βChoosing happy is a hell of a processβ: Thundercat on funk, lost friends and being fired by Snoop Dogg (possibly)
The genre-hopping bass virtuoso has backed Ariana Grande and Herbie Hancock, appeared in Star Wars and become a dedicated boxer. Ahead of his fifth album, Stephen Bruner explains his polymath mindset
It is an overcast Thursday afternoon at the end of January, and Thundercat is telling me about the time he tried to interest Snoop Dogg in the mid-70s oeuvre of Frank Zappa. He wasnβt Thundercat then, he explains. He was still Stephen Bruner, bass player for hire, who had fetched up in what he calls a βstupid-as-hell, Rick James-level bandβ backing the venerable rapper, packed with Los Angeles jazz luminaries who would later contribute to Kendrick Lamarβs To Pimp a Butterfly: Kamasi Washington, Josef Leimberg, Terrace Martin. Alas, their jazz chops were sometimes deemed surplus to requirements. At one point, while Bruner was playing an expansive bass solo on stage, Snoop sidled up to him and flatly announced: βAinβt nobody told you to play all that.β
So perhaps it was in the spirit of horizon-broadening that Bruner took it upon himself to play Snoop the song St Alfonzoβs Pancake Breakfast, a knotty, marimba-heavy slice of jazz-rock from Zappaβs 1974 album Apostrophe, which switches time signatures three times in less than two minutes, and features lyrics about a man stealing margarine and urinating on a bingo card. βYeah, I hit him with the rollercoaster,β Bruner chuckles. βHe was smoking, and he almost ate his blunt, saying: βWhat the hell is going on?β I said: βMy sentiments exactly.β I think I did a cartwheel after that and left the band: I played Snoop Dogg St Alfonzoβs Breakfast, my job is done here, I have no more work to do.β He thinks for a moment. βOr maybe I got fired: βGet out of here dude, youβre too weird.β I forget. It was a great moment.β
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Β© Photograph: Ollie Tikare/The Guardian

Β© Photograph: Ollie Tikare/The Guardian

Β© Photograph: Ollie Tikare/The Guardian