| Justin
Sanvicens [DJ, Producer] from Xtreme Music interviewed
William Winant on June 15, 2004 San Francisco (CA), Bodega Bistro.
Xtreme
Music: I'm here with William Winant.. I'd like to start the interview
by asking, what's it been like working with Mike Patton and John Zorn
over the years?
William
Winant: It's been a lot of good eating, restuarants just like this!
We've eaten in the finest restaurants throughout the world actually.
So that's one good aspect of it, that I've learnt a lot about food.
Also in every part of the world, Japan, Europe, Mexico, Canada and
of course America. A side issue is that the music has been really
great! It's been a great opportunity for me to actually work with
a lot of interesting musicians from all over the world. Both through
Mr. Bungle and through Zorn. It's been a good learning experience
and an eye opener for me overall.
Xtreme
Music: You've collaborated with some of my favourite musicians including
Mike Patton, Trey Spruance, Trevor Dunn and the members of Tipsy,
Tim Digulla and Dave Gardner. Could you tell me about some of the
work you did with them?
William Winant: Well, that was right around
the time I was finishing up a record with David Tanenbaum. We were
recording Terry Riley's guitar and percussion music, and I think I
was doing those sessions in the day and then in the evening I would
go down to the compound and just lay down tracks and listen to my
old tapes that I had of kinds of prank phone calls and stuff like
that. Then every once and a while go in, record and do overdubs basically
of looping tracks that they already had. They rented a bunch of percussion
equipment and I think we just spent two nights listening to prank
phone calls, drinking beer and laying down percussion tracks which
they later on probably cut up, manipulated and put out this wonderful
record.
Xtreme
Music: Working with Mr. Bungle you've toured extensively worldwide
with them. What was that experience like Willie?
William Winant: That was kind of an eye opener
for me because... working in the kinda music that I do, which is contemporary
classical mostly, I will work very hard on a piece for a couple of
months and then you perform it many once or twice. Having a chance
to work with Mr. Bungle on a continuing basis over a long period of
time, I got to record records with them and go on the road with them
and you-know just work on the music and do the same music over and
over and over again. Like do concerts ever night, playing that music
every day.. that was a great experience, a new experience for me.
Just the adventure of being on the road and playing in weird different
venues, it was a great experience.
Xtreme
Music: What would you say has been the best experience, if you had
to narrow it down, throughout your entire music career?
William Winant: Let's just go with the most
recent one, I've had so many over the years. The most recent ones
I would remember, would be concerts with John Zorn, some of the 50th
birthday concerts. Recently, we were in Mexico City, we had wonderful
concerts down there. I've had some very special moments with the members
of Mr. Bungle, both Trey and Mike. Those have been some very special
concerts. Also, with my trio Abel-Steinberg-Winant Trio, there have
been some really beautiful moments of music making. Working with composers
that we love, like Lou Harrison, Terry Riley, Somei Satoh and playing
in some beautiful venues in really nice countries and meeting really
great people.
Xtreme
Music: Out of all of the collaborations that you've taken part in,
who would you say has been the musician or composer that has challenged
you the most musically?
William Winant: I would say that the two composers
that I have had the most influence on me, and have somehow been the
most supportive of me over the years... There's a composer that recently
just died named Lou Harrison, a great American composer from the American
classical tradition, coming from the you-know tradition of Ives and
Henry Cowell, a collegue of John Cage. John Zorn is the other one
that I would say has been very supportive of me and who's music has
inspired me quite a bit. But don't forget people like Mike and Trey,
and people like that... Also some of the people I have collaborated
with, some of the musicians I have worked with over the years. People
like Yo-Yo Ma, correographers like Mark Morris, Merce Cunningham...
These are all great experiences for me.
Xtreme
Music: You were speaking earlier about Fantomas' most recent record
"Delirium Cordia", and you mentioned how you feel it's "the
most mature and sophisticated work that Patton has done to date".
Have you got any further comments on the work he's doing recently?
William Winant: Well you just said it all, I
think that everytime I hear a new record that Mike does, it gets to
a higher level. Here's an artist who every time I hear him, is just
maturing and the music is growing and he's growing as an artist and
a performer... I think it's evident on his last Fantomas record, which
I think is his most mature and sophisticated work to date.
Xtreme
Music: Working with Trey Spruance, the guitarist of Mr. Bungle and
Secret Chiefs 3, what was it like working on the recent Book Of Horizons?
