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John McLaughlin

 
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John McLaughlin


Guitarist

Musician magazine, in a 1993 survey of "The 100 Great Guitarists of the 20th Century," referred to John McLaughlin as "the mystic credited with inventing real fusion." The guitarist himself—whose work has embraced jazz, rock, blues, Indian music, and flamenco, among other styles—has long disdained the label. "I’m not trying to make any kind of fusion—it just happens that way," he protested to Guitar Player. Yet McLaughlin’s fearless hybridization of musical genres blazed a trail for other musicians and demonstrated a set of possibilities that spawned the eclectic jazz-rock movement that came to be known as "fusion."

McLaughlin has always been far too restless to dwell in any musical territory for long. From his early work with the Graham Bond Organization to his innovative excursions with jazz legend Miles Davis to his increasingly ambitious endeavors with the Mahavishnu Orchestra, Shakti, and his own trio as well as countless brief collaborations, McLaughlin has pursued his own musical development with an openly spiritual outlook. "My work in music is a work of the spirit," he proclaimed in a Down Beat interview. "It’s a development of my spirit, and the development of myself as a human being."

That development began in Yorkshire, England, where he was born in 1942. Raised to a background of classical music, he studied the violin—as his mother had—as well as piano, but became interested in the guitar early in his adolescence. This was due in part to the influence of one of his brothers but largely to that of American blues, European jazz, and flamenco. Recordings by blues artists like Muddy Waters, Leadbelly, and Big Bill Broonzy, as well as jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt, were particularly galvanizing for the young musician. "When I first discovered guitar at age 11, it was a five-dollar acoustic nylon-string guitar," McLaughlin recalled in a Guitar Player interview. "I didn’t know what acoustic or electric guitars were." He added that "The very first time I ever played the guitar I fell in love with it. I loved the sound, I loved the feeling."

As he got a bit older, he felt an increased desire to emulate the great jazz guitarists. Soon Reinhardt "was my hero," he told Down Beat. "Later I heard Tal Farlow and found what I consider a genius. Tal was a great source of inspiration for me." The great artists of bebop and post-bop jazz, too, made an indelible imprint on McLaughlin: Charles Mingus, Art Blakey, Miles Davis, and John Coltrane. The latter’s spiritual odyssey A Love Supreme took him a long time to understand, he recalled, but years later he would translate the piece into a fiery guitar duet with Carlos Santana. It was drummer Tony Williams, however, whom he wanted to play with most of all.

He began playing professionally in London in the early 1960s, hooking up with the Graham Bond Organization, a seminal outfit that included bassist Jack Bruce and drummer Ginger Baker, later the rhythm section of the influential psychedelic-blues trio Cream. McLaughlin also worked with Brian Auger’s band Trinity and with Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames. He was still in England when he became interested in Eastern religion and music; the sitar master Ravi Shankar made a particularly strong impression on him. It was the beginning of a very long artistic and spiritual quest.

In the meantime, however, he was still searching for his niche as a musician. Working as a guitar teacher, he had a number of promising pupils, including future Yardbird and Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page. He shared a London apartment with bassist Dave Holland, and the two of them played experimentally with drummer Jack DeJohnette, who taped the session. When Holland hooked up with Miles Davis, he described his former roommate to Davis’s drummer—Tony Williams—as a fantastic player. DeJohnette played the tape for Williams on a separate occasion; as a result, Williams invited McLaughlin to join his new band Lifetime.

It was early 1969 when the guitarist came to America to play in one idol’s band; within two days he had met Miles Davis and found himself in the studio working on Davis’s album Ina Silent Way. He worked on a number of other albums with the legendary trumpeter-composer-bandleader, including A Tribute to Jack Johnson, Live-Evil, Big Fun, and the groundbreaking Bitches Brew, which saw Davis inaugurating the jazz-rock era almost singlehandedly. Davis titled one track "John McLaughlin"; the guitarist later told Down Beat this "was the biggest surprise to me. I mean, I saw it on the record. I was shocked, really shocked." He would return the compliment by placing a piece called "Miles Davis" on an album some ten years later. Davis also brought McLaughlin together with rock guitar trailblazer Jimi Hendrix for a jam session.

In a Guitar Player interview McLaughlin discussed Davis’s profound influence upon him: "With Miles, for me, it was his simplicity, his directness, the authority of his music from a rhythmic, harmonic, and melodic point of view. His conceptualizations, from my point of view, were revolutionary. Everything I could see in Miles touched me."

