Bert Lochs

I am a professional trumpet player, composer of both jazz and classical pieces for small and large ensembles alike and a teacher. I am leader/initiator of two trio's: Trio Bert Lochs and Lochs/Balthaus/Herskedal and I play in the Guus Tangelder Bigband, Pieter Basts E.S.P and the Jasper Somsen Group. With my trio's I made some very well received CD's and I played at the North Sea Jazz Festival and a lot of Dutch and German venues. I teach at home and at the music school of Alphen a/d Rijn. One of my main skills is teaching the Balanced Embouchure method. A method of trumpet pedagogue Jeff Smiley. I discovered it in 2002 and it helped me play a LOT better, and it completely turned around my view of how to play and teach the trumpet.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Christmas music

Since I am a teacher on a music school, it is impossible to ignore music for the festive season. In Holland there is another phenomenon called Sinterklaas (yes, that sounds a lot like Santa Claus, but it is another person. I am told that he was a Turkish bishop from Myra, living several hundreds of years ago. On his birthday, the 5th of december, he and his helpers bring gifts and a lot of candy to the children) and there are a lot of Sinterklaas-songs. For beginners these are nice to play, because every child knows them, so they are easy to learn and the kids are eager to play them. After that comes Christmas, and of course there are a lot of christmas songs. I especially like the English carols and the American musical kind.
I wanted to organize a special christmas recital for my pupils this year, so I went looking for some new music. I found a very nice book by De Haske. Festive Christmas for trumpet. This is a set of very good pieces, not all acknowledged christmas music, but very good for the occasion. There is a CD included on which top trumpeter Frits Damrow plays all the pieces so you can listen how to play them, and the book comes with the piano/organ parts and accompaniment only, on the CD. For the rest I was a bit dissapointed. I wanted some duets, trio's or quartets to make a few ensembles, but I couldn't find much original stuff. That surprised me, and it made me think of writing some myself.
Some years ago De Haske published some books with quartets for trumpet that I wrote. They appeared to suit for saxophone, clarinet and flute as well, and it became a very usable and popular series of quartets. They sell all over the world. Once I saw a Canadian girl play a piece of one of these books on Youtube! That was weird, hehe. Anyway, I decided to try and write some christmas quartets in this fashion. A lot of people asked me if  I was going to write more quartets, and yes I am going to do that. I asked De Haske if they want to publish these again, but since they are taken over by Hal Leonard, it has gotten a bit harder, but I will try anyway. If they don't publish, I want to try and sell the pieces through my website, but I am not really sure how to do that.
The first of these quartets for christmas is ready, and I think it works very well. Work in progress. But if you are interested, please let me know.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Playing!

I've been busy playing for two weeks, something that does not happen that often, despite the fact that I have to make a living playing, hmmm. Anyway, I had a nice little tour with Lochs/Balthaus/Herskedal. We played in Orgelpark, Amsterdam, which is a brilliant spot. 4 majestic church organs to choose from, a heavenly sound (if you play without a drummer, haha) and some great music to play. Daniel wrote some new music especially for the occasion and Dirk practiced on all the organs so as to get the best sounds possible. It was a great concert and we made a very nice recording and even a little movie.
After that we went to Haarlem to play in a woodshed, which was totally crowded with an enthousiastic audience. We played very well there and we had a nice meal and a couple of fruitful conversations.
Then we went to Belgium to play in the Hopper, a well-known place, in the beautiful city of Antwerp. We had a very nice meal there, a very tiny siteseeing walk, and a good concert.


After a few days off, we went to Oberhausen for a gig in our favorite hangout: Polish cafe Gdanska. Actually a very nice theatre cafe, nice audience, grand piano, good music. The organizer, Kuro, always makes a very nice drawing of the band whenever we play there. I want to post one of these, but I am not sure if that is going to work.

The best concert was yet to come on sunday in Mülheim, Jazz in den Häusern. In Art Gallery Ricarda Fox we did a great concert, great audience, great food afterward, simply brilliant! I think that was the concert where everything came together. We were in the zone, so to speak, everything just went exactly the way we wanted. Daniel even made a lady cry with his tuba solo, which almost makes me cry everytime I hear it, to be honest.

















Wow, that was a great little tour with a great little band. (Photo's by Naual Abu el Hayy)


Right after that I fell into a new project we recorded last year, but that we never played with before. A quintet with Florian Zenker on guitar, Pieter Bast on drums, Jeroen van Vliet on piano and Rhodes and the boss: Jasper Somsen on bass. Music of Enrico Pieranunzi. Really lyrical music, very hard to play right, but ever so beautiful and well written. After a good rehearsal we did a first concert in hotel De Wereld (were peace was agreed upon in 1945). In a really packed hall, we played two sets. Mostly Pieranunzi's music, but some new songs by Jasper as well. Super!
As a little intermezzo, I recorded some film tunes for Florian, who stayed at my place, and is busy writing a lot of music for a film project. Saturday we did a live show on Radio 6, Shouting Bootz, and we played as a trio (actually my Trio Bert Lochs, which is part of the Jasper Somsen Group), music of Pieranunzi and some of my own songs. After that we went straight to Utrecht to play the CD release concert in Muziekhuis XXI. A good concert in a nice hall with virtual acoustics. A bit strange to my ears, but we got used to it, and I think we did a good job, soem of the material was really hot, and some of it decent enough, but we have to really do a couple of concerts to get this difficult music to flow and groove.

Well, I guess that is enough for two weeks. Very fruitful, and also on a personal level I was very satisfied. I play lovely music with lovely people, what more can I wish for?

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

On networking

I went to a Dutch networking event for jazz musicians. This is not something I particularly like to do. I want to play the trumpet and play with my bands. And that is exactly why I have to go to these gatherings. To meet the people that have the stages, and to meet the musicians to play my music.
One of the big dilemma's is, that I am a good trumpet player but a lousy networker. I owe it to my art and talent to make the best of it and try to get gigs. But the talent that is needed to get those gigs, is the talent to convince people to book you without playing one note. And I don't have that talent.
I had a conversation with a filmmaker whom we had already contacted about making a registration of one of our concerts. At a certain point he asked me if I liked doing an interview and mixing this with footage of the concert, and I said that I didn't really like that, because I want to show and let hear the music, not me talking. He didn't understand, and he said that the audience wants me to talk about my music. I really don't get that. Why should I talk about my music, instead of playing it? That is the second dilemma. If you deal with your audience, which is of course an important network you have to dedicate yourself to, what is it they want from you? I guessed it was hearing me play my music, but when you are at a networking event, or mingling with your audience after a concert, apparently they want you to talk about your music, which in a way, I find stupid. What can I say about my music that cannot be heard when I play it?
Music is a totally abstract art, which goes beyond language. That is the power of it. I cannot say in words what my music can express, that is probably one of the reasons I make music.
Anyway, I will try to find a way to deal with these dilemma's. I am not an unfriendly person to talk to, I can be convincing when I believe in something and I've learned to take care of business. So there is a chance that the networking I do is not doomed to fail, but it will never be a thing I do very naturally. I'd rather be on stage, playing my music for people that want to hear it, and if they don't want to hear it, I, myself, want to play and hear it. That is why I started to play in the first place.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Hope to get old like that!

I came across this video of trumpet legend Bud Herseth talking about his trumpets and mouthpieces.
Man, does this look like my own life over thirty years? I hope so. I already have the mouthpieces, some of the trumpets, and I hope the good humour and health , too. I will never make it to the legend he is, though, but never mind.
Love his 'jazz' playing, haha!