Almost legend
Bob Jordan is reheated on Left Oeuvres
by John O'Neill
When most musicians go on the road, they generally map out a route that, at the
very least, includes clubs to play in. When Bob Jordan went to Europe for a
month in May, he tucked his 100-year-old guitarra (a 12-string Portuguese
big-brother of the mandolin) under his arm, packed a bag, and hopped a bus in
London. From there he went to Scotland and cut peat in a village of 75 people
where the feudal system still exists ("Turns out my friend is a serf," he
remarks), and got thrown out of a park in London for trying to perform for
free. Eventually, he landed in Amsterdam and briefly lived the life of a street
musician.
"London was terrible, everyone was plugged in and electric and playing `Hotel
California' so I couldn't compete," he says. "But Amsterdam was very receptive.
I found a park bench and just played. I made a little money and spent it at the
coffeehouse. If the word coffeehaus begins with a K they just sell
coffee, if it's a cafe they sell beer, and if it begins with a C, they sell
hash. I mostly went to the houses with a C and drank my coffee there as
well."
Thus began my first real conversation with almost-legend Bob Jordan. Known for
his years of dedication to local music, from playing with and promoting various
groups to stints as a WCUW programmer to his involvement with the Worcester
Artist Group to his most recent venture as solo artist, Jordan has been an
omnipresent entity for the better part of 20 years. Open up a local paper and
Jordan's name will invariably pop up, whether it be hosting an open- mic night
or working the coffeehouse circuit for donations. He's also a man who, like
many of his influences, continues to ride his iconoclastic views on music all
the way into self-imposed obscurity. And he wouldn't have it any other way.
"I probably sell one cassette a day on average," relates Jordan of
back-catalogue sales of his past four cassettes. "It's a trickle type of
marketing! I wouldn't mind getting orders, but I'm really too busy just trying
to play music and do gigs. I set up 40 and hope I live that long, then when I'm
out of shows I do it again."
Jordan took his first step toward a potential larger audience as well as
mainstream legitimacy by releasing his first CD, Four Corners, and an
accompanying cassette-only release, Left Oeuvres. Supported in part by
the Worcester Cultural Commission and the Grafton Cultural Council, the CD
format of Four Corners drags Jordan, however hesitantly, into the
'90s.
"I'm really into the cassette format and having two sides, like records,"
Jordan admits. "It's just not possible to do vinyl so I decided to do a CD if I
could get some [financial] help. And then they funded me. I had to work fast,
because I realized I'd used up all my songs on my last tape!"
Jordan pulled together enough improves and "ethnic forgeries" to not only
complete a CD but to also spend some of his windfall on a beloved cassette.
"I just started assembling things like a jigsaw puzzle. I didn't want just a
bunch of songs, 'cause I'm really [a] . . . freak about how good
albums hang together. The CD is largely original, and the tape is mostly other
artists' stuff. I don't have permission for it, but it's people I can get
permission from, mostly."
Though the idea of a mostly cover album acting as a complement to a release
full of original material may seem improbable, or at the very least irrelevant,
Left Oeuvres fits quite snugly alongside Four Corners, a tribute
to both Jordan's ability to assimilate varying material and his willingness to
trash convention and explore sounds. The real key is the knowledge of when to
keep it simple and when to let it out. Jordan takes Tim Buckley's
"Phantasmagoria in 2" and sends it on an acid-laced trip down a deep hole only
to follow it immediately with a version of the Beach Boys' "In My Room" that
retains every bit of innocence and purity laid out in the original. Both
Four Corners and Left Oeuvres bounce around from
straight-forward, though quirky, singer/songwriter fare (the excellent "x q z'
me" and "Equipment") to more far-out spaces where Jordan employs less-orthodox
(sometimes structure-less) improvisations that integrate eerie textures, moods,
and hypnotic rhythm patterns. From the Sun Ra tribute "Music of Ganymede" to
the almost out jazz of "Pork Pie Hat," and the guitar improv of "Space on My
Hands," both albums offer an hour's worth of music that pleases far more than
it disappoints. Which is a general reflection of his career.
"When I play bars, I get away with it about 80 percent of the time. The other
20 is a nightmare . . . for everyone," says Jordan who is aware of
his cult status. "I just want to play. I practically drive off the road when I
hear my song on the radio. Luckily, it doesn't happen very often."