Though Davis—who died in 1992—at times left composing and arranging to the many talented musicians in his fold, he displayed "the capacity and the ability to draw out of people things that even surprise the musicians themselves." McLaughlin found liberation in Davis’s general, even cryptic directions: "He’s amazing to work with, because he’d never say, ‘I don’t really want that’; he’d just say, ‘play long’or ‘play short’. Once he told me, ‘Play like you don’t know how to play guitar.’ That’s Miles, and you just go along with it."

Broke Musical Barriers With Mahavishnu
Though the guitarist had to refuse Davis’s invitation to join his band because of his investment in Lifetime—which briefly featured Bruce on bass—he did later heed his recommendation to put his own band together. McLaughlin put out his first solo release, Extrapolation, in 1969. More solo efforts—notably 1971’s My Goals Beyond— followed, but soon McLaughlin was driven to assemble a more ambitious group.

Having become a disciple of the guru Sri Chinmoy, he’d also become interested in fusing Eastern and Western musics. Working with keyboardist Jan Hammer, violinist Jerry Goodman, bassist Rick Laird, tabla player Alia Rakha and drummer Billy Cobham, he formed the Mahavishnu Orchestra. The band would do much to shape the fusion of the ensuing decade; McLaughlin’s playing covered a huge stylistic territory. Indeed, wrote jazz scholar Joachim Berendt, "One is almost tempted to say that he plays all guitars simultaneously."

McLaughlin himself would adopt the name Mahavishnu; in 1973 he recorded an album with Santana and in the ensuing years made several more albums with the Orchestra, though with frequent personnel changes. According to Down Beat’s Lee Jeske, the group "reached a plateau for electric interplay and depth of feeling that has, to these ears, never been equaled."

Differences within the group caused friction, however, though McLaughlin revived Mahavishnu with different players some years later. "If you consider electric fusion music to be part of the jazz mainstream—not everyone does—then McLaughlin may be the most influential jazz figure since Coltrane," proclaimed Rolling Stone in 1976. "As far as guitar is concerned," Berendt opined around the same period, "McLaughlin certainly is the towering figure of this development."

Artistic Restlessness
By the mid-1970s he had grown restless again, however, and formed the more acoustically oriented Shakti, with violinist L. Shankar, tablaist Zakir Hussain, and two other Indian musicians. This project became his main focus until 1977, when, as he told Guitar Player, "I wanted to get back into some jazz and electric guitar." The solo albums Johnny McLaughlin, Electric Guitarist and Electric Dreams, with the One Truth Band, soon ranked among his most highly regarded works.

During the 1980s McLaughlin returned to the acoustic guitar. This led to a falling out with his record label Columbia and a move to Warner Brothers, which seemed to have more respect for his new direction. "One of the fundamental differences is that, with the acoustic guitar, the notes die out very quickly," he reflected in a colloquy with Jeske of Down Beat. "This is a more tragic sound, it’s more poignant in a beautiful sense. So, that in itself compels the player to modify, in some far-reaching ways, what he’ll play." McLaughlin added, "It reminds me of music I heard before I was born in this life," in a 1994 Guitar Player interview with Matt Resnicoff.

Struck by the impressive work of Spanish guitarist Paco De Lucia, McLaughlin sought him out; the two played some concerts with Larry Coryell, and performed and recorded with Al Di Meola. 1987 saw the release of an album by a new Mahavishnu Orchestra featuring McLaughlin’s luthier Abraham Wechter on acoustic guitar. McLaughlin also wrote a concerto for guitar and orchestra and formed a trio with percussionist Trilok Gurtu and a changing roster of bassists including Kai Eckhardt and French sensation Dominique Di Piazza. In 1990 McLaughlin’s career was endangered by a freak accident: a television set moving on a mounting track sheared off the tip of his left index finger. Fortunately the finger was reassembled in surgery, but the guitarist couldn’t play for two months and reported to Musician that he was "having nightmares, waking up in the middle of the night sweating." Soon, however, he was performing again. He released Que Alegria in 1992; recorded live in the studio, the album won a plaudit from Down Beat. "At 50, the inner fire is still burning," declared reviewer Bill Milkowski. "He’s just cooking on a lower flame."

The following year saw the appearance of his tribute to jazz pianist Bill Evans called Time Remembered in 1993. The Evans tribute involved a European guitar quartet; "I felt that if I transcribed it for a number of guitars, I could get this essential character, translated from the paino and the way he played, to the acoustic guitars," he noted in a Down Beat profile. Reviews mere mixed; some critics, like Howard Mandel of Pulse!, complained that McLaughlin "has stifled the momentum" of Evans’s best work and made an album that "seems too still for jazz." Entertainment Weekly’s David Hajdu, however, proclaimed "this guitar guru has finally found the God of the Details."

