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Frederic Yonnet Crowd Sources His New Album

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

I'm Michel Martin and this is TELL ME MORE from NPR News. When you think harmonica, I bet you think honky-tonk, country, blues, maybe Stevie Wonder, giving it some R&B love, but you probably never thought you'd hear this.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

MARTIN: That's Frederic Yonnet with the intro from his album in progress, Reed My Lips: The Rough Cut. It's available now as a digital download. He's actually asking fans to weigh in on the music titles and album artwork. It's a bold new concept that brings listeners into the creative process early.

Frederic Yonnet has collaborated with many musical greats, as well, such as Stevie Wonder, of course, Prince and John Legend. He did a special performance with us earlier this year. He brought the whole band with him and here he is, introducing his friends.

FREDERIC YONNET: Today, on keys, we have Hope (unintelligible) on keyboard.

(APPLAUSE)

YONNET: On guitar, Robbie MacDonald.

(APPLAUSE)

YONNET: On bass, Dennis Turner.

(APPLAUSE)

YONNET: And, over there on the drums, Chris Bynum on drums.

(APPLAUSE)

MARTIN: Thank you all for coming. Thank you for coming. You have a very interesting background and, if you would just tell us a little bit about how you got here, born in France.

YONNET: Born in France, raised in several places around France following my dad through his jobs. Every four or five years, we had to move, but I lived most of my life in Paris, where there's a huge music scene and that's pretty much where (unintelligible) my side.

MARTIN: And your mother has a French-Guyanese Creole background.

YONNET: Correct.

MARTIN: Which of them is musical? From which did you inherit your music gene?

YONNET: Actually, none of them, unfortunately...

(LAUGHTER)

YONNET: ...but somehow, it must have skipped a generation or two because my grandfather on my mother's side was playing 17 instruments and my grandfather on my father's side - I found out that he was a piano player and also a harmonica player.

MARTIN: And there's a very funny story about how you chose the harmonica, that you'd actually started on drums, but...

YONNET: But I couldn't carry my drums anywhere I wanted to. I didn't have a car. My neighbors hating me because I was the loud neighbor upstairs, so I had to take out my frustration on something that could fit in my pocket and, you know, what a better instrument than this? It's inexpensive. It makes people smile. Good choice.

MARTIN: But you also wanted to play the melody. Right? And you also kept getting in trouble because you kept kind of...

YONNET: That's correct. I got fired from quite a few bands because I was trying to actually take the lead with the drums and they were pretty clear about this. They were - they told me a few times, you know, you can't do that or you have to walk and - yeah - I got fired.

MARTIN: OK. Perhaps you're more forgiving with your own drummer now?

YONNET: Oh, yeah. He's doing just fine. I actually like the way he plays. He doesn't play like a follower. That's what I like about him.

MARTIN: But talk about the idea of not just bringing the harmonica front and center, but also giving it, as we say, an urban jazz feel. Is that just kind of the sound that you heard in your head or how did that come about?

YONNET: Well, I come from the perspective that the music I listen to does not include the harmonica, so I figured that, you know, there was a window there, a window of opportunity. It was a pretty simple choice to make. And the harmonica is an underestimated instrument; only used in a few different styles of music, which I love and respect a lot, but thank God, for me, I can actually take advantage of the fact that nobody is doing exactly what I'm doing. So it keeps me busy.

MARTIN: Well, let's hear a little bit.

YONNET: Let's see. We just heard a snippet earlier. We can actually delve a lot better. A little bit for you, just for, you know, a quick second.

MARTIN: Sure. Let's hear it. Yes.

YONNET: Give you an idea of where the music comes from and where it's going and then we'll come back in the conversation.

MARTIN: All right.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

(APPLAUSE)

MARTIN: And you know what I feel really bad about? Is that people can't see you.

(LAUGHTER)

MARTIN: Our audience in the studio can see you, and people always write about your - they use these euphemisms like electrifying stage presence. But that doesn't really capture the fact that you're kind of a wild man up here, like, with your, kind of like...

