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Stephen
Bocioaca: What made you want to start Moonjune Records?
What was the starting point of the Moonjune Records and
how it was developped along the way ? What achievements
can you highlight?
Leonardo Pavkovic: I have
started by an "accident', I was involved in a jazz label,
briefly, around 2000/2001 and wanted to have my own, and
when I discovered at the NearFest (www.nearfest.com) the
amazing Italian progressive fusion band DFA, and heard about
another Italian band FINISTERRE, I decided to release some
live cds, and have included also a tape from Mark Hewins'
archives featuring my all time sax hero Elton Dean.
The name of my company that does mostly
bookings of established vetarans of jazz-rock and prog-rock,
was taken from Robert Wyatt's composition on the Soft machine's
famous "Third" album, "The Moon In June".
I must admit that Robert Wyatt is
my ultimate music hero, and Soft machine 1969-1973 is my
favorite band. I was a sort of irregular label, have released
few more records in meantime, but only in 2006 I have to
decided to keep running a niche market quality label and
now I have 16 releases with 3-4 more coming in this calendar
year and 10-12 in 2008. MoonJune Records' focus is to release
internationally-situated music by artists exploring the
expanding boundaries of genuine, challenging and non-over-produced
music that cannot be easily categorized into any specific
format.
MoonJune's ongoing goal is to support
music that transcends stylistic pigeon-holing, but operates
within an evolutionary musical continuum that places jazz
at one end and progressive rock at the other.
The ever-expanding boundaries of these
two musical signposts have since come to include everything
from jam-rock to the avant-garde, neoclassical, experimental
music and more. As MoonJune continues to grow so, too, will
its commitment to representing this evolving musical space.
Particular emphasis is paid to current
and archival performances, as well as innovative genre cross-pollination.
Stephen
Bocioaca: How do you chose the musicians you're recording?
What is your involvement in the artistic project ?
Leonardo Pavkovic: I do not
have any strategic plan, all what I do in my life is based
on inspiration, moments and circumstances. All my releases
are circumstantial and each of them has its own compelling
story behind the scene, and I believe that would be the
case in the future.
I have things in my mind what I would
like to release, but its not always easy to achieve what
You really want, but I try. I would like to release a lot
of archival ‘70s jazz-rock live broadcast recordings of
little known or unknown but great European artists, I simply
love live music, and I believe that most of my future releases
will be live. 9 out of 16 of my releases are live recordings.
Some of the records I have produced,
co-produced or have been involved with, were released on
other labels in Japan, Europe and USA.
Stephen
Bocioaca: Is there any
special recording or recordings you've produced that have
a special place in your heart?
Leonardo Pavkovic: Difficult
to say, but the record I like specially is DFA's "Work
In Progress Live", because that concert from NearFest
2000 made me think of having my own label. The band was
totally unknown to me and after the gig, I approached those
4 wonderful guys from Verona and we instantly became friends,
the record was released in 2001 and gave me a lot of personal
satisfaction.
I am very proud of the new upcoming
Soft Machine Legacy studio album "Steam", that
I have produced with this legends and heroes of mine at
Jon Hiseman's studio in Surrey, England last December.
I have very special relationship with
Soft Machine Legacy guys, since days when Elton Dean was
alive, and now with the new saxophone/flute player Theo
Travis, the band is going more and more to progressive-jam-rock
dimensions, and having in the band the guitar-extraordinaire
John Etheridge, who plays better than ever, Hugh Hopper,
the fuzz-bass wizard and the central figure of the whole
Canterbury scene and my favorite drummer John Marshall,
I just feel in intellectual paradise.
I am also proud of New York based
band TriPod and their spectacular homonymous debut and of
Indonesian progressive ethno-jazz band simakDIALOG, whose
album "Patahan" is coming out this Summer. Clint
Bahr, the 12-string bassist of TriPod, and Riza Arshad,
leader/composer/pianist of simakDIALOG are phenomenally
skilled musicians that need much broader recognition.
Stephen
Bocioaca: How do you balance
the activity of MOONJUNE BOOKING & MANAGEMENT and MOONJUNE
RECORDS?
Leonardo Pavkovic: I am one-man-army
and I am challenging myself booking a dozen of artists and
running an indy label. Today is easier than before I guess,
most of booking business is done via e-mail, I travel a
lot, and still have time to do what is needed to be done.
I really do not "manage" anyone, "management"
means something "corporate", all musicians that
I work with are my friends, or becoming my friends, and
I like to keep it simple. I have specialized in Japan where
I've been so far 20+ times in past 4 years, and I like to
explore new territories like Asia and Latin America. I enjoy
my relationship with Allan Holdsworth, whose band with Jimmy
Johnson and Chad Wackerman, I am now booking worldwide.
Allan is one-of-a-kind, in any sense, one of the greatest
musicians ever, probably.
More
about Moonjune
www.myspace.com/moonjunerecords
moonjune.com
At JWQ
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