The guitarist didn’t wait around for his review; he was already discussing forming an organ jazz trio and returning to the electric. He’d long since given up gurus and followed a more personal path, but as Guitar Player’s James Rotondi observed, "McLaughlin’s music continues to reflect his spirituality, passion for life, and great discipline."

Success at the critical or commercial level has always mattered less to the guitarist than the heroic process of creativity. "I’m an eternal learner," he insisted in a Down Beat profile. "I don’t think I’ll ever stop learning; it’s a personal idiosyncrasy. I’m looking all the time for a way through music—searching, in a sense, for those different ways—harmonically, melodically, and rhythmically. For me the big joy of life is to play—that’s the big joy—just to play music."

Selected discography

Solo albums
Extrapolation, Douglas Records, 1969.Devotion, Douglas Records, 1971.
My Goals Beyond, Polydor, 1971.Johnny McLaughlin, Electric Guitarist, Columbia, 1978.The Best of John McLaughlin, Columbia, 1980.Belo Horizonte, Warner Bros., 1981.Music Spoken Here, Warner Bros., 1982.Live at the Royal Festival Hall, JMT, 1989.Mediterranean Concerto, Columbia, 1990.Que Alegria, Verve, 1992.Time Remembered: John McLaughlin Plays Bill Evans, Verve, 1993Where Fortune Smiles, Pye Records.

With Tony Williams and Lifetime; on Polydor
Emergency!, 1969.
Turn It Over.
Lifetime.

With Miles Davis
In a Silent Way, 1969.
Bitches Brew (includes "John McLaughlin"), 1969.
A Tribute to Jack Johnson, 1970.
Live-Evil, 1971.
Big Fun, 1974.
Get Up With It, 1974.
Aura, 1984
You’re Under Arrest, 1985.

With Devadip, Carlos Santana
Love, Devotion, Surrender (includes "A Love Supreme"), Columbia, 1973.

With the Mahavishnu Orchestra
The Inner Mounting Flame, Columbia, 1972.
Birds of Fire, Columbia, 1973.
Between Nothingness and Eternity, Columbia, 1973.
Apocalypse, Columbia, 1974.
Visions of the Emerald Beyond, Columbia, 1975.
Inner Worlds, Columbia, 1976.
Mahavishnu, Warner Bros., 1984.
Adventures in Radioland, Verve, 1987.

With Shakti; on Columbia
Shakti With John McLaughlin, 1976.
A Handful of Beauty, 1977.
Natural Elements, 1977.

With the One Truth Band
Electric Dreams (includes "Miles Davis"), Columbia, 1979.

With Paco De Lucia and Al Di Meóla; on Columbia
Friday Night in San Francisco, 1981.
Passion, Grace & Fire, 1983.

Contributor
Carla Bley, Escalator Over the Hill, JCOA/ECM, 1971.
Graham Bond, Solid Bond, Warner Bros.
Jack Bruce, Things We Like, Atco.
Larry Coryell, Spaces, Vanguard, 1970.
Joe Farrell, The Joe Farrell Quartet, CTI.
Zakir Hussain, Making Music, ECM, 1987.
Round Midnight (soundtrack), Columbia, 1986.

Sources
Books
Berendt, Joachim, The New Jazz Book, translated by Morgenstern, et al., Lawrence Hill, 1975.
The Penguin Encyclopedia of Popular Music, Viking, 1989.

Periodicals
Down Beat, June 6,1974; April 1982; March 1985; May 1991; December 1991; July 1992; December 1993; January 1994.
Entertainment Weekly, November 19, 1993.
Gramophone, December 1993.
Guitar Player, August 1978; July 1992; May 1994.
Musician, February 1993; August 1993.
Pulse!, March 1994.
Rolling Stone, June 3, 1976.
Additional information for this profile was provided by Verve Records publicity materials, 1993.
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AMG AllMusic Guide: Pop Artists:

John McLaughlin

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  • Genres: Jazz

Biography

One of fusion's most virtuosic guitar soloists, John McLaughlin placed his blazing speed in the service of a searching spiritual passion that has kept his music evolving and open to new influences. Whether shredding on electric or simmering quietly on acoustic, McLaughlin's intensity and underappreciated versatility have nearly always kept his playing vital, and his best moments -- whether as a solo artist or bandmember -- represent some of fusion's greatest recordings.

McLaughlin was born January 4, 1942, in Yorkshire, England, and began playing guitar at age 11. Initially attracted to blues and swing, he worked with British artists like Georgie Fame, Graham Bond, Brian Auger, and Ginger Baker. McLaughlin formed his own band in 1968, and recorded the excellent debut Extrapolation in early 1969. Later that year he moved to New York to join Tony Williams' groundbreaking fusion band Lifetime, and appeared on the classic Emergency! Through Williams, McLaughlin was invited to join Miles Davis' band, and became an important part of fusion landmarks like In a Silent Way, Bitches Brew, and A Tribute to Jack Johnson. In 1970, wanting to explore acoustic and Eastern music, McLaughlin recorded the classic My Goal's Beyond; he soon left Davis, and after one further solo album, Devotion, McLaughlin spent some time woodshedding.