(LAUGHTER)

MARTIN: How do you put all that together? You've got like - and is that choreographed, or is that just what occurs to you?

YONNET: I'm so sorry. It's really spontaneous. Let's put it this way: The energy it takes for me to express, or to actually dig out of my body and deliver to the audience requires, sometimes, more effort, more physical effort. And that's what you're witnessing in the motions.

(LAUGHTER)

MARTIN: People love it. What are you talking about? That's part of the fun of it. And I understand that you travel with - how many harmonicas do you travel with? I see maybe six up there right now.

YONNET: I have six Stainless Steel Reed harmonica. Usually they're made of brass, but those are a lot stronger than the competitors.

MARTIN: Mm-hmm.

YONNET: Usually I have like close to 40 Seydel harmonicas in my bag, because I break them sometimes - even though that brand is a lot stronger than the competitors, you know, I like to have some spares. Each harmonica has a personality, and sometimes the personality works with you, and sometimes it works against you. So...

MARTIN: What did they say when you go through security at the airport?

YONNET: Can you play as a song?

(LAUGHTER)

MARTIN: Do they really?

YONNET: And my question is: Do you have a band?

(LAUGHTER)

MARTIN: If you're just joining us, this is TELL ME MORE, from NPR News. We are having a special in-studio performance and conversation with Frederic Yonnet.

You're already releasing cuts from the album, calling it "Reed" - reed, that's R-E-E-D.

YONNET: Correct.

MARTIN: "Reed My Lips: The Rough Cut." And you're presenting work in progress. Where'd you get the idea to do that?

YONNET: I found out that people listen to the music differently when they know that they can have an impact on the end result. So I wanted to use this opportunity to share with my audience the creative process at several steps of evolution. And if some of the comments and suggestions coming back to us are actually as constructive as they can be, and if they are great ideas, they will end up on the final mix, and we'll give them credit for that.

MARTIN: Really?

YONNET: Yeah. Why not?

MARTIN: Because most people don't do that.

(LAUGHTER)

YONNET: It's true. Most people are scared of sharing the work in progress, but I think I can learn from this, and I also want to take people on a journey.

MARTIN: Hmm. Well, let's hear another song. This is "Voice."

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG "VOICE")

(APPLAUSE)

MARTIN: You know, I think Stevie Wonder's played an important role in your career here in the U.S. How did that come about?

YONNET: Not only in my career, he really had an important role in my life, in my musical evolution. I've always been a big fan of Stevie. I mean, of course, who isn't? But something about his generosity, his overwhelming sense of giving love that you feel in his music that actually was confirmed when I had an opportunity to meet him. I was introduced to him by Dave Chappelle. We were hanging out backstage at the Grammys in 2006. Dave was there to introduce Sly & the Family Stone. They had been gone for a long time, and he was basically there to bring them back on stage.

And as we were hanging out backstage with Dave, I actually saw the sign, Stevie Wonder, and I was shaking. I was extremely, extremely intimidated, and Dave very nicely introduced us. And we've been going ever since.

MARTIN: What, did you just pull out your harmonica and show him what you could do or what did you?

YONNET: I really wanted to so bad but I just didn't know how to introduce the subject. So we started talking about harmonica, and I asked him what kind of harmonica he uses. He answered, and I asked him if he knew about the brand I'm endorsing, and he said he was not familiar with it. So I was like, hey, let me just show you what it does.

(LAUGHTER)

MARTIN: Good for you. Nice move. Nice move.

YONNET: So I played one of his songs, and well, then he gave me his telephone number, and, you know, every time we're in the same city we hang out and we play together.

MARTIN: What's that like?

YONNET: Oh, it's like living a dream before you get to dream it, literally. It's - I mean, in my wildest expectations of life and of evolution in the music business, I would have never imagined. Meeting him is one thing, but playing with him and then sharing the stage with him is even more overwhelming. And now we are actually talking about doing some work together in the studio. So it's like, ah.

