improvisor interview: eugene chadbourne
En route for Berlin's prestigious FMP improv festival, the eminent Dr. Chadbourne, the world's foremost exponent of free improvised country and western be-bop, and ertswhile collaborator with Tom Cora, John Zorn, Shockabilly, the Violent Femmes and Camper Van Beethoven, stopped off at the Instants Chavirés in Paris on April 8th, where he amused and amazed us with his extraordinary guitar and banjo playing. Apart from originals from the ongoing "Insect and Western" series, and an extraordinary piece called "Madagascar" where Chadbourne had to play guitar and banjo at the same time (with hilarious consequences), the evening also included music by figures as diverse as Bach, Satie, Merle Haggard, Thelonious Monk and The Doors, with affectionate nods to Chuck Berry and Louis Armstrong, before Chadbourne finally abandoned the guitar altogether for an electronically-modified children's toy (christened "Patrizio"), amplified to pain threshold, which he proceeded to "play" with forks, screwdrivers and anything else that came to hand, which included somebody's boot, a journalists camera strap, and my own cigarette lighter. When I finally caught up with Dr. Chad next day (he was enthusiastically sketching the Eglise St. Eustache while waiting for me), my first question was about "the real star of the show..."