He re-emerged in 1971 as leader of the Mahavishnu Orchestra, a seminal band that did much to define and popularize early jazz-rock fusion, as evidenced by the albums The Inner Mounting Flame, Birds of Fire, and Visions of the Emerald Beyond. Pausing to record Love Devotion Surrender with Carlos Santana in 1972, McLaughlin led Mahavishnu until 1975. Returning to spiritual preoccupations on My Goal's Beyond, he then formed Shakti, which fused acoustic jazz with Indian music over the course of three albums. McLaughlin returned to his solo career in the late '70s, forming a backing outfit called the One Truth Band, and also recording the guitar trio albums Friday Night in San Francisco and Passion, Grace & Fire with fellow fusion burner Al di Meola and flamenco guitarist Paco de Lucia. As the '80s went along, McLaughlin experimented with classical-jazz hybrid composing; there was also a short-lived Mahavishnu reunion in the mid-'80s.

In the 1990s McLaughlin continued to record steadily in both electric and acoustic groups. He signed to Verve, where he would remain for 13 years. Some the more notable albums from that period include the acoustic Time Remembered: John McLaughlin Plays Bill Evans in 1993; After the Rain with Elvin Jones and Joey DeFrancesco in 1995; and 1996's The Promise, which featured the guitarist in a number of settings, including a reunion with his acoustic trio partners di Meola and de Lucia and a trio with DeFrancesco and drummer Dennis Chambers. The drummer was also a part of McLaughlin's final album of the decade, Heart of Things, a furious bout of electric jazz.

The 21st century found McLaughlin in another nostalgic mood, releasing Remember Shakti: The Believer, a live set featuring the guitarist (playing electric guitar) with electric mandolinist U. Shrinivas, kanjira and ghatam player V. Selvaganesh, and legendary tabla player Zakir Hussain. While it wasn't a Shakti album proper, it nonetheless echoed that group's intricate and amazing rhythmic and harmonic breakthroughs. The group toured and released Saturday Night in Bombay a year later. McLaughlin's Euro-classical-leaning Thieves and Poets appeared in 2003. In 2004, WEA in Germany issued the massive 17-CD box set of McLaughlin's Montreux Concerts, which featured performances recorded between 1974 and 1996. Industrial Zen, released in 2006, was a mixed-bag recording where the guitarist's ambitions ran wild. It was his final album for Verve.

In 2008 McLaughlin issued Floating Point, an extension of many of the concepts on Industrial Zen, on the Abstract Logix imprint. The final track on that album was entitled "Five Peace Band"; it served as the name for a supergroup assembled by McLaughlin and Chick Corea for a one-off world tour. The other members were saxophonist Kenny Garrett, drummer Vinnie Colaiuta, and bassist Christian McBride; an album of the same name was released in 2009 on Concord. To the One, a studio album, was released on Abstract Logix in the spring of 2010. ~ Steve Huey & Thom Jurek, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

John McLaughlin (musician)

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John McLaughlin

John McLaughlin performing in 2008
Background information
Also known as Mahavishnu John McLaughlin
Born 4 January 1942 (1942-01-04) (age 70)
Doncaster, England
Genres Jazz fusion, jazz, world fusion, post-bop
Occupations Musician, songwriter
Instruments Guitar, keyboard
Years active 1963–present
Labels Abstract Logix, Verve, Douglas
Associated acts Miles Davis, Tony Williams Lifetime, Mahavishnu Orchestra, Shakti, Remember Shakti, Paco de Lucía, Al Di Meola, Carlos Santana, Katia Labèque, Zakir Hussain
Website www.johnmclaughlin.com
Notable instruments
Gibson EDS-1275
Gibson L-4
Gibson Hummingbird
Fender Mustang
Gibson Les Paul Custom
Abraham Wechter-built "Shakti guitar"
Ovation acoustic

John McLaughlin (born 4 January 1942, Doncaster, South Yorkshire, England), also known as Mahavishnu John McLaughlin, is an English guitarist, bandleader and composer. His music includes many genres of jazz, and rock, which he coupled with an interest in Indian classical music to become one of the pioneering figures in fusion.

