
From Programer To Prophet - Callier's
Calling You
The Hardline According To... Terry Callier It's the kind of
thing that you never think will happen. You just hope and pray
that if you were ever to have to have your wish granted that
the powers that be will make this a day to remember. It was with
these feelings that I waited and watched Terry Callier live for
the first time last year in Brighton. So when I found out this
songwriting genius and spiritual guru was playing at Glastonbury,
it was a priority to try to talk to this personal hero of mine.
Callier's career has been a rocky road: from cult status on
the Chicago folk scene of the 1960s and two unfortunate record
deals to his rediscovery by Gilles Peterson in the early 1990s.
Constantly writing songs for nearly forty years has seen Terry
producing some of his best work of late - notably 1998's 'Timepeace'.
It demonstrated his powerful spiritual grasp on life and his
ability to stop people in their tracks with his transcendental,
humanitarian philosophy. Times are still changing for this restless
troubadour of the soul and it was with some anxiety that I learned
he has parted with his record company. However, as ever, Terry's
outlook is realistic and pragmatic: "Well I don't have any
problems with them any more because we've come to a parting of
the ways." (Laughs) "The problems are all in the very
past tense and it remains to be seen whether or not they were
right about their view of it or I was right about mine. But we
parted as friends." It would seem almost appropriate for
him to sign with a British or European label, after all, this
was the place which recognised his huge talent. Terry concedes: "Well,
at this point in my career I'm probably going to have sign with
a European label. We're talking to people now, well at least
my manager is, I'm not talking to anyone - I'm hiding out",
Terry chuckles. I add that he's just responsible for the music,
to which, still laughing, he adds: "Yes, so my manager's
talking to a couple of different companies now and we are going
to see in, I imagine, two or three months, something develop.
Because I'm actually a little anxious to get back in to the studio." So
are we.
With 'Timepeace' being such an emphatic return to form, I couldn't
help but wonder how he was able to make such and assured and
refreshing album after such an absence from even performing his
music. Terry recalls his initial thoughts about embarking on
such a project: "When I first started talking to the people
at Verve about a new recording, the question was whether I was
going to do all of the old stuff, or whether I was going to do
a mixture of new stuff and old stuff, or whether I should just
do new stuff. At that time it was 1996 and I figured I should
be doing 1996 stuff, so I had to convince them first off that
I had enough material for a CD and that it was decent material.
We finally got that squared away. Then a lot of these discussions
about what would be best for me to do were going on. There was
also a question of I had been out of the studio for so long and
would I be able to deal with the new technology? And what I discovered
when I got in the studio, and I'll admit it made me a little
apprehensive, but then I got in to the studio and what I found
was that computers were doing more things, like an engineer doesn't
need a touch anymore to know where the end of a track is. The
computer finds it for him, it finds the beginning. There are
also more ways to synthesise sounds now and some, which can be
quite pleasant, some cannot be so, it depends on the purpose
to which you want to put them. But the basic things, being able
to handle yourself in a recording situation, having an idea of
what musicians you want to use and how they'll feel about the
material and which combination of musicians will play best on
which types of tunes and especially on performance - nothing
much has changed except the microphones are more sensitive."
