This week’s ep is just a couple of Strat dudes talkin’ gear. The guys get deep on everything from their favorite guitars to pedals and some speaker chat, and the busy New York guitarist and professor talks about improv and the up-and-coming crop of jazz cats.
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Nir Felder on Improvisation
Cory Wong: Okay. I want to ask you a little bit more about improvisation, creativity, and harnessing it in the moment. A lot of people talk about, "Oh, how do you find inspiration for writing every day?" Or it's like, "Oh, yeah. Sometimes you just show up to work and you just have to find it or you have to find some way to harness it." Then there's the other side, which is, how do you find something compelling to say, improvising solos over your own music, over other people's music. Then when you're on tour, you're playing the same tunes night after night. Do I play same concepts every night? Do I build an arc and craft a solo that I loosely follow the script night after night? Or do I try to find something completely new night after night? These are all different approaches, and you are such a master improviser. I've seen you in so many different settings where I'm just curious about how you approach your creativity in improvisation and how you keep that spark going for you, so the listener feels that excitement every time they listen to you play.
Nir Felder: Oh, man. What a great question. I think that list that you made is pretty spot on. I'm a definite number three. I must start over because if I do make any attempts to... I was like, "Oh, wow. That solo last night really worked. Let me try to go for the same arc," I always fall flat on my face. I cannot repeat it. One thing I've learned from doing both jazz tours and pop tours and everything in between is some of these pop musicians that I would play with are more in the moment, more of what you think of as jazz than some of the jazz players, I would tour with sometimes, because they were really reactive to the energy in the room.
"Okay. We're playing the same set, we're playing the same songs. There's no solos. But the room feels different, the energy is different, the weather's different, we're in a different city. I'm just going to play 1 percent louder or 1 percent softer, do a slightly different fill here." It was like they were really feeling it in the moment. Some people are still trying to play their "improvised solo" from last week. That doesn't land with any kind of emotional connection to the city you're in, the people you're with, all that kind of stuff. Same for me. If I try to do the same thing, I'm not going to make it. It's just not going to work. So I just try to go for it every time. And sometimes I fail miserably. But that's the risk, right?
Rig Rundown: Nir Felder and Will Lee
Nir Felder has been called “the next big jazz guitarist” by NPR and hailed by The New York Times as a “whiz kid.” Will Lee is the Grammy-winning Musician’s Hall of Fame member you’ve likely seen and heard playing bass as part of Paul Shaffer’s World’s Most Dangerous Band on David Letterman’s late-night talk shows.
Currently, Felder and Lee are touring together with drummer Keith Carlock (Steely Dan, Sting), Jeff Coffin on saxophones and woodwinds (Dave Matthews Band, Bela Fleck & the Flecktones), and keyboardist Jeff Babko (James Taylor, Toto) as Band of Other Brothers. On April 20, the Other Brothers made a stop at Nashville’s City Winery, supporting their second album, Look Up. Lee and Felder took a break pre-soundcheck to usher PG’s John Bohlinger through their rigs.
[Brought to you by D’Addario XS Electric Strings]
For the Band of Other Brothers, this dynamic duo carries a light load.
Nir Felder has been called “the next big jazz guitarist” by NPR and hailed by The New York Times as a “whiz kid.” Will Lee is the Grammy-winning Musician’s Hall of Fame member you’ve likely seen and heard playing bass as part of Paul Shaffer’s World’s Most Dangerous Band on David Letterman’s late-night talk shows.
Currently, Felder and Lee are touring together with drummer Keith Carlock (Steely Dan, Sting), Jeff Coffin on saxophones and woodwinds (Dave Matthews Band, Bela Fleck & the Flecktones), and keyboardist Jeff Babko (James Taylor, Toto) as Band of Other Brothers. On April 20, the Other Brothers made a stop at Nashville’s City Winery, supporting their second album, Look Up. Lee and Felder took a break pre-soundcheck to usher PG’s John Bohlinger through their rigs.
Brought to you by D’Addario XS Electric Strings
First and Best
Although Nir Felder has plenty of guitars, he usually gigs with his stock 1995 Fender Tex-Mex Stratocaster—his first electric guitar. The Strat has high mileage and plenty of battle scars.
He plays with Dunlop Jazz III picks and keeps it strung with D’Addario NYXL strings. And no nets for this musical high-wire walker. Felder has been touring without a backup axe.
Deluxe Redux
Felder plays Fender Deluxe ’65 reissues on tour, speccing the model for backline amps. It’s a ubiquitous 1x12, so he can always get a consistent tone.
The Tenacious 10
Felder’s uptown sound—on the ground—includes a TC Electronic PolyTune Mini, an Ibanez TS9 Tube Screamer with a Keeley mod, and a Klon KTR. Those two overdrives usually stay on, and he rolls down the volume of his Strat to clean up the signal while giving it a warm, rich undercurrent of dirt. From there, it’s a King Tone Duellist, King Tone Octaland, Meris Ottobit, Line 6 DL4 MkII, Strymon BigSky, Boss DD-3, and a Neunaber Wet Reverb. Power comes from a Strymon Zuma. The board is by Stompin-Ground, and cables are from L.A. Sound Design and Nice Rack Canada.
Fab 4-String
Will Lee plays his signature 22-fret Sadowsky bass. This J-style features master volume, a pickup blender, a push/pull treble roll-off, a bass boost, treble boost, and a mid-boost on/off switch. There’s a push/pull pot that’s a preamp bypass switch for playing in passive mode, and the instrument is equipped with a Hipshot Bass Xtender that Lee tunes down to low C. Strings are Dean Markley SR2000s.
The Haunt of Eagles…
is what the Latin word aquilare means. And linquists believe Aguilar, a common town name in Spain, is derived from it. But Lee’s amp for this gig—an Aguilar DB 751 pumping through one of the company’s SL 210 400-watt, 8-ohm bass cabinets—was from SIR rentals.
The Rig for This Gig
Lee says he has a rig for every gig, and with Letterman he had to have enough pedalboard space to create every sound he might need to cover a wide variety of guest artists and genres. But for the Band of Other Brothers, Lee plugs into a Boss TU-3 Chromatic Tuner, an MXR Bass Envelope Filter, and a POG, a Mod 11 Modulator, and a Canyon—all by EHX. Juice comes from a Truetone 1 Spot Pro.