In 2010 guitarist Jeff Beck called him "the best guitarist alive".[1] The Indian tabla maestro Zakir Hussain has called him "one of the greatest and one of the important musicians of our times". In 2003 McLaughlin was ranked 49th in Rolling Stone magazine list of the "100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time".[2]

After contributing to several key British groups of the early sixties and making his first solo record Extrapolation (with Tony Oxley and John Surman) he moved to the USA where he played with Tony Williams's group Lifetime and then with Miles Davis on his landmark electric jazz-fusion albums In A Silent Way, Bitches Brew, A Tribute to Jack Johnson and On The Corner. His 1970s electric band, the Mahavishnu Orchestra, performed a technically virtuosic and complex style of music that fused electric jazz and rock with Indian influences.

Contents

Biography

1960s

From a family of musicians (his mother being a concert violinist), McLaughlin studied violin and piano as a child and took up the guitar at the age of 11, exploring styles from flamenco to the jazz of Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli. He moved to London from Yorkshire in the early 1960s, playing with Alexis Korner[3] and the Marzipan Twisters before moving on to Georgie Fame and the Blue Flames, the Graham Bond Organisation (in 1963)[4] and Brian Auger. During the 1960s he often had to support himself with session work which he often found unsatisfying[5] but which enhanced his playing and sight-reading.

McLaughlin moved to the U.S. in 1969 to join Tony Williams' group Lifetime. A recording from the Record Plant, NYC, dated 25 March 1969, exists of McLaughlin jamming with Jimi Hendrix. McLaughlin recollects "we played one night, just a jam session. And we played from 2 until 8, in the morning. I thought it was a wonderful experience! I was playing an acoustic guitar with a pick-up. Um, flat-top guitar, and Jimi was playing an electric. Yeah, what a lovely time! Had he lived today, you'd find that he would be employing everything he could get his hands on, and I mean acoustic guitar, synthesizers, orchestras, voices, anything he could get his hands on he'd use!"

He played on Miles Davis' albums In A Silent Way, Bitches Brew (which has a track named after him), On The Corner, Big Fun (where he is featured soloist on "Go Ahead John") and A Tribute to Jack Johnson. In the liner notes to Jack Johnson, Davis called McLaughlin's playing "far in." McLaughlin returned to the Davis band for one night of a week-long club date, recorded and released as part of the album Live-Evil and of the Cellar Door boxed set. His reputation as a "first-call" session player grew, resulting in recordings as a sideman with Miroslav Vitous, Larry Coryell, Joe Farrell, Wayne Shorter, Carla Bley, the Rolling Stones, and others.

1970s

John McLaughlin, Zirkus Krone, Munich, West Germany April 13, 1973

He recorded Devotion in early 1970 on Douglas Records (run by Alan Douglas), a high-energy, psychedelic fusion album that featured Larry Young on organ (who had been part of Lifetime), Billy Rich on bass and the R&B drummer Buddy Miles. Devotion was the first of two albums he released on Douglas. In 1971 he released My Goal's Beyond in the U.S., a collection of unamplified acoustic works. Side A ("Peace One" and "Peace Two") offers a fusion blend of jazz and Indian classical forms while side B features melodic acoustic playing McLaughlin on such standards as "Goodbye Pork Pie Hat", by Charles Mingus whom McLaughlin considered an important influence. My Goal's Beyond was inspired by McLaughlin's decision to follow the Indian spiritual leader Sri Chinmoy, to whom he had been introduced in 1970 by Larry Coryell's manager. The album was dedicated to Chinmoy, with one of the guru's poems printed on the liner notes. It was on this album that McLaughlin took the name "Mahavishnu."

In 1973 McLaughlin collaborated with Carlos Santana, also a disciple of Sri Chinmoy, on an album of devotional songs, Love Devotion Surrender, which included recordings of Coltrane compositions including a movement of A Love Supreme. He has also worked with the jazz composers Carla Bley and Gil Evans.

McLaughlin performing in The Netherlands, 1978

In 1979 he formed a short-lived funk fusion power trio named the Trio of Doom with Tony Williams on drums and Jaco Pastorius on bass. Their only live performance was on 3 March 1979 at the Havana Jam Festival (2–4 March 1979) in Cuba, part of a US State Department sponsored visit to Cuba. Later on 8 March 1979 the group recorded the songs they had written for the festival at Columbia Studios, New York, on 52nd St.[6] Recollections from this performance are captured on Ernesto Juan Castellanos's documentary Havana Jam '79.

The Mahavishnu Orchestra

McLaughlin's 1970s electric band, the Mahavishnu Orchestra,[7] included violinist Jerry Goodman, keyboardist Jan Hammer, bassist Rick Laird and drummer Billy Cobham and performed a technically difficult and complex style of music that fused electric jazz and rock with Eastern and Indian influences. This band helped establish fusion as a new and growing style. McLaughlin's playing at this time was distinguished by fast solos and exotic musical scales.

