April 18, 2012
Bela Fleck returns to Charleston with the original Flecktones
Courtesy photo
Bela Fleck and the Original Flecktones bring their genre bending jazz and bluegrass music to the Clay Center Saturday. The band is (from left) bassist Victor Wooten, Fleck, pianist/harmonica player Howard Levy and percussionist Roy "Future Man" Wooten.
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Musically, the band is much the same, though Levy said time has softened some of the edges.

"The big thing is Bela enjoys co-writing a lot more than he did back then," he explained. "Back then, he just had this flood of tunes, and he was mostly interested in just recording his own stuff.

"He's more collaborative -- but so am I."

On the new album, "Rocket Science," Levy pointed out, he wrote two of the tracks. He also co-wrote "Life in Eleven" with Fleck, which won a Grammy this year for Best Instrumental.

There weren't a lot of hard feelings when Levy left the band, he said -- at least, he didn't think so.

Back in the late 1980s and early 1990s, even if the band was only doing Bela Fleck's songs, all of the Flecktones had input into the arrangements. They put their marks on every song.

"We were always extremely collaborative then," he said. "Everybody contributed significant ideas."

The same is true now, Levy added.

"The two songs I wrote on the record would never sound the way they do with any other musicians. The unique musical personalities in the band, we'd come up with stuff nobody else would come up with."

It's good to be back, he said, though Levy never really went too far away from the band. Since the mid-1990s, he has popped up with the Flecktones occasionally for jazz festivals and as a special guest at a few shows. This current Flecktones reunion owes its roots to a three-week tour the band asked him to join in 2009.

Levy wasn't certain if the original lineup would stick together past that tour. He's a busy man. Aside from this band, he is involved with several other musical outfits including Trio Globo, an acoustic world-music/jazz ensemble. He also teaches harmonica through his website and is a frequent guest on public radio's "Prairie Home Companion."

But who's to say what will happen after this? Levy thinks the tour is fun while it lasts. At the very least, it's taking him places he hasn't been in years, including West Virginia, where he used to teach harmonica at the Augusta Heritage Center in Elkins during the summers.

"I did that for seven summers in the 1980s," he said. "I had a great time. A lot of students became lifelong friends. We learned a lot of great stuff together, and I got turned on to a lot of Appalachian stuff I wouldn't have known about."

Reach Bill Lynch at ly...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-5195.

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