Jean-Luc Ponty, Biréli
Lagrène and Kyle Eastwood
@ the Barbican Centre
16 March 2018
Click an image to enlarge.
Jean-Luc Ponty biography
Jean-Luc Ponty is a pioneer and undisputed master
of violin in the arena of jazz and rock. He is widely regarded as
an innovator who has applied his unique visionary spin that has
expanded the vocabulary of modern music.
Ponty was born in a family of classical musicians
on September 29, 1942 in Avranches, France. His father taught violin,
his mother taught piano. At sixteen, he was admitted to the Conservatoire
National Supérieur de Musique de Paris, graduating two years
later with the institution's highest award, Premier Prix. In turn,
he was immediately hired by one of the major symphony orchestras,
Concerts Lamoureux, where he played for three years.
While still a member of the orchestra in Paris,
Ponty picked up a side gig playing clarinet (which his father had
taught him) for a college jazz band that regularly performed at
local parties. It proved a life-changing jumping-off point. A growing
interest in the jazz sounds of Miles Davis and John Coltrane compelled
him to take up the tenor saxophone. Fuelled by an all-encompassing
creative passion, Jean-Luc soon felt the need to express his jazz
voice through his main instrument, the violin.
So it was that Ponty found himself leading a dual
musical life: rehearsing and performing with the orchestra while
also playing jazz until 3 AM at clubs throughout Paris. The demands
of this doomed schedule eventually brought him to a crossroads.
“Naturally, I had to make a choice, so I took a chance with
jazz,” says Jean-Luc.
At first, the violin proved to be a handicap;
few at the time viewed the instrument as having a legitimate place
in the modern jazz vocabulary. With a powerful sound that eschewed
vibrato, Jean-Luc distinguished himself with be-bop era phrasings
and a punchy style influenced more by horn players than by anything
previously tried on the violin; nobody had heard anything quite
like it before. Ponty played with some of the best European musicians
such as Daniel Humair, Eddy Louiss, Niels-Henning-Ørsted-Pedersen
among others. His notoriety grew with remarkable leaps and by 1964,
at age 22, he released his debut solo album for Philips, Jazz Long
Playing. A 1966 live album called Violin Summit united Ponty on
stage in Basel, Switzerland with such notable string talents as
Svend Asmussen, Stéphane Grappelli and Stuff Smith.
In 1967, John Lewis of The Modern Jazz Quartet
invited Ponty to perform at the Monterey Jazz Festival. Jean-Luc's
first-ever American appearance garnered thunderous applause and
led to a U.S. recording contract with the World Pacific label (Electric
Connection with the Gerald Wilson Big Band, Jean-Luc Ponty Experience
with the George Duke Trio). Through the late-60s and early 70s,
Ponty achieved mounting critical praise and popularity across Europe.
In turn, the violinist soon found his signature talents in demand
by top recording artists the world over.
In 1969, Frank Zappa composed the music for Jean-Luc’s solo
album “King Kong” (Blue Note). In 1972, Elton John invited
Ponty to contribute to his Honky Chateau #1 hit album. Within a
year - at the urging of Zappa who wanted him to join his band the
Mothers of Invention - Ponty emigrated with his wife and two young
daughters to America and made his home in Los Angeles. He continued
to work on a variety of projects - including a pair of John McLaughlin/Mahavishnu
Orchestra albums/tours (Apocalypse, Visions of the Emerald Beyond).
In the meantime he became a prolific composer, signed on as a solo
artist with Atlantic Records in early 1975, released his first album
“Upon The Wings Of Music” that same year and started
touring with his own band.
For the next decade, Jean-Luc toured the world
repeatedly and recorded 12 consecutive albums which all reached
the top 5 on the Billboard jazz charts and sold millions of copies.
Early Atlantic recordings, such as 1976's “Aurora” and
“Imaginary Voyage,” firmly established him as a figurehead
in America’s growing jazz-rock movement. He went on to crack
the top 40 in 1977 with the Enigmatic Ocean album and again in 1978
with Cosmic Messenger. In 1984, a revolutionary video featuring
time lapse images was produced by Louis Schwarzberg for Individual
Choice. Along with Herbie Hancock, Ponty became one of the first
jazz musicians to have a music video.
From the 80s to this day Ponty has been recording
and touring around the world with his own groups and has done collaborations
with other great musicians such as guitarists Allan Holdsworth,
Al Di Meola, bassist Stanley Clarke, West African musicians, banjo
player Bela Fleck, Lalo Schifrin, Chick Corea and Return To Forever
IV, violinists Nigel Kennedy, Mark O’Connor, L. Subramaniam
from India, classical violist and conductor Yuri Bashmet from Russia,
pianist Wolfgang Dauner, guitarist Bireli Lagrene and singer Jon
Anderson from Yes, and his daughter pianist-singer-composer Clara
Ponty. Jean Luc has also performed his music with symphony orchestras
in the U.S.A, Canada, Japan, Western and Eastern Europe, Brazil
and Russia.
|