The Mahavishnu Orchestra's personality clashes were as explosive as their performances and consequently the first incarnation of the group split in late 1973 after two years and three albums, one a live recording entitled "Between Nothingness and Eternity". In 2001 the "Lost Trident Sessions" album was released, having been recorded in 1973 but shelved when the group disbanded. McLaughlin then reformed the group with Narada Michael Walden (drums), Jean-Luc Ponty (violin), Ralphe Armstrong (bass), and Gayle Moran (keyboards and vocals), and a string and horn section (McLaughlin referred to this as "the real Mahavishnu Orchestra"). This incarnation of the group recorded two more albums, Apocalypse with the London Symphony Orchestra and Visions of the Emerald Beyond. A scaled-down quartet was formed with McLaughlin, Walden on drums, Armstrong on bass and Stu Goldberg on keyboards and synthesizer, which generated a third "Mahavishnu 2" recording in 1976 largely due to contractual obligations, Inner Worlds.

Shakti

McLaughlin then became absorbed in his acoustic playing with his Indian classical music based group Shakti (energy). McLaughlin had already been studying Indian classical music and playing the veena for several years. The group featured Lakshminarayanan L. Shankar (violin), Zakir Hussain (tabla), Thetakudi Harihara Vinayakram (ghatam) and earlier Ramnad Raghavan (mridangam). The group recorded three albums; 'A Handful of Beauty' (1975), 'Shakti' (1976), and 'Natural Elements' (1977). Based on both Carnatic and Hindustani styles, along with extended use of konnakol, the band introduced ragas and Indian percussion to many jazz aficionados.[8]

In this group McLaughlin played a custom-made steel-string acoustic guitar made by Abe Wechter and the Gibson guitar company that featured two tiers of strings over the soundhole: a conventional six-string configuration and seven strings strung underneath at a forty-five degree angle - these were independently tuneable "sympathetic strings" much like those on a sitar or veena. The instrument's vina-like scalloped fretboard enabled McLaughlin to bend strings far beyond the reach of a conventional fretboard. McLaughlin grew so accustomed to the freedom it provided him that he had the fretboard scalloped on his Gibson Byrdland electric guitar.

Other activities

John McLaughlin, Remember Shakti Concert, Munich/Germany (2001)

McLaughlin also appeared on Stanley Clarke's School Days and numerous other fusion albums. 1979 also saw the formation of the very short-lived Trio of Doom, consisting of McLaughlin with Jaco Pastorius (bass) and Tony Williams (drums). They only played one concert, at the Karl Marx Theater in Havana, Cuba on 3 March 1979,[9] as part of the Havana Jam festival. Their performance is captured on Ernesto Juan Castellanos's documentary Havana Jam '79. They later recorded three tracks at CBS Studios in New York, 8 March 1979. The same year he teamed up with flamenco guitarist Paco de Lucía and jazz guitarist Larry Coryell (replaced by Al Di Meola in the early 1980s) as the Guitar Trio. For the tour of fall 1983 they were joined by Dixie Dregs guitarist Steve Morse who opened the show as a soloist and participated with The Trio in the closing numbers. The Trio reunited in 1996 for a second recording session and a world tour. Also in 1979 McLaughlin recorded the album Johnny McLaughlin: Electric Guitarist, the title on McLaughlin's first business cards as a teenager in Yorkshire. This was a return to more mainstream jazz/rock fusion and to the electric instrument after three years of playing acoustic guitars.

Left to Right: Al Di Meola, John McLaughlin and Paco de Lucía

1980s

The short-lived One Truth Band recorded one studio album, Electric Dreams with L. Shankar on violins, Stu Goldberg on keyboards, Fernando Saunders on electric bass and Tony Smith on drums. After the dissolution of the One Truth Band, McLaughlin toured in a guitar duo with Christian Escoudé.[10]

With the group Fuse One, he released two albums in 1980 and 1982.[11]

In 1986 he appeared with Dexter Gordon in Bertrand Tavernier's film "Round Midnight." He also composed The Mediterranean Concerto, orchestrated by Michael Gibbs. The world premier featured McLaughlin and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. It was recorded in 1988 with Michael Tilson Thomas conducting the London Symphony Orchestra. Unlike what is typical practice in classical music, the concerto includes sections where McLaughlin improvises. Also included on the recording were five duets between McLaughlin and his then-girlfriend Katia Labèque.

