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		<title>JOHN MCLAUGHLIN &#8211; Johnny&#8217;s Language of Music</title>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 13 May 2006 10:24:57 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[John McLaughlin, quite simply, is an eloquent. A guitarist whose musical vocabulary is both fluent and succinct; a musician who has proved he can work on equal terms with players from around the world and in any context. The language of music has rarely been expressed better. He is also the guitar hero&#8217;s guitar hero; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3><span class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/johnny_guitar..jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="John McLaughlin" align="right" height="250" width="250" />John McLaughlin, quite simply, is an eloquent. A guitarist whose musical vocabulary is both fluent and succinct; a musician who has proved he can work on equal terms with players from around the world and in any context. The language of music has rarely been expressed better.</span></h3>
<p>He is also the guitar hero&#8217;s guitar hero; admired by Johnny Marr, Jeff Beck and Robert Fripp amongst many others &#8211; there are very few serious guitar players who cannot have been influenced by his virtuoso technique. John is currently recording a new album, with a group of invited musicians, which will incorporate ideas from Asian underground music that originated here in the U.K.</p>
<p>&#8220;Asian music and culture have played a pivotal role in my life, whether from a musical or philosophical/spiritual viewpoint. About 12-15 years ago, Jungle music appeared and coincided with a very strong retrospective movement in Jazz. I was never a fan of retrospective music, and I became intrigued by Jungle only to find out that it had its roots in Jazz-Rock, Reggae and Indian music. Drum &#8216;n Bass is a derivative of Jungle, but for my ears Jungle is more unpredictable and consequently more enjoyable.</p>
<p>&#8220;Asian Dub Foundation, Nitin Sawhney, and Talvin Singh have experimented with either Jungle or Drum &#8216;n Bass, and in addition have introduced a vast array of Indian percussion with it and Indian vocalists. I&#8217;ve even heard Shakti influences in some of their recordings.</p>
<p>&#8220;Some of the recordings they have done are very interesting from the conceptual point of view, and the sometimes very tasteful use of synthesizers.</p>
<p>&#8220;With these artists, there are some really interesting groups such as D Note and Lemon D, who have also made some excellent recordings.</p>
<p>&#8220;Now while the music might not be as &#8216;rich&#8217; as jazz music, for me, some of them are more interesting musically.</p>
<p>&#8220;The other aspect of &#8216;Underground&#8217; is the world we live in, insofar as it is now extremely industrialised. We live surrounded by the sound of industry, and my idea is to incorporate this &#8216;industrial music&#8217; into new forms of music. That&#8217;s the tricky part. The other part is putting together some of the world&#8217;s finest musicians, from East and West, and placing them in a musical situation where their particular musical conventions might not work. In other words it makes them think in different ways, and then putting all of this together.&#8221;</p>
<p>Born in Yorkshire on January the 4th 1942, John McLaughlin grew up in a musical family but was essentially self-taught as a guitarist and took on various influences from blues, flamenco, jazz and classical music. His love of music informed his dedication and has led him to being one of the foremost talents in the world today.</p>
<p>&#8220;On my iPod I have a selection from:- Miles (early &amp; late period), Coltrane (early &amp; late period), Bill Evans, Charles Lloyd, Cannonball Adderly, Joshua Redman, Brad Meldhau, Sly and the Family Stone, D Note, Lemon D and other UK &#8216;underground&#8217; groups, Bluth, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Vinnie Colaiuta, Massive Attack. The list is endless.&#8221;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/johnny_guitar3..jpg" class="imageleft" alt="miles Davies" align="right" height="258" width="255" />He emerged publicly during the British blues revival of the Sixties, featuring in bands such as Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames and the Graham Bond Organisation, before cementing his reputation in avant-garde jazz with the similarly brilliant John Surman and Dave Holland. Drumming legend, Tony Williams picked John to play in his group Lifetime, with Jack Bruce and Larry Young, after hearing a tape of his playing and soon after Miles Davis came a&#8217; calling. Miles was moving into his Jazz-Fusion period and was sweeping up the cream of young musical talent to join him; even though Miles risked alienating Tony Williams, a man he respected and