
Saturday, July 14, 2001
Occhipinti pops the lid on jazz values
By DENIS ARMSTRONG
Ottawa Sun
One of the best arguments heard recently
for Canadian folkie Bruce Cockburn is jazz
guitarist and bandleader Michael Occhipinti's
funky new take on one of Cockburn's hookiest
tunes, Creation Dream.
Not only is his new True North Cockburn
tribute easy to snuggle up to, it also makes
a pretty compelling argument through stylish
jazz fusion arrangements and improvised guitar
playing for how good the Cockburn canon is.
Regardless of politics.
Seems a couple years back, Occhipinti, 34,
was feeling musically stale and looking for
a strong song he could fool with.
Being an old Cockburn fan, he began improvising
on Wondering Where The Lions Are.
"My most creative writing happens when
I'm bored," says Occhipinti, who opens
Monday night for Tony Bennett at Confederation
Park as part of the jass festival.
He ended up improvising on the song all
afternoon.
"Jazz players used to improvise on
pop-songs all the time before rock 'n' roll.
We have our own Gershwins and Porters, but
today's pop music puts so much emphasis on
production rather than the song, it makes
the good songs harder to find."
But the biggest hurdle facing Occhipinti
was in capturing the essence of the music
without Cockburn's passionate and righteous
lyrics.
"I've always liked Cockburn for his
outspoken lyrics, so you could see the dangers
of turning him into elevator music if you're
too reverential and do little more than take
out the lyrics," he explains.
So he launched into improvising on The Police,
a trial he found fruitful but not quite as
satisfying as Cockburn. So Occhipinti and
his band worked everything out at Toronto's
RexHotel jazz nightclub last year before making
the commitment to recording.
Brisk sales
"Bruce's manager Bernie Finkelstein
saw the show and gave us his seal of approval."
The recording, which is selling briskly,
has also given Occhipinti an even higher profile
on the jazz and pop music scenes. Which is
really cool for him because he's always had
a broad view of himself as a musician.
"I grew up in a musical family, listening
to Pete Townshend, Pat Metheny and Wes Montgomery,"
he reminisces. "I love pop musicians
who create musical categories for themselves,
like Joni Mitchell, Robbie Robertson and Bruce
Cockburn.
"I've learned a lot from this album.
It's the first recording that captures my
playing and personality."
Occhipinti returns to the recording studio
this September with his big band NOJO before
he tackles his next cover project, a tribute
to metal classics Led Zeppelin with his band,
Rivethead.