William Winant: Trey is probably one of the
best producers I have ever worked with in the studio. He's a great
recording engineer, he knows how to put things together. This record
he's probably working with seventy to eighty tracks. He comes into
my studio with his computer and one mic and he gets incredible sounds.
To me it's always amazing to work with Trey, it's like he's a magician.
You never know how it sounds until he puts it all together. I would
put Trey up as one of the great producers or all time! You-know, up
there with Phil Spector or Brian Wilson. Really, really creative in
the studio and it's proved by this new record which I also think is
the best Secret Chiefs 3 record to date.
Xtreme
Music: That's fantastic to hear about and from your perspective Willie,
what would you say is the fate of Mr. Bungle in the years to come?
William Winant: Oh man, I just think that you-know right now everybody
is off doing their bands, their special projects and their record
labels. I think they're all growing and searching, doing their own
thing and who knows maybe VH-1 will track them down and do a bands
reunited thing...
Xtreme
Music: Who are your main influences and how have they shaped your
musical direction?
William
Winant: There are so many! Again, I have to say people like John Cage,
Iannis Xenakis, Lou Harrison. Steve Reich when I was very young was
a very important influence on me I think... All the music I listened
to as a kid you-know, from jazz to blues to rock, I mean there's so
much! Certainly the people that I work with now, people like John
Zorn, Mike Patton, Christian Wolff... these are all very inspirational
people. Actually, even working with Sonic Youth... working with those
guys have been very inspirational.
Xtreme
Music: You've been working at Mills College, University
Of California, Berkeley and Santa Cruz. Could you tell us about some
of the percussion work you've been doing there?
William
Winant: Well for me teaching, I really enjoy
it! I enjoy the enthusiasm of the students and you-know working with
young people, it's great. Usually, I'm just turning these people onto
music that I'm into. So it would be the music of Zorn or Lou Harrison
or John Cage or
Xenakis.
Improvised music or the music of Fred Frith, Braxton, just you-know
opening them up to the same music that when I was a kid, opened me
up. The good thing about working with these people is that they turn
me onto things. They come in with all their ideas which is rejuvinating
to me. That's what was so great about working with Bungle, coz they
were of a different generation than me and they really turned me onto
all kinds of things. You-know new musical horizons which was great!
Xtreme
Music: Could you tell us a little bit about the work you've been doing
more recently and what we've got yet to come in terms of future collaborations?
William
Winant: I am doing twenty-three concerts, I'm gonna be doing a large
tour with Merce Cunningham. Again, that's the most recent thing
I've been doing, working with the Merce Cunningham Dance Company along
with composers Takehisa Kosugi and Christian Wolff. It looks like
we've got twelve concerts all through the U.K. coming up in October,
and then a series of concerts in New York City and then finishing
with a series of concerts at the Paris Opera House in January where
we'll be focusing on the music of John Cage. So that's one thing I'm
really excited about. I would have to say, I'm going to be doing some
recording with John Zorn. We'll record his new piece called "Rituals"
in October and then I'm going to participate in a concert with Zorn
of all of his most recent chamber music which will feature at the
Miller Theatre in New York City in January when I get back from Paris.
So these are some of the things I've got coming up that I'm really
looking forward to. I'll also be working with this violist in The
San Francisco Symphony, Geraldine Walter and we're gonna do the premier
of this relatively new piece of Luciano Berio's called "Naturale
For Viola Percussion And Tape" (February 28, 2005 Oakland (CA),
Mills College). I'm really looking forward to that... this is one
of my favorite viola players in the world. I getting to do this piece,
but that'll probably be next February. Also recently, Fred Frith,
I've been working with him. We just recorded a piece for six guitars
called "Stick Figures", which will be part of this new record
he's putting out with the Arditti String Quartet, it'll be a sorta
interlude piece between two new string quartets. And then Fred is
also writing a piece for myself and this cellist from the Kronos String
Quartet named Joan Jeanrenuad that we're gonna premier in March I
think, here in San Francisco.
Xtreme
Music: Fantastic! So you've got plenty of live tours to look forward
to worldwide and playing in more collaborations coming up in the near
future. William Winant, it's been a fantastic pleasure meeting you
and interviewing you in person regarding your prolific work with numerous
artists. You're definitely one of the greatest avant-garde percussionists
of recent times! |