admired, by asking John to join him on the recording of In A Silent Way, his move was vindicated by John&#8217;s beautiful, soulful playing on what has now become a landmark recording. John continued to perform with Williams and Davis but soon formed his own band, The Mahavishnu Orchestra, playing jazz-rock fusion that was by turns muscular and contemplative. John&#8217;s career since then has found him in varied musical environments with a succession of dazzlingly accomplished partners from the screaming jazz-rock of his work with Carlos Santana to the exhilarating indo-jazz of Shakti to the exuberant flamenco work-out of his trio guitar work with Paco DeLucia and Al DiMeola. John gives the impression that, like Miles, he never wants to sit on his laurels.</p>
<p>&#8220;My first band was formed while I was still at school. After that I became a kind of permanent side-man until 1970. I had just played a gig with Miles and we were speaking together in the band room. All of a sudden he said &#8216;John, now&#8217;s the time to form your own band&#8217;. Since he was the most honest man I&#8217;d ever met, and my hero since the age of 15, I had to justify his faith in me, even though at that time I didn&#8217;t feel ready to be a leader. Since then I haven&#8217;t stopped. As far as ‘feeling comfortable&#8217; is concerned, I love all great musicians and great music wherever they may come from so I&#8217;m delighted to play with Spanish, Indian, Western musicians, whatever. However, in a way I am against being &#8216;comfortable&#8217; in music. I need to be provoked in music, and of course I also provoke in my turn. For me, it is somewhat dangerous to be too comfortable in music. Human nature quickly becomes indolent.&#8221;</p>
<p>The list of partners that John has chosen to collaborate with has been a catalogue of the world&#8217;s best and most innovative artists: Billy Cobham, Jerry Goodman, Zakir Hussain, L. Shankar, Hariprasad Chaurasia, Jan Gabarek, Trilok Gurtu, Kai Eckhardt, Joey DeFrancesco as well as the aforementioned Carlos Santana, Paco DeLucia and Al DiMeola. Also, John&#8217;s work as a &#8220;side-man&#8221; has enabled him to work with the last great Miles-influenced generation of jazz legends (or &#8220;Miles&#8217; Boys&#8221;) including Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, Joe Zawinul, Wayne Shorter, Tony Williams, Dave Holland, Keith Jarrett, Jack DeJohnette, and Airto Moreira.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/johnny_guitar1..jpg" class="imageleft" alt="John Mclaughin" height="344" width="470" />&#8220;Music is a communicative art: firstly amongst the musicians performing, and secondly with the audience. One of my main criticisms of the &#8216;Retrospective&#8217; Jazz I spoke about earlier, was the lack of interactionbetween musicians which is to me one of the principal criteria in good Jazz, or good music in general. Jazz and Indian music are essentially collaborative or interactive musics because improvisation plays such an important role &#8211; the most important role. What this means is spontaneity, but there&#8217;s no spontaneity without other humans to be spontaneous with.</p>
<p>&#8220;I will never be able to repay my debt to Miles for his &#8216;influence&#8217;. Since the age of 15 he has been influencing me in the most marvellous way musically. Being able to play and record with him was critical for me in being able to learn his way of playing and leading, recording, whatever. His way was simply masterly. &#8216;My Goals Beyond&#8217; half of which contains several, quite exceptional, acoustic guitar pieces was an exception to what I&#8217;ve just written, but of course, there is always room for the &#8216;solo&#8217; artist to produce great works. Since this was the only &#8216;solo&#8217; recording I ever made in my life, this is indicative of my interest in solo work.&#8221;</p>
<p>The work for which John may be most fondly remembered, certainly on the Indian Sub-Continent, is his collaboration with Indian classical maestros who formed the heart of Shakti. John found himself in conversation with the powerhouse talents of L. Shankar, Zakir Hussain, and T.H. Vinayakram (and later, the sublime Hariprasad Chaurasia) and was completely at ease in this exalted company. The Shakti recordings sum up everything that is good about music; the breadth, subtlety and shades of emotion that are contained within are, quite simply, breathtaking. Shakti are the only Indo-jazz fusion group that has gained widespread acceptance in India and is a testament to the universality of the musical language that exists with great musicians and to John&#8217;s musical honesty that he immersed himself entirely within an idiom that other western musicians find difficult to engage with except on a superficial level.</p>