In the late '80s and early '90s McLaughlin recorded and performed live with a trio including bassist Kai Eckhardt and percussionist Trilok Gurtu. The group recorded two albums: Live at The Royal Festival Hall and Que Alegria, with latter featuring Dominique DiPiazza on bass for all but two tracks; parts of the subsequent tour also included Jeff Berlin on bass. These recordings saw a return to acoustic instruments for McLaughlin, performing on nylon-string guitar. On "Live at the Royal Festival Hall" McLaughlin utilised a unique guitar synth which enabled him to effectively "loop" guitar parts and play over them live. The synth also featured a pedal which provided sustain when pressed. McLaughlin played parts which sound overdubbed and creating lush soundscapes, aided by Gurtu's unique percussive sounds. This approach is used to great effect in the track "Florianapolis", amongst others.

1990s

In the early 1990s he toured with his trio on the Que Alegria album. The trio comprised John McLaughlin, percussionist Trilok Gurtu and bass player Kai Eckhardt (later replaced by Dominique DiPiazza). Following this period he recorded and toured with The Heart of Things featuring Gary Thomas, Dennis Chambers, Matthew Garrison, Jim Beard and Otmaro Ruíz. In 1993 he released a Bill Evans tribute album entitled "Time Remembered: John McLaughlin Plays Bill Evans" with his acoustic guitar backed by the acoustic guitars of the Aighetta Quartet and the acoustic bass of Yan Maresz. In recent times he has toured with Remember Shakti.

In addition to original Shakti member Zakir Hussain, this group has also featured eminent Indian musicians U. Srinivas, V. Selvaganesh, Shankar Mahadevan, Shivkumar Sharma, and Hariprasad Chaurasia. In 1996, John McLaughlin, Paco DeLucia and Al Di Meola (known collectively as "The Guitar Trio") reunited for a world tour and recorded an album by the same name. In that same year he recorded "The Promise". Also notable during the period were his performances with Elvin Jones and Joey DeFrancesco.

2000s

In 2003 he recorded a ballet score, Thieves and Poets, along with arrangements for classical guitar ensemble of favorite jazz standards and a three-DVD instructional video on improvisation entitled "This is the Way I Do It" (which contributed to the development of video lessons.[12]) In June 2006 he released the post-bop/jazz fusion album Industrial Zen, on which he experimented with the Godin Glissentar as well as continuing to expand his guitar-synth repertoire.

In 2007 he left Universal Records and joined Abstract Logix. Recording sessions for his first album on that label took place in April. That summer, he began touring with a new jazz fusion quartet, the 4th Dimension, consisting of keyboardist/drummer Gary Husband, bassist Hadrian Feraud, and drummer Mark Mondesir. During the 4th Dimension's tour, an "instant CD" entitled Live USA 2007: Official Bootleg was made available comprising soundboard recordings of six pieces from the group's first performance. Following completion of the tour, McLaughlin sorted through recordings from each night to release a second MP3 download-only collection entitled, Official Pirate: Best of the American Tour 2007. During this time, McLaughlin also released another instructional DVD, The Gateway to Rhythm, featuring Indian percussionist and Remember Shakti bandmate Selva Ganesh Vinayakram (or V. Selvaganesh), focusing on the Indian rhythmic system of konnakol. McLaughlin also remastered and released a shelved 1980 project called The Trio of Doom, featuring jazz/fusion luminaries Jaco Pastorius and Tony Williams. The project had been aborted due to conflicts between Williams and Pastorius as well as what was at the time a mutual dissatisfaction with the results of their performance.

On 28 July 2007, McLaughlin performed at Eric Clapton's Crossroads Guitar Festival in Bridgeview, Illinois.

McLaughlin, 2007 Crossroads Guitar Festival

On 28 April 2008 the recording sessions from the previous year surfaced on the album Floating Point, featuring the rhythm section of keyboardist Louis Banks, bassist Hadrien Feraud, percussionist Sivamani and drummer Ranjit Barot bolstered on each track by a different Indian musician. Coinciding with the release of the album was another DVD, Meeting of the Minds, which offered behind the scenes studio footage of the Floating Point sessions as well as interviews with all of the musicians. He engaged in a late summer/fall 2008 tour with Chick Corea, Vinnie Colaiuta, Kenny Garrett and Christian McBride under the name Five Peace Band, from which came an eponymous double-CD live album in early 2009.

McLaughlin performed with Mahavishnu Orchestra drummer Billy Cobham at the 44th Montreux Jazz Festival, in Montreux, Switzerland, on 2 July 2010, for the first time since the band split up. In November 2010, a new book was released by Abstract Logix Books entitled Follow Your Heart- John McLaughlin Song by Song by Walter Kolosky, who also wrote the book Power, Passion and Beauty - The Story of the Legendary Mahavishnu Orchestra. The book discussed each song McLaughlin wrote and contained photographs never seen before.

