Kaveh Rastegar Parlays His Versatility Into An Auspicious Solo Debut
Is there a more versatile, all-in bass player than Kaveh Rastegar? Since arriving in Los Angeles in 1999, Rastegar has defined the modern session bassist: Heโs a doubler who has provided bottom on recordings ranging from Meshell Ndegeocello and Shania Twian to Beck and Charlie Puth, as well as film soundtracks and jingles (including an appearance in La La Land); heโs a composer who has written for Ndegeocello, Bruno Mars, Ciara, and Cee Lo Green; and heโs a producer for Sabrina Claudio, Dawn Richard, and De La Soul (for whom he also wrote and played bass). Then thereโs his recently concluded, 18-year run wearing all of those hats in the forefront jazz unit Kneebody, and his longtime role in John Legendโs band. With that much musical impact on other peopleโs projects, it was only a matter of time before Kaveh released his solo debut. Light of Loveย is a sonic tapestry full of fervent grooves, abundant vocal hooks, and ingenious bass orchestrations via his โ64 Fender Precision and acoustic bass. Key to the 12-track discโs uber-contemporary sound is the way it was written and produced, through free-form jam sessions, post-jam collaborations, and open-minded experimentation. Co-conspirators include vocalists Becca Stevens, Gaby Moreno, and David Garza, drummers Chris Dave and Scott Seiver, guitarists Chris Bruce and Josh Lopez, and trumpeter Nicholas Payton. Allows Kaveh, โThis record was certainly overdue. The fun was in drawing from all of my musical worlds.โ

Born in Montreal on November 17, 1975, Rastegar moved with his family to Denver when he was two, remaining there until age 21. The years in between were filled with music at the urging of his arts-minded parents and his stepdad, a prog-rock composer/guitarist. Saxophone came first, at age nine in elementary school, and then his tastes turned to punk rock and reggae. Kaveh recalls, โSuicidal Tendencies, Sly & Robbie, the Cure โ the bass in those bands was such a driving instrument, and the ferocious, wonderful sound when the rest of the band dropped out drew me to bass. A key was Simon Gallupโs part on The Cureโs โFascination Streetโ [Disintegration, 1989, Elektra].โ First picking out bass lines on his stepdadโs acoustic guitar, Rastegar got a Fender Musicmaster Bass at age 13 from his mom, and he was off. While in high school he saw the Psychodelic Zombiez, a local funkโpunk horn band, and he fell into their universe, meeting their vocalist and then Lopez and Seiver, and gigging in all of the groupโs satellite bands. Spending time on a Fender P-Bass Lyte, a Peavey TL-5, a Fender Jazz Bass 5-string, and Lopezโs dadโs acoustic bass, Rastegar played in reggae and salsa bands, and he subbed for jazz acoustic bassist Artie Moore. Along the way he took in the additional influences of Flea, Les Claypool, Jaco Pastorious, Pino Palladino, and Bernard Edwards.
Gradually, members of the Zombiez moved to Los Angeles, creating a pipeline for the Colorado crew of players. Rastegarโs next move, however, was to attend the University of Northern Colorado in Greeley for two years until another Denver pal, trumpeter Shane Endsley, convinced him to join him at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York. Kaveh successfully auditioned on acoustic bass and, along with Endsley, met saxophonist Ben Wendel and keyboardist Adam Benjamin, who would all go on to form Kneebody in Los Angeles (with drummer Nate Wood) in 2001. Regarding his original May โ99 move to the City of Angels, Rastegar recalls, โIt was mysterious, colorful, warm, and incredible. All of my Denver buddies were in touring bands for artists like Macy Gray and Everlast. I did local gigs and became a bass instructor at Fleaโs Silverlake Conservatory of Music.โ Over time, he made inroads across the musical spectrum, leading to the alliances that help make Light of Lovethe kaleidoscopic, kinetic debut it is.

How did Light of Loveย come together?
My intention at the start was for it to be my bass album, but it ended up bringing together all of my worlds: bass playing, songwriting, producing, and my love of collaboration โ I also played guitar and sang. The genesis was getting together with my old friend Scott Seiver [Tenacious D] and improvising grooves and forms that I could later write over. I did additional jam-style sessions with buddies like Josh Lopez, Chris Bruce, Brandon Coleman, and Chris Dave. Then I went through all of the sessions and picked out some good spots, and I began writing the songs with collaborators. My buddy Pete Min, who engineered and mixed the record, is a key collaborator, as well. I bounced all of my ideas off him. I was inspired by J Dillaโs Donuts [2006, Stones Throw], where itโs just one insane idea after another. Compositionally, the songs are just moods that inspired me, like a mixtape. My work on De La Soulโs And the Anonymous Nobodywas like that.
There are a lot of diverse bass colors, starting with โCuento Ilogicoโ and โCat Woman.โ
โCat Peopleโ is my โ64 Precision and my acoustic bass going through a Fender Twin Reverb, with the reverb on. The song is a nod to Giorgio Moroderโs score for the 1982 film Cat People, with its mysterious, elegant, synth-laden melodies. โCuento Ilogicoโ has my arco acoustic bass choir at the top and my P-Bass later. I wrote that with the vocalist, Gaby Moreno. And I wrote โA Little Too Late,โ which also has arco acoustic bass, with [vocalist] Becca Stevens in my studio. Those are the only two songs not written from previous jams.
โTom Tom?โ and โLavenderโ sound like they have keyboard bass lines.
โTom Tom?โ was from the end of a jam I did with guitarist Jeff Parker. Iโm playing both a [Roland] Juno and P-Bass bass line to the groove, which is in 5/4. I brought that to Chris Dave, and he created something new against it. โLavenderโ is actually my P-Bass and a Boss OC-2 Octave pedal with the oct 1 knob turned all the way up and everything else turned all the way down. That song came from the same jam as โAccidents Waiting to Happenโ โ you can hear the same style and tempo. I put the track together and sent it to Dawn Richard, a New Orleans artist who was in Danity Kane, and she wrote the lyrics and added her vocal.