<p>&#8220;My relationship with Asia in general, and India in particular has been very long and until now, a wonderful adventure. My life, and as a consequence, my work also, would be dramatically different without these influences. Actually unthinkable!</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t agree entirely that western musicians engage superficially with Indian classical music. Yes it&#8217;s true that lots of the new &#8216;World Musicians&#8217; use the sounds of Asia simply for effect and to add colour. This is unfortunate, but then again, there are lots of people who want to hear this kind of music, whether for ambient sound or otherwise. It&#8217;s not at all demanding. Joe Harriott was certainly an exception. To say clearly what drew me to Indian music or to Indian culture for that matter, is unknown to me.</p>
<p>&#8220;However, from a musical point of view, there is a deep connection between jazz and Indian music. They are the only two schools of developed rhythmic improvisation on the planet. The foundations are different since the western way is harmonic, but since the advent of modal music by the late 1950&#8242;s (Miles again), and the outstanding work done subsequently by John Coltrane in modal music, we have even more in common.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/johnny_guitar2..jpg" class="imageright" alt="Remembering Shakti" align="left" height="208" width="250" /><br />
&#8220;My work with Shakti is not to learn how to play Indian music, (though I have studied it seriously for many years), my work with Shakti is simply the desire to play with these absolutely fantastic musicians. I am first and foremost a western musician, but I have benefited in countless ways from my association with these musicians.&#8221;</p>
<p>John&#8217;s relationship with Eastern philosophy began in the early 70&#8242;s, when he became a disciple of Sri Chinmoy Kumar Ghosh (Sri Chinmoy gave John the name Mahavishnu), and John&#8217;s spirituality can be felt quite clearly in his work. Music has always been able to express emotion with more fecundity and nuance than the spoken word will ever be able to bear or, to put it another way, a jazz musician&#8217;s job will always be to make a tune sound not like itself but himself. Like Miles, Coltrane, Rollins, Bill Evans and all the other greats too numerous to mention, John expresses a profound emotional resonance and beauty through the notes he plays that is served by his astounding technique rather than enslaved by it; he has never reduced himself to the empty verbosity that technical expertise can engender in less articulate musical linguists.</p>
<p>&#8220;We may think that music operates only on the emotional, spiritual and aesthetic levels, but politics and the intellect are there all the time. The reverse is also true insofar as the world&#8217;s politicians are concerned only with the economic and political ramifications of their actions. As a result, they forget, or are unconscious, of the corrosive influence they have generally on the hearts and minds of people by ignoring these essential aspects of human existence.&#8221;</p>
<p>John McLaughlin has been at the peak of his creative powers for over 30 years and a generation of guitarists are beholden to him in demonstrating the splendour that lies at the heart of the instrument and an indefatigable spirit that keeps him moving forward.</p>
<p>&#8220;There is so much left to do, and I really don&#8217;t know what keeps me going creatively. Passion???&#8221;</p>
<p>Jazz guitar legend John McLaughlin has recently released an educational box-set about improvisation called This is the Way I Do It.</p>

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		<title>SPICE FESTIVAL 2005 &#8211; Music, Painting, Poetry &amp; Drama</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 09 May 2006 12:28:45 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[The opening night sees an evening of classical opera extracts performed, including Carmen, Nessun Dorma, The Barber of Seville, The Marriage of Figaro and many others at The Hackney Empire. East London Metropolitan Opera continues to bring together top professional musicians with members of the local community and children from Hackney schools accompanied by a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/editorial/spice_festival_2005_hilighted.jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="Spice Festival 2005 Hilighted Image" align="left" />The opening night sees an evening of classical opera extracts performed, including Carmen, Nessun Dorma, The Barber of Seville, The Marriage of Figaro and many others at The Hackney Empire.</h3>
<p>East London Metropolitan Opera continues to bring together top professional musicians with members of the local community and children from Hackney schools accompanied by a full orchestra.</p>
