• Только для взрослых
  • Военные игры
  • Крутые тачки
  • NO
    добавил видео
    01.03.2015
    • Пожаловаться
    Видео доступна только в полной версии Мой Мир.
    Полная версия
    John McLaughlin | A Spiritual Quest in Music
    John was introduced to the jazz world by playing with Miles Davis on In A Silent Way and Bitches Brew, he then went on to form two very influential fusion bands in the 70s, electric-fusion-jazz band Mahavishnu Orchestra and world-fusion acoustic band Shakit, and I’m just mentioning a hand full of John enoumous discography.John has recorded over 80 albums in his career and though they cover many different styles of jazz they are all infused and grounded by a spirituality that John has been cultivating since his early 20’s.This is a rare interview for John to discuss his spiritual side rather than the usual interview that finds him talking jazz and the guitar, and I tell you it’s a great one.John's Bio:Born in Yorkshire, England on January 4, 1942, the guitarist is well known for his eclectic taste in music. John was a child when he first fell in love with jazz and the blues, and he was just 11 years old when he began studying and playing the guitar. The 1960s found him playing jazz, rock, and blues in his native England, where he worked with Alexis Korner and Ginger Baker, among others, before moving to New York at the end of the decade.John had a busy year in 1969 he recorded his debut album, Extrapolation, and started working with two seminal voices in early fusion: Tony Williams (who employed McLaughlin and organist Larry Young in his trailblazing group Lifetime) and Miles Davis. Never afraid to forge ahead, Davis had done a lot to popularize cool jazz and modal post-bop in the past and he continued to break new ground when he introduced fusion on his 1969 sessions In A Silent Way and Bitches Brew, both of which feature McLaughlin’s playing. The guitarist was also featured on 1970′s A Tribute To Jack Johnson, another Davis gem of the time.Like bebop in the 1940s and modal jazz in the early 1960s, fusion was controversial. Jazz purists felt that rock and funk rhythms had no place in jazz, but thankfully, John disagreed and let his musical instincts guide him. After participating in Davis’ and Williams’ groundbreaking fusion combos, John founded an influential group of his own in 1971: The Mahavishnu Orchestra, which boasted such greats as drummer Billy Cobham and keyboardist Jan Hammer. By the time Mahavishnu broke up in 1975, it had recorded several classic albums for Columbia (including Birds of Fire, Between Nothingness and Eternity, and Visions of the Emerald Beyond) and gone down in history as one of the 1970′s most influential fusion outfits.In 1975, John did the unexpected by founding Shakti, an acoustic group that employed traditional Indian musicians (including tabla player Zakir Hussain and violinist L. Shankar, Ravi Shankar’s nephew) and underscored the guitarist’s interest in India’s music, culture, and religion. Shakti reminded listeners that John was as appealing on the acoustic guitar as he was on its electric counterpart, and proved that he wasn’t about to confine himself to playing any one style of music exclusively. Indeed, McLaughlin has been heard in a variety of musical settings from an acoustic guitar summit with Al DiMeola and Paco de Lucia, to a classical album with the London Symphony Orchestra, and his current work with his band The 4th Dimension which sees his return to the electrified fusion John first innovated more than 40 years ago.John’s musical influences carry over to many of the musical elite, with Jeff Beck declaring him in 2010 to be “the best guitarist alive.” In 2003, McLaughlin was ranked 49th in Rolling Stone magazine list of the 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time. Chick Corea remarked to DownBeat Magazine that “…what John McLaughlin did with the electric guitar set the world on its ear. No one ever heard an electric guitar played like that before, and it certainly inspired me. John’s band, more than my experience with Miles, led me to want to turn the volume up and write music that was more dramatic and made your hair stand on end.” Indian Tabla maestro Zakir Hussain refers to John McLaughlin as being “one of the greatest and most important musicians of our times”.

      Комментарии