
Welcome to part two of Night is Alive’s interview with the legendary David Basse!
NiA: How did you get into singing?
DB: I graduated from high school when I was 17 and two weeks later, a band came through town and they happened to need a drummer and they were going on to Colorado and other places. So, I joined the band and left, and as we were driving away, the bandleader asked if I could sing and I said no. The band leader said, well that’s too bad because I would give you more money if you sang. He suggested I sing without a microphone and see if I could find a part to sing harmony and just get comfortable singing from the drums. So, I’m more comfortable singing from the drums than without the drums. I guess I’m equally comfortable now, after many, many years.
NiA: When did you decide to become a bandleader?
DB: I decided to be a bandleader in 1980. So I stopped playing what somebody else wanted to play and I started playing the music I loved, which was a mixture of jazz and blues–the music of Kansas City is what really drew me in. In the first two years I was on the road I went to all the places I wanted to go and I hadn’t found one that stuck–I went to Nashville, New Orleans, LA, New York–and I didn’t know about Kansas City. Then somebody in Iowa said, “you know, you ought to go to Kansas City, here’s the number of an agent.” And when I came here, I found that you can make a living on music in Kansas City and there are a lot of people doing it and it’s not that difficult. So, I was playing as many as nine gigs a week, playing seven nights and taking a couple of matinees and going to jam sessions and it was just great.
NiA: Wow, that’s incredible–it sounds like you really found where you belong, found your home.
DB: Yeah, I think I did. You know, about ten years ago I was talking to John Clayton–the bassist with Diana Krall and the Hollywood Bowl, a prominent musician–and I was having dinner with him, and I told him I was so impressed by his career and all the things he’s done, and he said, “you know, you have a place too–you’re our guy in Kansas City, so don’t be too impressed with me, just be you.” And I was very taken by that.
NiA: What was it like being a part of the City Light Orchestra?
DB: In 1980 when I became a bandleader there was a vocalist named Priscilla Bowman and she had a hit record called “Keep Your Hands Off Him, He Don’t Belong To You,” so it’s blues and it was a million-seller hit. I was going to my tenth high school reunion and a trumpeter said, we got this gig tonight–you should come and play drums with Priscilla Bowman, and I did. Then towards the end of the second set, she said she was going to go home, she was tired, so the club owner said to me, I heard you’re a vocalist, can you sing in the last set? And I said sure, so I sang some songs and after the set, he asked, what would you call this band? And I said I’d call it the City Light Orchestra. He asked, why orchestra? Why not the City Light Band because we’re the City Light Jazz Club. I said no, ‘orchestra’ sounds better, so that’s what we named it. And one thing led to another and we played there for seven nights, five nights a week.
NiA: What are some of your most memorable moments and experiences from being the bandleader of the City Light Orchestra?
DB: We got to go to New York. The editor of the newspaper here had been married in a nightclub on Upper East Side, 91st and 2nd avenue, and the club had just piano players, some of the exceptional piano players there, and this editor got us a gig for two weeks. So, the first time we went to New York we played for two weeks in a nightclub and that was phenomenal. We got to meet a lot of cool people, like Benny Goodman, Southside Johnny. To think of it now–to go to New York and play two weeks in a nightclub, twelve nights in a row with a Sunday off. That’s not really possible anymore unless you’re somebody of great stature. We were just a bar band.
NiA: It sounds like a dream!
DB: Yeah, it seems like a dream to me too.
To be continued in part three… In the meantime, check out Night is Alive’s albums page for the very best in jazz.
Learn more about David Basse at davidbasse.com
written by Jacqueline Knirnschild
photo from facebook.com/davidbassejazz/