Fully living up to the title of a popular instructional
book he once wrote called “How To Make Your Guitar Talk,”
Nils was the smooth jazz story of 2005, breaking through to audiences
across the country with the energetic title track from his Baja/TSR
debut Pacific Coast Highway. Hitting #1 on the Radio & Records
airplay chart, “Pacific Coast Highway” became the soundtrack
of the summer, staying at #1 for seven weeks on its way to being
named the most played song in the format in the U.S. and Canada
for the year. The guitarist’s follow-up single “Summer
Nights” remained in the Top 5 for six months on the same chart
and became his 2nd #1 hit.
Inspired by this success, Nils enters
2007 Ready To Play once again with an exciting new collection that
keeps his crisp and edgy electric guitar front and center while
expanding his pop, jazz and R&B driven musical palette even
further. Confirming his desire to get back out on the road and perform
at prominent jazz festivals this summer after playing over 30 concerts
last year (including the Lexus Jazz Festival in Newport Beach and
the Catalina Island Jazz Trax Festival), his perfect choice for
the album’s first radio single is the instantly infectious,
funky and percussive “Ready To Play.” Other key tracks
are the optimistic, sensual midtempo number “Just Smile,”
the dreamy and ambient, wordless vocal tinged “Catnap”
(which taps into Nils’ fascination with electronic music),
the old school soul-inflected funk of “Sunrise On Sunset”
and the brash and bouncy, hard grooving “Hi Five.”
“The most important thing
I learned from the success of PCH,” he says, “was that
everyone likes a good groove and you’ve got to make them move.
And of course, there’s no substitute for a good song with
a great melody. That’s what I always strive for. If I come
up with a strong hook and it starts getting to me, I know I’m
on the right track. The most important thing was to make sure Ready
To Play featured my best writing and playing from start to finish.
I love the fact that it incorporates all of my favorite styles.
One of the main reasons I got into jazz was because I loved playing
jazz guitar. My pop sensibilities are there in the songwriting,
and my R&B background is the force behind all the grooves. All
of those elements play a part in making this even a better album
than Pacific Coast Highway.”
In addition to displaying his powerful
and lyrical songwriting and versatility as a guitarist, Nils—who
recorded the basic tracks for the album in his fully equipped home
studio, located in a very secluded area of Los Angeles--wanted Ready
To Play to capture the ensemble energy of his live performances.
The 12-track-collection features all of the members of his current
touring band: bassist Alex Al, keyboardist Leon Bisquera, drummer
Donnell Spencer, Jr., synth player and singer Clydene Jackson and
percussionist Oliver Brown. Jackson and Brown are also part of the
jazz vocal trio Gravity, whose debut album Nils recently produced.
Other featured first-call sidemen
on Ready To Play include bassists Roberto Vally, Dwayne “Smitty”
Smith and Reggie McBride and keyboardist Larry Dunn. Some of the
colorful background vocals on Nils’ sparkling, jazz/gospel-flavored
twist on “My Girl” are provided by Carmen Twillie, who
sang lead vocals on the classic “Circle of Life” in
the film The Lion King.
Born and raised in Munich Germany,
Nils picked up his first guitar as teenager. While his first inclinations
were to follow the lead of his idols Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin,
it wasn’t until he was introduced to funk music that he was
hooked; he spent “endless nights” learning and copying
rhythm players like Nile Rogers, Al McKay and Paul Jackson, Jr.
“But growing up in Germany,” he says, “the chances
to become a full time musician were rather slim, unless you wanted
to play Top 40 or polkas. The schooling options were either a strictly
classical Conservatory or a small private music school.”
Moving to L.A. in the mid-80s, he
began studying composition, arrangement and film composition. While
making inroads into the competitive field of film and television,
he got his first job as a teacher at the legendary Valley Arts Music
Store; no matter how busy he’s become over the years as the
various facets of his career—sideman, film composer and now
solo artist—have taken off, Nils still loves to give back
by teaching young guitarists. While acquiring his current production
skills as a studio engineer in the 90s, he started doing sessions
as a rhythm guitarist for everyone from Rick Braun to The Temptations
and George Benson. Nils contributed as a musician and co-writer
of “Keep Rollin’” on Benson’s 1998 album
Standing Together, and the guitar and vocal legend returned the
favor by playing a duet with Nils on Nils’ 1998 debut CD Blue
Planet; Blue Planet also featured performances by Gerald Albright,
Nathan East and the late vocalist Carl Anderson.
Since producing music for the independent
film “Beyond The Ring” and working as Music Editor on
the Fox sitcom Undeclared, Nils has been Music Editor for the show
Weeds for the past two years and has composed for the Independent
Spirit Awards for the past three; he is currently scoring a documentary
and composing and adding soundscapes for a multimedia DVD project
entitled Transmuteo.
“As much as I’ve loved
creating music in the studio all these years, I realized when I
started to play concerts and festivals last year that I’d
been missing the ying to my yang, so to speak,” he says. “It’s
been a wonderfully validating experience. I’ve enjoyed the
travel and the opportunity to play for so many people who enjoy
what I do. That’s the reason I started making music in the
first place, to communicate, and it’s been so enjoyable to
bring my music to a wider audience. I’m looking forward to
getting out there again, and, like the title of the album says,
I’m seriously Ready To Play.”