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"Chris Squire was amazing, I was lucky enough to know him through the bass player world." Tal Wilkenfeld's world of music

Tal Wilkenfeld.

Bassist Tal Wilkenfeld's musical CV boasts some of the prog and rock world's biggest names: Trevor Rabin, Todd Rundgren, Jeff Beck, Chick Corea to name just a few. When she released her second solo album Love Remains in 2019 she sat down with Prog and discussed her career to date.


Tal Wilkenfeld’s career is successful and fascinating. Born in Sydney, Australia in 1986, she was a budding guitarist as a kid, with only a few rock records on her shelf. Aged 16, she dropped out of high school and emigrated to the US, switching to bass and enrolling at Los Angeles Music Academy College Of Music. After graduating she moved to New York and earned a reputation as a hotshot player on the circuit, sharing a stage with the Allman Brothers, fusion guitarist Wayne Krantz and ex-Zappa drum great Vinnie Colaiuta.

She recorded her calling card jazz fusion debut Transformation in 2006, and Chick Corea selected her to play in his band on his Australian tour the following year. Her big break came soon after when Jeff Beck enrolled her as his bassist, and since then she has played with an incredible list of artists, among them Herbie Hancock, Mick Jagger, Prince, Trevor Rabin, Todd Rundgren, The Who and Brian Wilson. The plot thickens on her second album, Love Remains, which sees her step up to the mic to deliver a moody, heartfelt, subtly complex set drawing on her many musical influences and life experiences.

Love Remains is your first vocal album and you deal with some raw emotions on it. Does the attention it’s getting you feel different to the kind you’ve got as ‘just’ a bassist?

The attention doesn’t feel different but I feel different. I’ve revealed a larger aspect of myself, and so when I’m getting this kind of feedback it feels even more wholesome. It doesn’t feel strange to put myself out there like this, it feels really natural. The easiest thing to write about is your life and experience. Even if it’s just something you’ve seen in a movie that’s inspired you, it’s still through your own lens. 

So movies inspired some of these songs? 

Yes. I’ve spent a lot time watching TV shows and movies like The Graduate and Taxi Driver, playing along or pausing during an emotional moment and starting to write. It’s a really good way for me to inspire myself. I write mostly when I’m moving around doing other things – walking, driving, washing the dishes.

Haunted Love is an extraordinary song. Pete Townshend himself called it ‘a jewel’…

Well, I wanted to do one song that had the bass as the harmonic instrument, I use it like a classical guitar. It changes time signatures nearly every bar at one point, and changes key centres regularly. I recorded the strings at RAK Studios, and it was one
of my favourite days ever. I want to write much more music
for orchestra.

Love Remains is all about songs, but Transformation was pure fusion.

Jazz fusion was very much my focus back then. I was playing a lot with Wayne Krantz. But all the styles of music I’ve played have influenced my songwriting. I couldn’t have written Haunted Love if I hadn’t played fusion. Even [country-style ballad] Pieces Of Me is in 11/4 in parts. I look to old folk and blues, where everything follows the story and melody, and they’ll add extra beats and bars where needed. I mean, listen to Lightnin’ Hopkins, he plays 12 ½ bar blues! When I first moved to LA and switched from bass to guitar people kept calling me ‘Mini-Vinnie’. Turns out they meant Vinnie Colaiuta! He’s known for playing polyrhythmic stuff, and I was doing that on the bass. One of the very first things I learned to play on bass was The Black Page by Frank Zappa.

So prog does feature in your musical diet? 

Oh yes. One of the first bands I ever listened to a lot of was Tool and that style really influenced me. I didn’t start hearing other bands in the genre, like Yes, until way later. Chris Squire was amazing, I was lucky enough to know him through the bass player world. He was a really cool guy and super fun. I love it when musicians retain their childlike qualities, that’s where music comes from I believe. Pink Floyd are one of my favourite bands. I got to play with David Gilmour at the Royal Albert Hall [during Jeff Beck’s 2009 tour], and that was pretty magical. I’ve seen The Wall a couple of times in concert, Roger Waters’ latest incarnation of it, and it’s phenomenal. I hope one day I can be part of something that elaborate and astonishing.

There are so many proggy luminaries on your CV – Trevor Rabin, Todd Rundgren…

And I had to do my research! I met Todd in Hawaii and he’s been a very supportive person in my life for 10 years now, and obviously his music’s amazing. The thing is, I didn’t grow up with a lot of music around me in Sydney. I only owned Jimi Hendrix’s Are You Experienced, Rage Against The Machine’s Evil Empire and Herbie Hancock’s Thrust

And you went on to play with Herbie, on his album Imagine. With someone like that is it tricky to separate the person from their ‘legend’?

It doesn’t really matter to me that someone is famous or not. It’s about their musicianship and what they’re trying to express as a person, a soul. If I’m accompanying them I want to know how can I best help them deliver their message. It’s not about being impressed with somebody, it’s about facilitating the music.

Chick Corea knows a good bassist when he hears one. How did you get that gig?

I think Vinnie told him about me, then I sent him demos. I did quite a bit of sight-reading with Chick. I had to sight-read [Return To Forever’s] Spain, as much as that’s a standard I didn’t really know it. That was funny.

All these players are virtuosos. When you’re performing with them are you aware in the moment that they’re operating at some higher level?

Yeah. At a certain point you become one with music, you are just a conduit for music to express itself. And when that happens it’s the most beautiful thing to see.

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