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Multi-Instrumentalist Pablo Correa Branches Out into
the Worlds of Writing and Producing
by John WildmanBy all accounts, Pablo Correa is an achiever. And I would hesitate to say he's an over-achiever because he doesn't strike me as someone who has ever had a complete idea of how much he is capable of. A multi-instrumentalist quickly making his mark as a songwriter and producer as well, Correa seems baffled by the acceptance and relatively easy entry he has had into the bands and creative endeavors of the people he has worked with to date. At the same time, he is equally nonchalant about the relatively lack of difficulty for him to create those opportunities through his talent and hard work in the first place. Need to figure out a way to pay your tuition for the music school you want to study at? Then get a job answering phones for that very same school. You're one of too many drummers in your band? Then pick up another instrument. Or two. And play. For many people, obstacles become mountains that are impossible to overcome. For Correa, a mountain would just be a good reason to finally take up that rock climbing hobby he had always though about. We spoke with Correa on the phone during a break in his project juggling. What's going on in your world right now? What are you working on? The latest thing is I'm playing for a friend of mine, Leslie Paula, in her band. She's finishing her new CD and I wrote three of the songs and did the arrangements for two of them. It's kind of like a salsa band - 15 piece. She's been around for several years. She's pretty well known in the Latin market. She plays a lot of the summer festivals stuff like that. And how did you hook up with her? Hussain Jiffry, the bass player and teacher at the LA Music Academy.
I performed with him once and awhile with this sax player Robert Kile.
And they both had worked with her. In fact, right now, Robert is working
with her. He's the producer of her new CD. I started playing with her
two years ago. I started just playing the drums, then things kept
getting better. The relationship was better, and she started seeing
me as a writer of music and songs, doing arrangements and things like
that. So she started giving me more chances to work with her [in that capacity]. Let's step back a bit. How did you first come to the LA Music Academy? In January 1999, a friend of mine who is also a graduate student,
Alberto Albis, a bass player from Columbia, he came six months before
I did. And he called me once he was here and said, "Man, you've got
to come down here. This is the place. This is the place to get to
study what we really want to study." We had studied together at one
of the best universities in Columbia Universidad de los Andes. We
had worked on classical harmonies - stuff like that - and I wanted
to work on more popular stuff like Jazz, Rock and Pop or, say,
Punk any of that stuff. We never got to study that. We played it,
but we were raised on Latin music so we never learned the basics of
it. So he said, "Here is where they give you all the basic information
about the Pop music. You've got to come here." You actually worked at the school? Yeah, I was working at the front desk. What were your impressions of the school when you first got here? I was definitely impressed. They had places for the drummers to practice in the evenings after classes were over, and the equipment, and the teachers that was the main reason I came to the LA Music Academy. To get here and see guys like Ralph Humphrey who was an idol to me. I learned a lot and now to see him, and he's still an idol. I was his student, and now he's like a friend, you know? So many times, he's helped me. He's great. I hear that frequently from former students of the school,
who say they've learned so much from the LA Music Academy. What did the school teach
you in particular? I would say the main thing is to be a professional musician. That's what they taught me here. There are rules. There are parameters to being a professional musician. You have to be a good reader. They teach you how to be a good reader. How to behave in a professional environment. Somewhere else they may show you the technical stuff, how to do it, this is the way it should be done, but then you don't have anywhere to apply it. Here, at the same time you are growing as a musician, you're also getting an opportunity to get out and play. When you're still in school, you can get into the ensemble performances. For example, Ralph's class the guys that were playing in the ensemble were Steve Billman [bass player and instructor] and Brad Rabuchin [guitar player and instructor], and those guys are from a different planet. And you'd get a chance to play with them every Monday! By the time you would get out, you already would have it going on. You'd know how to behave and approach the different styles. How to play it safe if you aren't familiar with it right away, so you wouldn't look like somebody who doesn't know. How long were you a student? From '99 to 2000 a year. Then when I was finishing school, I was in
one of those bands that they do every six months, those performances that
you have to do. So I was in the Latin band. And it was led by Hussain
Jiffry. And since I had studied music - I had studied saxophone and
keyboards before I got to the LA Music Academy well, we had like four
or five drummers in the same band so, for one song he used me as a
drummer, and then I said, "You know, I know how to play a little bit of
this and a little bit of that." So I started playing some other instruments
for him, I started playing keyboards for a song and saxophone for another
song, and I guess he really liked that. So, you went right from the school into making this CD with Alessa? Right. And at the same time, Hussain and the LA Music Academy started
hiring me to play in the ensembles at school. So I started getting a
little more involved at the school at the same time I was doing these
other projects around town. And then I got a call from another friend to
play with this band that is very popular down in South America. They play
like, Spanish Pop Rock. Vilma Palma is the name of the band. Right now, I
am the musical director for them, and I play the saxophone and play
percussion for them. And we toured eight months ago for about six months,
and it was amazing. Those guys are really popular. You've gone beyond simply playing percussion with a
handful of instruments under your belt. And now, you're writing, arranging,
and producing songs and records. I feel blessed because I've been given the chance by people like Leslie that trust me and say, "Okay, write me a song." And, you know, I have the pro tools studio at home. So, I write the song in my studio, put the keyboards on it and the horns through the keyboards, as well. I sang it for her, and she was thrilled. She ended up using three of my songs. Now, having done that, what do you see for
yourself as far as what you would like to do? Do you want to do more
writing and arranging? Does that supercede simply playing the instruments? No. The main thing is playing the instruments in a band or for somebody. But I have been doing more writing over the past four years. You just keep growing as a musician. Now, when I record and sing on my songs in the studio more and more I think I can do a pretty good job as a singer. So, now I would like to do a couple things: I want to continue as a producer for other people, but I would also like to try it as a solo artist. I would like to get my music out on a CD as the main guy or the front guy. Show it to some people and see what happens. That's what I will probably try to shoot for in the next year. |
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