A
Minute With: Nile Rodgers on guitars, music and
charity
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[December 16, 2021]
By Mindy Burrows
LONDON (Reuters) -
After a career spanning six decades, veteran
guitarist, composer and producer Nile Rodgers is
focused on his charity work as much as music
these days. |
The Grammy Award winner who
rose to fame in the 1970s with band Chic and hit
song "Le Freak", has collaborated with some of
the biggest stars in music including David Bowie
and Madonna and been an influential guitarist,
but is now selling some prized possessions for
charity.
On Thursday, a range of his guitars and other
belongings are being auctioned, with proceeds
going to his We Are Family Foundation.
Rodgers, who will also host an online Christmas
concert for music therapy charity Nordoff
Robbins on Sunday, spoke about his work,
foundation and the auction in an interview with
Reuters.
Below are excerpts edited for length and
clarity.
Q: Can you talk about the guitars being
auctioned?
Rodgers: "97% of the records that I've produced,
I also play on and I play one guitar in
particular but I also use the right tool for the
right job.
"I don't have such an accurate memory of every
song that I've played on because there have been
so many ... thousands ... and most of these
guitars I've acquired along the path of my
production or recording arc."
Q: Between producing, writing, performing,
running the foundation and seeing your family,
how do you fit it all in?
Rodgers: "I work 24-7, I love to work. I call
myself a worker bee."
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Q: What is the foundation's
mission?
Rodgers: "We Are Family Foundation (is) the
turbocharger in my engine because at this point
in my life, I can't be the same type of on the
ground activist that I was when I was younger...
What I can do now with We Are Family Foundation
... is to support financially and sometimes
emotionally, but I can support those youths that
are on the ground, doing work in areas that
really can help this planet.
"As a result of the pandemic, we thought we'd be
less effective. We wound up being more effective
because now we can deal with people in their
actual surroundings and we can couple them with
mentors and financial support ... to help them
move their projects along with people that are
right there locally."
Q: Are there any artists that you haven't worked
with yet but would like to?
Rodgers: "There are so many new artists and even
some classic artists that they just titillate
me. I love what they do and I want to be in
their world."
(Reporting by Mindy Burrows; Writing by
Marie-Louise Gumuchian; Editing by Susan Fenton)
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