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Wally West: The Big Fish
by Skip Spratt
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The saxophone is alive and well in Greensboro, North Carolina.
Wally West, Yamaha clinician, commercial saxophonist and band
leader is tearin' it up" in the Bible Belt. His big,
bad tenor sound will get your attention, but it's Wally's
soulful side that is a perfect match for his gentlemanly southern
manner. Be it on stage, the back of the house or simply chatting
with an old friend, Mr. West is a true gentleman. "There's
hundreds, thousands, HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS (laughs) of better
saxophone players out there, but one thing that I really try
to do when I go on any job is I try to be very personable.
I like to let my personality come through, not just in my
playing, but the way I interact with people. I think that
has led to a lot of my success. I'm not gonna say that my
music has. I think a lot of my success is by the way I handle
my affairs."
Wally has been "handling" the saxophone quite well
for the last 20 years. If you're not familiar with his playing,
not to worry, you may have already heard him. He has backed
a cross section of performers that includes jazz greats, original
Motown groups, name big bands and even some of country music's
finest. Whether playing with Tony Bennett, Smokey Robinson,
The Dorsey Orchestras, Roy Clark or Vince Gill, Wally is at
home behind the saxophone, regardless of style.
Wally West began playing alto saxophone at the age of 11
in Greensboro, North Carolina. From the moment he began to
blow into that old alto, Wally knew he was on to something.
He received recognition for being a promising young musician
right from the beginning. "In six weeks I had pretty
much gone through the first year of band. I received lots
of honors and got lots of playing opportunities. I really
made a good name for myself and I was really proud."
Years of touring and recording have brought many successes
and some notoriety to Wally West, but this "good 'ole
boy" is most comfortable at home in North Carolina. As
he himself has said, "You can take the boy out of the
country, but you can't take the country out of the boy!"
"This particular region of North Carolina is blessed
with so many wonderfully talented musicians and I like to
think that I'm one of them. I work very hard at trying to
do a good job, be on time, have a good attitude and help people,
especially with my agency. I feel that in today's music world
you've got to be 50 percent player and 50 percent business
person. Being able to handle your affairs in an orderly fashion,
in a timely fashion, in a mannerly fashion is probably the
biggest step that you can take in order to further your musical
career, even though those things have nothing to do with blowin'
on a saxophone. I will gladly sacrifice a little bit of musicality
any day of the week in order to hire someone that I know will
show up early, be courteous, be well-dressed - somebody that's
reputable, somebody that I can trust, rather than somebody
that can play Giant Steps in 12 keys at quarter note equals
350!
I'm proud to say that I had the pleasure of playing and hanging
out with Wally during my two-year stint at Berklee College
of Music in Boston some 20 years ago. I left to grow as a
player and Wally stayed for the same reason. We found each
other on the internet after all these years. We spoke until
our throats were sore and our eyes grew weary getting caught
up on the last two decades. The conversation never grew old
as Wally has the gift of inserting the perfect colloquialism
at just the right moment. I learned quite a bit about the
gentleman tenor player to the south. The following are excerpts
from our conversations.
Interview
Let's start with Berklee. When did you go there and what degree(s)
did you get?
I entered Berklee in September of 1980 and completed
my course of study in December of 1983. I actually graduated
in the Spring of 1984. My degree is a Bachelor of Music in
Performance.
I understand there were a lot of good players
there at that time. You have mentioned that going to Berklee
was an eye-opener. How so? How did it differ from what you
were accustomed to living in North Carolina?
Growing up in Greensboro, North Carolina, which
is not exactly a hot bed of big musical (laughs) enthusiasm,
I kind of had this big fish/small pond mentality, you know.
And of course having had great success in high school...
How so? What was the measuring stick?
North Carolina is divided into six districts
and you'd audition for four years in high school, then you
audition for the all -state band. I was real fortunate because
I made district band every year and made all-state band two
years. This was a concert band. This year (2000-2001) N.C.
will be hosting the first all-state jazz ensemble.
I remember at Berklee the players that
really knocked me out. The northeast United States was just
heavenly laden with talent. I would imagine that compared
to North Carolina, the density of the Northeast...It's so
much more dense, you've got a whole lot more going on.
You're gonna have 2 percent of the population
down here that really enjoys listening to mainstream jazz,
whereas up north your probably gonna have 15 percent of the
population who really digs that.
….YOU CAN READ THIS COMPLETE
INTERVIEW IN MARCH/APRIL 2001 ISSUE OF SAXOPHONE JOURNAL.
Contact dornpub.com for
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Used by permission.
© 2001 by Dorn Publications, Inc.
March/April 2001, Volume 25, No. 4
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