Whatโs the feel and stylistic influence of โAs Long As You Love Meโ?
Thatโs inspired by Malian singer/guitarist Ali Farka Tourรฉ โ that African-music-meets-the-blues style โ and the feel is 7/4. I play baritone and standard guitar, and acoustic bass. The vocals and lyrics are by an artist known as Who Is Wednesday. It started from a jam with Scott and Josh, and then I wrote the B section, which has the two scales fused together [Mixolydian b6 ascending, Bbย Lydian descending].
You step out for a solo on โLong March,โ which features Nicholas Payton.
Thatโs built on a bass line Iโd had for a long time, which is a bit of a tongue-twister but has a funky side, too. I taught it to Josh and Scott, and they made it their own. Then I sent it to Nicholas, who I had met through Kneebody, and he wrote and overdubbed the melody and the horn parts, all of which are brilliant. The changes are challenging to blow over [AโCโEbโAbโGโF]; I just went for it stream-of-conscious, keeping the groove in mind.
You end the record with a chord melody version of โLuz Do Sol.โ
Thatโs one of my favorite songs from one of my favorite records [Caetano Veloso, 1986, Nonesuch], by Brazilian composerโvocalistโguitarist Caetano Veloso. About ten years ago, I got into creating solo bass arrangements of songs I love as part of my practice routine. Itโs a great learning experience, because you find all of these challenges and limitations on the instrument that you have to solve, and more often than not, you discover that the simplest way to get the melody across is the best way. Here, I added an outro, with Jeff Babko on keyboards, Chris Dave on percussion, and three overdubbed basses in conversation.

Having recently left Kneebody after 18 years, how do you reflect on the band?
To have been a founding member of Kneebody is one of the true honors of my life. I learned quickly to get over the hang-up of being around incredible musicians who were levels above me, so I could focus on all the ways they challenged me. Along the way, we became best friends and brothers who created records in a musical lab. We would all bring in tunes, workshop them on gigs, and find our way to the finish line. Itโs a leaderless band, which could get a little crazy at decision time, but it couldnโt be any other way. And to be able to play with a hero of mine in Nate Wood โ an equally amazing drummer and bassist, who hears everythingโ raised my playing and musical awareness tenfold. Iโll continue to watch and support them, knowing theyโre in super-capable hands with Nate handling both bass and drums.
How would you describe your role with John Legendโs band?
I feel very blessed to play in Johnโs band because heโs one of the great artists of our time. Heโs rooted in R&B, soul, and pop, so bass-wise I draw from masters like James Jamerson, Chuck Rainey, and Willie Weeks โ but he also comes from hip-hop, so Iโm drawing from players like Pino Palladino, too. Heโs open to all of the cool things you can do as a bass player, whether itโs filling the spaces on a soul tune or creating a huge, sub-bass sound with a pedal on a hip-hop tune. Basically I play whatโs on the recordings, but thereโs plenty of leeway. John feeds off the bandโs energy, and ideas develop live. It doesnโt always mean I play busier; maybe Iโll play a different bass note or weโll throw in a chord substitution. Overall, I feel like my role is to provide whatever the bass needs to do for the music, and that almost always means being the foundation.
Whatโs coming up in 2019?
Iโm about to release two follow-up singles toย Light of Love. One is from the same jam session as โRoll Call,โ called โDonโt Turn Back,โ featuring vocalist Dorian Holley, and the other is a remix of โLuz Do Solโ by electronica producer Daedelus. This summer Iโll release my singerโsongwriter record, which has a Plastic Ono Band vibe and features keyboardist Larry Goldings, drummers Matt Chamberlain and Jay Bellerose, and guitarist Tim Young. Iโm producing some songs for vocalist Sabrina Claudio and continuing to tour with John [Legend]. I also have some projects coming up that I canโt speak about yet that will be especially interesting to bass players. Overall, I feel very fortunate to be involved in so many different musical camps, with each one providing a unique creative outlet.

LISTEN
Light of Love, 2018, Rope-A-Dope; Sabrina Claudio, No Rain, No Flowers, 2018, Atlantic; Kneebody, Anti-Hero, 2017, Motรฉma Music; Meshell Ndegeocello, Ventriloquism, 2018, Naรฏve; De La Soul, And the Anonymous Nobody, 2016, A.O.I.
EQUIP
Bassesย 1964 Fender Precision Bass; 100-year-old ยพ German acoustic bass (with Pirastro Evah Pirazzi strings, Kolstein German-style bow, and Gage Realist pickup); 2019 Fender American Professional Precision Bass (with flatwounds); 2008 Hofner Beatle Bass; 1967 Gibson EB-2; 1968 Gibson EB-0; 1977 Music Man Stingray; 1972 Fender Jazz Bass
Stringsย GHS Boomers, GHS Bass Precision Flats (both .045โ.105)
Ampsย Aguilar AG 500 or DB 751 head, DB 410 & SL 112 cabinets
Effectsย Aguilar Octamizer, Boss OC-2 Octave, Wesco Pedals Grease Juicer, Electro-Harmonix Memory Man, Line 6 DL4, Boss SD-1 Super Overdrive, MXR Bass DI+, Rat Turbo RAT
Otherย Tonecraft 363 Tube Direct Box, BAE DMP 1073 Desktop mic pre
