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Buddha at the Gas Pump

034. Rick Laird

Buddha at the Gas Pump

Rick Archer

Religion & Spirituality, Philosophy, Spirituality, Society & Culture

4.7695 Ratings

🗓️ 19 August 2010

⏱️ 88 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Richard Quentin 'Rick' Laird was a jazz musician, born on 5 February 1941 and died on July 4, 2021. He was a bass player best known for his place in The Mahavishnu Orchestra. Laird was born in Dublin, Ireland. He played music from a young age and enrolled for guitar and piano lessons. He started playing jazz after moving to New Zealand at the age of 16 with his father. He played guitar in jam bands in New Zealand before buying an upright bass. After extensive touring in New Zealand he moved to Sydney, Australia where he played with many top jazz musicians including Don Burrows. He moved to England in 1962 and became house bassist at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club in London, playing with many greats including the guitarist Wes Montgomery and Sonny Stitt. From 1963-4 Laird then at London's Guildhall School of Music and Drama. He was recorded on Sonny Rollins's soundtrack for the movie Alfie and played in The Brian Auger Trinity (July 1963-February 1964) and The Brian Auger Group (Feb-October 1964). His next step was to go to Berklee College of Music in Boston, where he studied arranging, composition, and string bass. He then teamed up with John McLaughlin and The Mahavishnu Orchestra to play electric bass until 1974, when the band broke up. After that, he moved to New York and played with Stan Getz (a tour in 1977) and Chick Corea (a tour the following year). Laird put out one album as a leader, Soft Focus. Today, he is a successful photographer as well as a private bass tutor, and an author of a number of intermediate to advanced-level bass books. In 1962, just before leaving Sydney for London, a friend gave him a copy of J.Krishnamurti’s book “The First and Last Freedom”. This began a long journey as a seeker which included drugs, alcohol, meditation, Scientology, EST, AA, etc. In early 2008, after reading Gangaji’s book “The Diamond in Your Pocket” everything changed, what had always been there became obvious and spontaneously the seeking ended. Interview recorded 8/18/2010 YouTube Video Chapters: 00:00:00 - Introduction and Musical Background 00:03:58 - Discovering Krishnamurti's Book 00:08:29 - Troublemaker in School, Early Experiences with LSD 00:12:22 - Different Perspectives and Seeking 00:16:43 - Joining the Monte Vigne Orchestra in New York 00:21:33 - Life on the Road with Mahavishnu Orchestra 00:25:23 - Samsara in Action 00:28:30 - Personal Demons and Inadequacy 00:31:06 - The Benefits of the e-meter 00:33:33 - The Early Days of Scientology 00:35:10 - Transitioning from Scientology to Photography 00:36:54 - Rediscovering my Passion for Photography 00:39:20 - Discovering a Niche Market 00:41:32 - From Drinking to Spiritual Seeking 00:43:21 - Finding Sobriety and Spiritual Growth 00:45:30 - Seeking Spiritual Teachings, from Osho to Buddhism 00:48:30 - A Profound Time in New York 00:51:55 - The Shock of Realization 00:54:39 - The Immersion in Reality 00:57:00 - The Power of Language and Stories 00:59:48 - Different Approaches to Non-duality 01:02:11 - Qualifying Claims of Awakening 01:05:00 - The Infinite Room for Improvement in Awakening 01:08:05 - Different Strokes for Different Folks 01:10:50 - Something Wonderful is Taking Place 01:13:37 - Evolving Perspective and Less Engagement with Thoughts 01:15:26 - The Journey to Inner Freedom 01:18:09 - The Value of Difficult Experiences 01:21:12 - Ram Dass and the Power of Now 01:24:04 - Humility and Relaxation in Awakening 01:26:59 - Conclusion and Farewell Save

Transcript

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0:00.0

I'm

0:02.0

B.

0:03.0

I'm

0:04.0

Bhop

0:05.0

I'm

0:06.0

.

0:07.0

I'm

0:09.0

.

0:11.0

I'm

0:12.0

. Welcome to Buddha at the gas pump. My name is Rick Archer and my guest this week is Rick Laird.

0:33.6

Rick had a spiritual awakening some while back in connection with Ganges, which we'll talk about.

0:42.3

And I don't know which order to put these things in in terms of their significance,

0:48.3

but he also used to be the bass player for the Mahavishnu Orchestra during its heyday.

0:59.6

And I think that's really cool because I was a musician myself back in those days,

1:04.4

late 60s, early 70s, playing drums in a local rock band.

1:11.9

And so for me, in that regard, this is like a little league guy interviewing one of the New York Yankees or something, because you guys were really great. Did you suffer any hearing loss as a result of

1:20.1

that group?

1:21.1

Um, because you guys were loud. Not really.

1:24.7

You had a reputation for being really loud, you know?

1:27.2

It was very loud, yes.

1:29.3

Definitely loud.

1:30.3

I actually wore ear plugs quite a bit.

...

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