<p>For those with more contemporary, independent tastes, a hip triple bill on the 13th July with Billy Childish and the Buff Medways, Ed Harcourt and Paul The Girl, is not to be missed. A cult figure in America, Europe and Japan, Billy Childish is arguably the most prolific painter, poet and songwriter of his generation. In a twenty-year period he has published 30 collections of his poetry, recorded over 90 full-length independent LP&#8217;s and produced over 2000 paintings. High praise comes from Alternative Press, USA, &#8220;Of all the &#8217;70s punk survivors Childish is one of the select few who didn&#8217;t sell out, or end up sucking.&#8221; Whilst Time Out describes Billy as &#8220;terse, gutsy and powerfully humane.&#8221; Ed Harcourt, reviewed by the Observer Music Monthly, has been praised also, &#8220;the blissful sound of a besotted drunk in love&#8230;Harcourt retains a composer&#8217;s eye for detail which repays whatever attention you care to give it.&#8221; British artist, Paul The Girl is an admired and accomplished musician; The Guardian review wrote,&#8221;&#8230;on her own tiny label, Paul is making the most original music of any British artist, of either gender.&#8221; Spice festival goers will be spoilt for choice with the line-up of drama performances. From Cardboard Citizens; an clectic mix of theatre, circus and music developed and devised by This Way Up, the UK&#8217;s largest arts performance programme for homeless people, to Rajni Shah Theatres&#8217; story of Queen Elizabeth I, a traditional Indian bride and according to the synopsis, &#8220;&#8230;the relationships we have to the land we live on, and the theatres we all invent.&#8221;</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s not forget the little people for whom the Movingstage Marionette Company bring double bill, Captain Grimy and The Three Little Pigs, a charming puppet show re-telling these familiar, timeless tales. Also presented by Spice Festival is Richard Pinner, Gold Star BAFTA award winner who will be performing, &#8220;excellent close-up magic,&#8221; as described by The Stage.</p>
<p>The diverse drama available includes internationally renowned theatre company Rotozaza presenting their unique and innovative acts without any rehearsal. Actors perform by following live instructions. ROMCOM or The Distance Love Can Be Maintained Between Any Two Fixed Points, by Glen Neath is performed by two unprepared actors with headphones telling them what to say and do. The Glasgow Herald likens it to,&#8221;&#8230;one of Godards movies&#8230;as well as comedy it&#8217;s a complex study of compatibility and communication.&#8221;</p>
<h4>2005 Events</h4>
<p><strong>Opera Gala Evening:</strong><br />
Hackney Empire:<br />
Tuesday 12th July: 8pm, Tickets: £8, concessions £2.50</p>
<p><strong>Billy Childish and The Buff Medways, Ed Harcourt, Paul The Girl:</strong><br />
Hackney Empire:<br />
13 July: Doors 8.15pm Tickets: £10, conc. £7.50</p>
<p><strong>Cardboard Citizens:</strong><br />
Acorn Theatre:<br />
Thursday 21st July: 7.30pm</p>
<p><strong>Rotozaza: </strong><br />
Hackney Empire:<br />
17th July: 3pm: Tickets: £12/£8</p>
<p>Rajni Shah Theatre:<br />
Acorn Theatre: Sunday 24th July: 4pm &amp; 7.30pm: Tickets:£10/ £7</p>
<p><strong>Movingstage Marionette Company:</strong><br />
Acorn Theatre:<br />
16th July. 11am &amp; 2pm: Tickets:£6, children £4.50.</p>
<p><strong>Richard Pinner:</strong><br />
Bullion Theatre:<br />
Sunday 24th July: 2.30pm: Tickets: £6 children, £4.50.</p>

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		<title>RAHMANIAN RHAPSODY &#8211; Letting his Work do the Talking</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 09 May 2006 09:43:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[A. R. Rahman, having scored for over 75 movies and sold over 150 million albums, is almost worshipped as a god in some parts of India. However, despite his huge success he is ever the reluctant celebrity, preferring to let his work do the talking. Rahman will bring his Live, 3D Concert to Wembley Arena [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/rahmanian_phapsody.jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="rahmanian phapsody" height="279" width="475" />A. R. Rahman, having scored for over 75 movies and sold over 150 million albums, is almost worshipped as a god in some parts of India. However, despite his huge success he is ever the reluctant celebrity, preferring to let his work do the talking. Rahman will bring his Live, 3D Concert to Wembley Arena Pavilion on 30th July 2005.</h3>
<p>If I told you of an artist whose albums have outsold Elvis, The Beatles and all of the Jackson clan added together, I wonder how you might respond?</p>
<p>Well, the artist in question is A. R. Rahman, dubbed &#8220;the Mozart of Madras&#8221;, whose tunes have mesmerised music lovers the world over. Having first made his name with numerous hit Bollywood soundtracks, he has since composed the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical Bombay Dreams. His next musical offering, the stage adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien&#8217;s Lord Of The Rings trilogy, will open in Toronto later this year and, at a cool £10 million, it is the most expensive musical ever.</p>
