“It was 1996,” he replied. “I was producing a record for Richie Sambora, and we were working in my house in L.A., and he had a hat maker come to the house.”
The hatmaker was from Baron and Sambora said Was should get one made. Being receptive, Was showed the hatmaker two album covers. One was a Merle Haggard album and the other, Bob Dylan’s Desire. “Do a combination of these two hats. And the guy made it and showed up two weeks later and I put it on, and it felt like I was born in it.”
Was is on his sixth iteration of the original and even got John Mayer to have one made, the result seen on Mayer’s album Paradise Valley. “But we made a deal that we wouldn’t wear them to the same place.”
I told Was I enjoyed his interview with Henry Rollins on The Sound of Vinyl and how they believed the physical limitations of an LP - with twenty minutes to a side - gave artists the opportunity to tell a story with their songs. I asked him if he had a favorite example of this and he mentioned his favorite record of all time, Wayne Shorter’s Speak No Evil. “I really gravitated to side two. Side two really has healing properties.”
Was said that listening to Shorter’s saxophone sounds like a conversation. “When I listen to side two, I imagine we are walking down the street together. And Wayne is like a big brother to me, and he’s telling me things to avoid.”
Besides being a musician, producer, composer, Was has been the President of Blue Note Records since 2011, an offer given to him by chance during lunch with an executive at Capitol Records, and one he readily accepted because of his love for the venerable jazz label. And one of the joys of working at Blue Note? Getting to know Shorter and having him rejoin the label at the end of his career.
“He was all that and more,” Was said.
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