MARTIN: Well, you've been playing with all kinds of people, all kinds of different genres. I know that we've seen you with, as we mentioned, with John Legend and, of course, Prince and...

YONNET: India Arie.

MARTIN: India Arie.

YONNET: (unintelligible). I'm doing, I've done some things for Anthony Hamilton also on his album. Kindred and the Family Soul also, I'm on their album. So I'm trying to, you know, expand - the Jonas Brothers, also. I'm really trying to put the harmonica in places where you least expect it.

MARTIN: Yes. You're right. I wouldn't expect it in the Jonas Brothers. No, I'm sorry.

(LAUGHTER)

MARTIN: That's... So is there any kind of music that you don't think you could apply it to? You think no, I just can't, I just can't do it?

YONNET: When the political involvement is too deep into something that I'm against, yes. Definitely. I'll just put it that way.

MARTIN: Mm.

(LAUGHTER)

MARTIN: OK.

YONNET: Other than that, I mean, you know, music - there's two kinds of music, like Duke was saying, good and bad music. So, you know, it keeps the doors open.

MARTIN: Yeah. Sure. And one more thing: I understand that the work actually helps you with your asthma, and that you're actually teaching kids to use the harmonica, who have asthma, as a way to work on that - their breath and their breathing. Can you tell me a little bit about that?

YONNET: Correct. I grew up with asthma, and I always carried an inhaler in my pocket. And when I really started to switch on putting a lot of energy in sharpening my craft as a harmonica player, I realized that I did not need the inhaler as much as I used to, to the point that I actually totally gave up on it.

You know, when you have asthma, if you forget your inhaler, that's when the monkey jumps on your back. And I realized that when that actually took place, it was better for me to pull the harmonica out of my pocket and practice a lot harder. So now I'm doing two things: not only I am trying to show kids who have asthma that there is an outlet, away from medicine and away from medication, that actually is linked to some kind of a meditation. You know, the harmonica, when you hyperventilate, you find yourself in that kind of a pocket of meditation sometimes. So, you know, that's one thing that I like to do. But I also like to show kids how they can incorporate the harmonica in the music they listen to, you know, and use it in a creative way, and in their own way.

MARTIN: Well, thank you for coming. We sure enjoyed visiting with you. I'm going to ask you to play one more thing for us. But tell us about the album. As we mentioned, it's a work in progress, and you're actually asking listeners to participate in the creative process. When do you think you'll have the final cut ready?

YONNET: We're thinking about getting by next year, hopefully the album will be released in its final, mixed version. And for the final mix, it will be released everywhere.

MARTIN: What are you going to play as we say goodbye? What are you going to play to send us off?

YONNET: Oh, this is it? This is the last tune?

MARTIN: Yeah. Sorry.

YONNET: OK. Well, I enjoyed myself so much. I'm sorry.

(LAUGHTER)

YONNET: I'm not going to...

MARTIN: Well, you know, time is the one thing they're not making more of. So...

YONNET: So we're going to play a track right now. I think it's letter D on the download card.

MARTIN: Letter D?

YONNET: Yeah.

MARTIN: Frederic Yonnet plays the harmonica. His album in progress is called "Reed," - that's R-E-E-D. "Reed My Lips: The Rough Cut." Fans can download the latest material from his website and leave feedback.

Thank you so much for visiting with us, and good luck to you.

YONNET: Michel, thank you for having us.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

MARTIN: You've been listening to Frederic Yonnet, playing from his album-in-progress "Reed My Lips: The Rough Cut." he's been letting fans weigh in on his creative process. The final mixed version of the CD is due out next year.

Over the summer, Frederic Yonnet did several shows with Dave Chappelle - that blended music and comedy. And later this month, he's scheduled to perform at the Chestertown Jazz Festival in historic Chestertown, Maryland.

Finally, we want to wish you a happy Labor Day. Let's talk more tomorrow.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.