July 15, Thursday Stiles opens solo acoustic for Suzy Bogguss at the classic Mystic Theater in Petaluma!
July 16, Friday Stiles opens solo acoustic for Keb' Mo' at the The Uptown in Napa
September 3, Friday Stiles headlines Freight and Salvage in Berkeley
JL Stiles on popwreckoning.com for cover of Animal Collective's No More Runnin.
Math and Blues
JL
Stiles is a unique animal who for the first time is merging two totally different fields of truth-seeking: Ragtime blues and
higher mathematics. Both of these disparate strands filtered through a
lifetime on the run, searching for a universal truth from psychedelic
Brazilian forests to US college campuses and further into his own unique
vision. JL Stiles has a mind that sees music in a similar way to how J.S. Bach
saw music. However, Bach never played the blues.
Fact
# 1: JL Stiles is the John Nash of
music.
JL
Stiles was born with hardwiring most only dream about, a brain that could look
at the most basic picture and convert it to it's numerical basics. All through
school in rural Connecticut it was clear where he was going to be, working at
the cutting edge of mathematics, as he took to the abstract shapes and numbers
as a duck would take to proverbial water, until, that is, a band wearing grease
paint, Cuban heels, questionable body hair and several pints of fake blood
rolled into JL's particular little town: Kiss. A 12 year old JL was hooked by
the devils fishing rod that was rock and/or roll and when his brother brought
home a terrible guitar from college and left it when he went back, JL had the
tools to begin his assault on the world.
He began
fashioning songs using the simple chunking and melody of Jimmy Reed and sub-Rush lyrics about the challenging political
world as seen by a 13-year old kid.
Quick introductions to the lyrics of Bob Dylan, the power and message of
The Who and the space-age ass funk of Parliament, shaped his musical balloon in
new ways and JL, taking his John Nash brain and applying it to the one piece of
equipment he had at his disposal, a useless dime store guitar, realized pretty
quickly that he better maximize the algorithmic potential of the pathetic
instrument by learning to pick each and every string independently and
simultaneously with the dexterity of a perfect machine and the re-incarnated
soul of a genius blind bluesman who strangely disappeared in the early
1930's. That blind genius would be
the little known 20's & 30's virtuoso, Blind Blake, who JL heard by
accident, floating in from the radio of his father while studying late one
night on a mathematical problem involving fourier transformations. He rushed to the transistor just
quickly enough to catch the name and his future was born. (He also finished the
problem that night in case you wondered).
Fact #2: JL Stiles is the freakiest white fingerpicking guitarist in this great
country right now.
Stiles carried on in his
twin disciplines, learning Banach spaces and homology at college by day and wearing out his Blind
Blake records at night, studying under the tutelage of the great Laszlo Fuchs,
pioneer of abelian group theory, whilst writing hundreds of songs, each one
getting gradually better than the last. Both strands were equal to him as he
searched for the big picture in whatever way he could.
But
something began to happen; as the songs got better and began to get attention,
especially from the ladies, and JL realized that, Fuchs aside, a lot of
academicians can be big dicks with fragile egos, he began to drift toward the
more standard methods of soul searching for a young guy in late 20th century
America: LSD, pot and anything other.
Hanging
out in the blazing heat studying with Chinese Mathematicians, drifting into
oblivion on opium and psychedelics, JL knew the music was more than a sideshow
to a brilliant career in the outer reaches of theoretical math. It was, in fact, his calling, and one
where he could teach the beauty of what is so perfect about math and blues, the
abstract.
Imagine a
wild-eyed, half-crazed math prodigy with the most dexterous fingers on earth,
channeling the spirit of a mysterious blind blues genius who unexplainably
vanished, and you are approaching where JL found himself at this juncture in
his life.
Fact
#3: The search for
the fundamentals is the same in music as it is in math: The fingerpicking
guitar opens up infinite possibilities
But what
would he do with this burden? He wasn't just a singer-songwriter with a cute
heartbreak song and a big white smile; he was the walking soul of mathematical
fundamental principles driven into the ground by the spirit of the blues. Where
could a young boy like this go? To the home of voodoo, New Orleans.
In an out
of the coffee houses and clubs of New Orleans and Mississippi, JL spooked the
audiences up and down and left and right, he cut a solo set of songs, just him
and a guitar, that rang as clear and true as Blind Blake had 80 years earlier
and he knew he had to get out there and spread the theory around.
He
traveled to Mexico and Brazil, Amsterdam and Scandinavia, he lived in the woods
for weeks at a time, writing new songs and trying to define a unifying
mathematical and musical theory in homological algebra, he went to the brink
and stared at the abyss and then he came back with songs in hand to deliver the
message back to us dear souls who hadn't made the journey.
He found
a spiritual home in san Francisco and immediately picked up on the musical
community there. He played with Etta James in front of 6,000 in front of the
courthouse in Riverside, he opened for the great Keb Mo, Leon Redbone, JJ Cale,
John Hammond, he knew he was in the right place at the right time, and so, here
he is.
Fact
#4: What JL Stiles
is writing now is the best he's ever written and is closer to the fundamental
truth of bringing the past together with the future into a musical singularity
than he's ever gotten.
Fact
#5: JL Stiles
believes he has come up with the algorithm for the pure heart of music.
JL Stiles
is a unique animal (as we have stated before), he believes that the soul of
1920's blues, c.400 BC Greek mathematicians and 21st century artists like
Animal Collective (get ready for JL's incendiary cover of AC's "No More
Runnin") can all be unified into his singular vision. Can he do it? With
his head for numbers, I certainly wouldn't bet against him.