Influence

McLaughlin has been cited as a major influence on many 1970s and 1980s fusion guitarists. Examples are prominent players such as Steve Morse, Eric Johnson, Mike Stern, Paul Masvidal, Al Di Meola, Pebber Brown, Shawn Lane, and Scott Henderson. His influence did not stop in the 80's, though; hardcore punk guitarist Greg Ginn of Black Flag cited Birds of Fire by The Mahavishnu Orchestra which inspired him to record more progressive guitar work and even record instrumental songs. Current players still hold him as highly influential, including Omar Rodriguez of The Mars Volta. According to Pat Metheny, McLaughlin has changed the evolution of the guitar during several of his periods of playing. McLaughlin is also considered a major influence on composers in the fusion genre. In an interview with Downbeat, Chick Corea remarked 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". Frank Zappa once said of McLaughlin: "A person would be a moron not to appreciate McLaughlin's technique. The guy has certainly found out how to operate a guitar as if it were a machine gun. But I'm not always enthusiastic about the lines I hear or the ways in which they're used. I don't think you can fault him, though, for the amount of time and effort it must have taken to play an instrument that fast. I think anybody who can play that fast is just wonderful. And I'm sure 90% of teenage America would agree, since the whole trend in the business has been "faster is better."[citation needed]

Discography

Family

John has been married to the French pianist Katia Labeque, who was also a member of his band in the early 1980's. He is currently married to Ina Behrend with whom he has a son, Luke (b.1997). Ref. http://www.abstractlogix.com/interview_view.php?idno=23

Equipment

See also

References

  1. ^ Uncut magazine, March 2010.
  2. ^ "Rolling Stone 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time". http://www.rollingstone.com/news/coverstory/5937559/page/29. 
  3. ^ Jazzreview.com[dead link]
  4. ^ Mo Foster, '17 Watts? The Birth of British Rock Guitar', Sanctuary Publishing 1997
  5. ^ Guitar Player Magazine, interview August 1978
  6. ^ Trio of Doom
  7. ^ "Power, Passion and Beauty, The Story Of The Legendary Mahavishnu-Orchestra". Allaboutjazz.com. http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=22802. Retrieved 2011-10-18. 
  8. ^ "Chembur.com". Chembur.com. http://www.chembur.com/anecdotes/carnatic/lshankar/. Retrieved 2011-10-18. [dead link]
  9. ^ Sleeve notes: Trio of Doom, Columbia/Legacy 82796964502
  10. ^ All About Jazz. "Christian Escoude - Jazz - Guitar". Allaboutjazz.com. http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/musician.php?id=6573. Retrieved 2011-10-18. 
  11. ^ Allmusic Discography
  12. ^ All About Jazz (2004-08-17). "Walter Kolosky "All About Jazz" 2004". Allaboutjazz.com. http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=14486. Retrieved 2011-10-19. 
  13. ^ "An EDS-1275 and a Drone-Stringed J-200: The Tale of John McLaughlin’s Two Rare Gibsons". Gibson Guitar Corporation. http://www.gibson.com/en-us/Lifestyle/Features/An%20EDS-1275%20and%20a%20Drone-String/. Retrieved 4 March 2010. 
  14. ^ Chapman, Richard (2000). Guitar: music, history, players. Dorling Kindersley. p. 115. ISBN 9780789459633. 
  15. ^ Blackett, Matt (October 2004). "The 50 Greatest Tones of All Time". Guitar Player 38 (10): 44–66. 
  16. ^ Ferris, Leonard (May 1974). "John McLaughlin & Rex Bogue Creating the 'Double Rainbow'". Guitar Player. http://www.cs.cf.ac.uk/Dave/mclaughlin/art/rainbow.html. Retrieved 3 March 2010. 
  17. ^ Cleveland, Barry. "John McLaughlin's 2007 Touring Rig". Godin Guitars. http://www.godinguitars.com/johnmclaughlin_07.htm. Retrieved 4 March 2010. 
  18. ^ Milkowski, Bill (1998). Rockers, jazzbos & visionaries. Billboard Books. p. 176. ISBN 9780823078332. http://books.google.com/books?id=HeAXAQAAIAAJ&q=abraham+wechter. 
  19. ^ Stump, Paul (2000). Go ahead John: the music of John McLaughlin. SAF Publishing. p. 97. ISBN 9780946719242. http://books.google.com/books?id=TDFqHbV5K7cC&pg=PA97. 
  20. ^ Wheeler, Tom (August 1978). "McLaughlin's Revolutionary Drone-String Guitar". Guitar Player. http://www.7171.org/electrons/frap/article3.html. Retrieved 19 October 2009. 

External links


 
 
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