Chris Botti has a Grammy Award and a stellar reputation as one of the finest jazz trumpeters working today.
What he doesn’t have is something most jazz musicians also lack these days. But, for two decades, he hasn’t let that deficiency slow him down.
“I’m a musician,” Botti said. “I don’t have a hit song. If you look at Chris Isaak, Frank Sinatra, Paul Simon, they have a hit song. Did K.D. Lang play “Constant Craving”? You can’t ask that about me. I have a hit band, a hit show. Over time, the exit poll for the show — I play 260 times a year — brings people in.”
Botti’s Grammy is a Best Pop Instrumental Album award for 2013′s “Impressions.” But he’s really not a pop musician. In fact, if you ask him to describe himself, he says:
“I’m a trumpet player first and a jazz musician second and I’m an entertainer. That’s my real problem with jazz. They think if you’re trying to be an entertainer, you’re diminishing the music. I’ve got a newsflash for them. Louis Armstrong, Cannonball Adderley, Dizzy Gillespie were all entertainers. Miles turning his back on the audience was his entertainment, a shrewd move.”
Miles, of course, would be Miles Davis, the legendary jazz trumpeter who, decades ago, prompted the young Botti to decide to play music for a living.
“He inspired me to be a professional musician,” Botti said. “My start came when I saw Doc Severinsen on TV. For pursuing the trumpet, I had Doc. That was when I was 9. When I was 12, I heard Miles and the whole thing just clicked. Doc was a great trumpet player, still is. But he was all flash. With Miles, that brooding beautiful sound is what got me.”
Credit: Courtesy of Chris Botti
Credit: Courtesy of Chris Botti
Forty five years after he heard “My Funny Valentine,” Dayis continues to play an important role in Botti’s music.
“We play a couple songs from ‘Kind of Blue’ every night,” he said of Davis’ landmark album. “It’s very evident with the way I play, the horn muting that I’m very influenced by Miles.”
The Davis compositions are part of a wide-ranging, stylistically varied repertoire that knows almost no boundaries.
“For anyone who hasn’t come to one of my shows, it’s hard to explain it,” Botti said. “If I’m going to see U2, they’re going to play their hits and there’s going to be a light show. You understand that. They don’t understand that with me. They’re coming to see a band with three singers, one of them’s an opera singer, one of them’s a jazz singer, one of them’s an R&B singer. It’s all over the place.
“It’s the variety of music in the show that makes it so different,” he said. “There isn’t anywhere else in the (world where) you can see that I’m curator of a Rubik’s cube of an all-star band. That’s been my mantra.”
Prior to leading his band, Botti played in the bands of music legends, starting with Frank Sinatra when he was still a student at Indiana University. He spent a decade touring and recording with Paul Simon and, during that period also performed with the likes of Joni Mitchell and Aretha Franklin and, in 1999, toured with Sting.
“Being around Paul Simon, Sting and Joni Mitchell, I learned a lot about being a band leader,” Botti said. “My first gig was with Sinatra. He wasn’t just a singer, he was an entertainer and a band leader. He was like (comedian Don) Rickles, except he sang. He would talk to an audience, not at them. That’s something I learned early, how to interact with an audience.”
Botti acknowledges that he’s never going to have a huge hit — in part that’s because he’s an instrumentalist who isn’t likely to get the radio airplay and playlisting that creates hits in 2021.
But it’s also because, in his words, the “Record business fell off a cliff.”
In a word, album sales have tanked. That, to say the least, is a disincentive for artists like Botti to make records.
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
“Why? I really don’t know why you would do it,” said Botti, who might just make an album again anyway. “We did a live DVD that’s out there. We play a show and people put it on Twitter, they put it on YouTube, that’s the record of it … I’m better at my craft. I’m a better trumpet player than I was 9 years ago, 5 years ago. But I’m a touring act.”
And tour he does — and has. In the years before the pandemic, he typically played about 250 shows a year now.
“We’ve done more than that,” he said. “We were gone 300 days a year when we were a cheaper act. We would go anywhere. We had situations where we’d fly to Seoul, Korea, do a one-nighter, then the next day was Jacksonville, Florida.”
That tour is where Botti said he’ll use all his skills — as a musician and entertainer — to create a special evening.
“I go see a lot of shows and support a lot of musicians,” Botti said. “It’s just hilarious, they don’t care at all. You’ll see them come out and the first thing they say is ‘on the piano, blah, blah, blah,’ ‘on the drums, blah, blah, blah’, ‘on the trumpet, blah, blah, blah.’ Then they play the music. How do you know anything about those people and the music? If you thread things out and talk about people individually, it makes it more special and it brings people into the show.”
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