A child of the piano
Paul Saitowitz
From his earliest memories the black keys, the white keys, the foot
pedals, the high notes and the low notes gave him a feeling of
clarity. Jazz, classical, even some rock, he could play it all. No
struggle through lessons or practices, just smooth sailing.
“The piano was just something that made sense to me,”
pianist/composer Billy Childs said. “I looked at it, and I was able
to understand the way it worked.”
The 46-year-old three-time Grammy-nominated Los Angeles native
will appear along with Claudia Acuna at the Orange County Performing
Arts Center tonight and Saturday as part of the Scott’s Seafood Jazz
Series.
Growing up with a piano in the house gave him a jump-start, but it
wasn’t until his older sister introduced him to jazz when he was 11
that he became obsessed with music.
He spent hours playing every day and ended up befriending the son
of jazz trombonist J.J. Johnson. At 19, he went with Johnson and his
son on a club tour of Japan.
“That was basically my first gig,” he said. “I had started
composing music before that, but that was my first time on the road.”
During that same time, he was studying music composition at USC,
which expanded his appreciation for classical music. Right out of
college he got his first commission from the North Texas State Wind
Orchestra to write a concerto for percussion. He has since been
commissioned to write several pieces, including works for the L.A.
Philharmonic, the Akron Symphony Orchestra and the Plymouth Music
Series.
“When you think about it, the two are not that different,” Childs
said. “I look at jazz as America’s classical music ... it just has
more room for improvisation than classical does. The thing is that
the more free you are, the more constrained you are. If you improvise
and just play a bunch of nonsense it’s not going to work, it can be
really hit or miss.”
He has branched into film-scoring and was nominated for an
Australian Film Institute award for the work he did on the Aussie
film “Flynn.”
“I haven’t done any major films yet, but that is something that I
am definitely trying to pursue,” he said.
Although he has a studio in his house, where he records his work
as well as the work of artists he produces, it is difficult to find
inspiration in a regular 9-to-5 routine.
“It takes me about two to three months to put a 20-minute piece
together,” Childs said. “Sometimes ideas come to me and sometimes I
have to just wait for them. I’ll write the entire thing out on piano
and then transcribe it and give it to the orchestra.”
Childs, who only plays the piano, arranges most of his orchestral
pieces in his head and doesn’t get a chance to hear them until they
are performed live.
“That’s one thing that is always a thrill for me,” he said. “I
have a pretty good idea of what it’s going to sound like, but hearing
it all together is a great feeling.”
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