<p>The good news for London though, is that, in July &#8217;05, A.R. is embarking on his first live UK tour. Expect magical musical soundscapes, stunning visuals and, for the first time in concert history, experience it all in 3D. The publicity release explains it like this: &#8220;&#8230;the audience will receive 3D glasses to transport them into a magical galaxy, where they will be able to ‘virtually&#8217; reach out to their favourite stars&#8230;&#8221; Apart from A.R., the concert will feature the very best classically trained, Bollywood playback singers, all of whom are popular artists in their own right. These include Shankar Mahadevan, Hariharan and Sadhna Sargam, to name but a few.</p>
<p>However, life has not always been so kind and, A.R.&#8217;s own meteoric rise to fame is itself the stuff of &#8220;Bombay Dreams&#8221;. Born in Chennai, India, A.R.&#8217;s earliest memories are of long periods spent sitting by his father&#8217;s hospital bedside &#8211; something he assumed that all children did. Following his father&#8217;s untimely death, A.R., aged just nine, felt the mantle of responsibility for his family pass onto his young shoulders. Aged eleven, he left home to become a touring musician, working with many eminent names, including the table maestro, Zakir Hussein. In time, the young Rahman earned a scholarship at Oxford University&#8217;s Trinity College, where he studied Western Classical Music. On returning to India he set up his studio, Panchathan Record Inn (now one of India&#8217;s most technologically advanced recording studios, housing one of the biggest and most comprehensive sonic libraries).</p>
<p>His big break, however, came in the form of maverick film director, Mani Ratnam, who offered A.R., then 26, the role of Music Director on his 1992 film Roja. The gamble was worth it, as the Roja soundtrack revolutionised the sound of Indian film music and went on to win every music award imaginable, including Best Music Director for A.R. Rahman, at the National Film Awards.<br />
Since Roja, A.R. has provided the scores for most of Bollywood&#8217;s biggest blockbusters, including the Oscar-nominated Lagaan. His skills are in demand the world over and in 2003 he provided the score for the Chinese martial arts film Warriors of Heaven and Earth.</p>

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		<title>NICOLA BENEDETTI &#8211; Young Musician 2004</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 09 May 2006 05:12:39 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[17 year old Nicola Benedetti, who became the first Scot to win the BBC Young Musician of 2004, released her debut album recently on one of the most prestigious classical labels in the music industry, Deutsche Grammophon (a subsidiary of Universal Music Group). The album is regarded as one of the most anticipated recordings of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 class="post_head"><img src="http://www.whitemercury.com/images/articles/music/nicola_benedetti.jpg" class="imageleft_top" alt="Nicola Benedetti photo" align="left" />17 year old Nicola Benedetti, who became the first Scot to win the BBC Young Musician of 2004, released her debut album recently on one of the most prestigious classical labels in the music industry, Deutsche Grammophon (a subsidiary of Universal Music Group).</h3>
<p>The album is regarded as one of the most anticipated recordings of recent times, which Nicola recorded with the London Symphony Orchestra. The recording was conducted by 29 year old Daniel Harding, who was recently appointed Principal Guest conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra, and Music Director of the Mahler Chamber Orchestra.</p>
<p>It has been a momentous year for the 17 year old violinist, since her triumph in the BBC Young Musician competition, debuting with some of the world&#8217;s most respected orchestras, playing for HM the Queen at the opening of the Scottish Parliament and then signing a six album deal with Universal Music.</p>
<p>The album features a selection of Concerti and violin repertoire, including the sophisticated Szymanowski Concerto No 1, which Nicola brought to the public&#8217;s attention last year. The recording will also feature a new Sir John Tavener work, entitled ‘Fragment for the Virgin&#8217; that was especially written for Nicola. The album also features a special backing track of the Mèditation from Thais by Massenet which will give Nicola&#8217;s listeners the opportunity to play accompanied by the London Symphony Orchestra.</p>
<p>Nicola is playing at the Barbican<br />
30 July at 7.30pm<br />
Box office 0845 120 7500</p>

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