it wasn't that difficult.

    "Hossam invited me to stay in his Cairo apartment, and it just
    snowballed from there. It made sense to contact my vocalist friend
    Maryem, who happened to be in Egypt at the time. She actually lives
    three blocks away from me here in Toronto," he adds with a chuckle.

    "Once you get the travel bug, it's pretty easy to just grab the
    laptop and go. It's amazing. I was flying home from Europe and I'm
    mixing with 64 tracks on my Mac right there in row 13."

    He's quick to add, "Just because you have the capability of recording
    on the fly and have access to these tools, it doesn't mean everyone
    can be a producer. Remember, it's in the ears."

    Going to where the musicians live is crucial, says Cook. "I'm not
    sure you get the best take when musicians aren't at home. In their
    own space, they're in the groove."

    The liner notes to Nomad hint at adjustments, however. Cook sprinkles
    in bits and pieces of his album journal.

    Cairo, January 11, 2003, 3:15: One of the violinists has arrived. The
    first musician to show for a 2 p.m. call. Cairo time. Got to love it.


    "I expected to have a hard time due to my Western origins. They all
    thought I was from the States. I expected more hostility, post-Sept.
    11. But people were great," says Cook about his hosts. "I guess
    politics operate above humanity."

    Nomad isn't just different from Cook's other albums for its melding
    of musicians.

    "Most of my previous music is instrumental. But I knew I wanted
    lyrics and singing on this album. So, scary as it was, I made a demo
    so I could generate interest in this project. It's really awful, if
    you've ever heard me sing. You begin to understand what a great
    singer can do for a song--it makes it or breaks it."

    So, Cook wrote the tune for Montsé Cortés in her range. But he took a
    different tact for Brazilian singer Flora Purim.

    "I was just writing another version of 'Girl from Ipanema,' and then,
    ironically, her CDs just flew across my desk and the project clicked.
    I went to L.A. to record her voice tracks."

    Liner notes expand on his process for Purim's track, titled "Maybe."
    It's not so much Bossa Nova as it is Brazilian samba meets rumba
    flamenco.

    "I love eclecticism," says Cook. "Finding a flow is important and a
    bit of a trick. Basically, all the tunes are rumbas. The guitar is
    front and center, chugging away."

    He adds, "I think people are obsessed with division--culturally,
    spiritually and musically. For me as a musician, the similarities are
    far greater than the differences. In Tibet, for example, when we
    played there, it didn't matter what language we were singing in or
    even talking in. It's the music that's the universal language. Boy,
    that sounds clichéd. But it's true."

    For Cook, it's all music from the planet Earth.

    When I asked him to describe contemporary music in one sentence, he
    responded quickly.

    "It's music of the next millennium. Our travel time is shorter now,
    though we cover great distances, compared to say, France in the 18th
    century. It changes how we listen. So, Britney Spears now has a
    Bollywood string riff, and people don't hear it as such. They just
    hear that they like it."

    Yet with the shrinking of travel time and the ubiquitous ability to
    taste everything, Cook says the business of musical genres and
    audience promotion is slower to catch on.

    "Here in Canada, the CD went gold. In the States, it's more of an
    underground following. Is it the music business or a cultural thing?
    I don't know. Some songs did quite well, even charted on the radio.
    But not in the States. Oddly, "Qadukka-l-Mayyas" charted in the
    United Arab Emirates."

    With all this globalism, Cook says he had the hardest time,
    ironically, working with one musician closer by in the States.

    "Once I decided I wanted to work with the BoDeans on the track 'Early
    on Tuesday,' I went looking for Kurt Neumann in Austin. We made all
    the arrangements, and I'm about to leave Toronto, and the SARS scare
    hit. Kurt cancels, saying we all had cooties up here," Cook quips.

    "I spent a good deal of time convincing him that we're all OK. No one
    I knew had gotten sick--it's a big city, you know. But Kurt wasn't
    taking any chances. The running joke later was that I'd be somewhere
    in the States working, and I'd call Kurt in Austin just to tell him I
    was doing OK."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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