His work and study at the National Print and Research Centre
at the university of Chicago while supporting his children as
a single parent had given him an understanding of computers,
but despite all the new technological advances in the studio,
Terry states it still comes down to having the ability to perform
the songs well. "The only thing that's new is there are
these machines and you use them or not as you so choose, but
when you get ready to approach the microphone you have to have
it inside you, or with you, or it doesn't happen in any case." This
is where our meeting began to slip into something deeper and
more meaningful. You see, once you've heard Callier sing his
heart out and share his observations on life - usually accompanied
by the hair on the back of your neck standing up - you realise
this man has a gift that few possess today. As I was to discover,
though, Callier's creative process focuses more on the minutiae
and the mundane in life, inspiration, it seems, is at every corner. "It
differs, almost from song to song. Sometimes I start with just
the title, sometimes it's just a phrase on the guitar, a couple
of chords. It's gotten to the point now where I'm carrying one
of those around (points at my Dictaphone) so in case I have a
musical idea I can put it down and not have it slip away from
me. So then sometimes I just start with a verse or a chorus or
just a phrase, yeah? And in terms of the source of the inspiration,
I'm in process of tracking that down now. I never thought about
it, or never talked about it much until I heard an interview
with John Fogarty. He said something along the same lines as
I'm saying now, that these songs already exist somewhere, on
some level, in some form, and I just happen to be part of the
physical manifestation of these things. But there are so many
other levels, not just in terms if existence but in terms of
'beyond' that you can't really say 'OK, I wrote this', and you
say well you know - you were 'there' when it was written".
(Laughs) I add that you 'arrive' at the same point as that song.
Terry agrees. "It 'happened' to you, you intersected with
that song. Yeah, that's right, that's excellent." Terry's
importance as an older and wiser spiritual figure in these increasingly
cynical times is, in my opinion, without question.
However, for someone like myself who has always felt ill at
ease with religious dogma to have felt truly moved at Terry's
gig last year forces one to ask about its source. Is it something
the audience brings? Where do Callier's beliefs come from and
where does this 'other thing' come from? Thinking hard, Terry
recalls his wake up call. "Primarily in terms of outward
influences there was a time when I was listening to John Coltrane
for twelve to fifteen hours a day. Looking back now, I would
have been better off spending some of that time practicing, but
you do what you feel you have to do. The first time I saw him
live was with the quartet - McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison and Elvin
Jones. When they first started playing it frightened me because
from the very first tune they were all over the music. And I
wasn't sure what was going to happen to them if this was the
intensity with which they began the first number of a five-night
stand and I wasn't really sure what was going to happen to me
if I stayed there and listened. I might even have left the club
but there were so many people outside trying to get in that there
was no way to get out, so I just had to make myself comfortable
with it. Then gradually it dawned on me that they were playing
everything - they were playing heaven and hell, the earth, wind,
fire, the spiritual, the not so spiritual, the completely unbelievable…and
once that dawned on me I was able to get in to it. The minute
I started reading more about him and started listening to his
music and he didn't 'proslytize' - you know he didn't say ok
I'm this and I'm that and this is the best way and you should
this - it was all in the music. And what you said earlier was
interesting - people do bring something, you see the audience
does bring something - the audience does bring something in terms
of their expectations. Now you can call that spiritual or you
can say vibration of what have you - terminology is… the
artist brings something and that completes the circle, you see?
In terms of religious practices I'm trying to be a Sufi, I'm
trying to follow the Sufi path."
Similar in terms to the existential path guitarist John McLaughlin
follows. Callier continues "Right, and it's difficult because
you have to approach everyone and everyone's view point as worthy,
especially in terms of spiritual things, so you can't cling so
hard to your beliefs that you exclude everyone else's because
that's the problem now, you know. I could tell you, but we don't
have time, and then I would have to mention religion as such.
I don't think people are tired of religion I think what they
are tired of is what they perceive or what is perceived as a
lack of faith, a lack of the reality of the religion, and this
goes for any denomination you might choose, because there are
people in every denomination and every world religion who are
dissatisfied and who are looking for something. And mainly what
they are looking for is the spirit of that thing because in the
spirit of it, in the kernel of it, in the inside of it is what
makes it actually 'be'. All these paths are no different than
a line you might draw in the sand, right? So part of my assignment
is to keep reminding people of this." Never taking himself
too seriously, Terry laughs uproariously and shakes me by the
hand. "That's deep man", he quips with a glint in his
eye. With this philosophy lesson over with, we part company grinning
- I'm reassured that to many, this mentor has a soul as strong
and as hardy as a great old oak capable of offering shelter as
and when we need it - and we need it now more than ever.
Text © Mike Flynn