Stanley Jordan
@ the PizzaExpress Jazz Club
30 October 2011
Click an image to enlarge.
Biography
From the moment he made his debut in 1985 with the gold-selling
Grammy® nominated album “Magic Touch”, guitar virtuoso
Stanley Jordan has proven himself as a forward thinking innovator.
With his nimbly executed ‘touch’ or ‘tap’
technique, he ushered a dazzling and spellbinding new sound into
the world of progressive instrumental music. Over the course of
five major recordings and several smaller independent releases,
Stanley has explored earthly and astral musical trailways. Because
of the extraordinary originality of his approach to guitar, Stanley
has been looked upon first and foremost as a musical original, orbiting
in an artistic universe without predecessor or immediate successor.
With his groundbreaking new album, “State Of Nature”
(his first mainstream release in over a decade, and his debut for
the Mack Avenue label), Stanley Jordan makes another bold step by
using his music to aurally illustrate profoundly unifying truths
about man's relationship to nature and humankind.
It was a convergence of experiences that led Jordan down this thematic
path. “Part of the reason that I made this album were
revelations I discovered in my journey to try to become a better
person,” he states. “The other reason is that
I discovered some disturbing information about environmental issues
such as global warming, the deterioration of our planet and man's
role in it. When I was a kid, my family lived in what is now known
as Silicon Valley, which used to be a vast swath of open land with
farms and orchards. People talked a lot back then about taking care
of the environment, but fast forward to today and it’s still
a problem. It made me wonder how humans can know about things like
global warming and still not do anything. What is it about humans
that makes us so intelligent and yet so unwise?”
This thought process led to the underlying inspiration for the
song structures and themes of “State Of Nature.” Recording
at Tarpan Studios in Northern California allowed Jordan to take
time off for retreats to beautiful Santa Cruz and surrounding areas,
where he immersed himself in nature awareness courses. The resulting
music finds Jordan weaving classical, jazz and rock textures to
get across his messages of atonement and harmony. Beyond his signature
touch technique on guitar; Jordan utilises other revolutionary techniques,
such as playing two guitars at once, playing guitar and piano simultaneously,
and incorporating sounds of nature that he recorded himself. Stanley
also features the cello work of 19 year-old Meta Weiss, a classically
trained musician whom he once tutored as a child in jazz and improvisation.
He also includes three short pieces called “Mind Games”
- mini canons, palindromes and interludes (inspired by those that
Earth Wind & Fire slipped into classic albums such as That's
the Way of the World) that gave him an opportunity to include some
musical ideas on the album without changing its focus.
Jordan states, “The two main ideas that consumed my thoughts
were these: Human beings need to get back to nature, which extends
to the environment as well as our bodies - the part of nature we
carry around with us, and we need to evolve intellectually, spiritually
and politically. Neither will work without the other. I believe
that when we become more educated, we'll be better problem solvers.”
”State Of Nature” also includes a return to piano.
That Stanley is also a pianist may be surprising, but it was his
first instrument as a child because there was one in the house.
“My sister says I was messing around with it as young as 3.
I composed my first song at 5 and I started lessons around age 7.
I didn’t start on guitar until I was 11. Piano was a natural
instrument for me. I find that when I sit at the piano, I make music.
But I don’t have the same training as I have on guitar. So
that’s always been intimidating. I realised that for my own
personal development, I had to get out of my comfort zone and overcome
my fear of performing on piano. There are aspects of my music that
live in the piano. If I want those elements, I have to go there
to get them.”
To describe Stanley Jordan is to think of him as a world-class
musician who marches in all aspects of his life to the beat of his
own drum. He is a progressive thinker with goals and ideas that
stretch far beyond record deals, fortune or fame.
Each project that followed his classic “Magic Touch”
(Stanley was also nominated for a Best New Artist Grammy that year)
has taken him into thrilling virgin territory. Those projects included
a solo guitar album titled “Standards Volume 1” (1986)
where Stanley made the bold statement that songs by the likes of
Stevie Wonder and the Beatles deserved recognition as standards
as much as chestnuts like “Georgia On My Mind.” He followed
that with the band album “Flying Home” (1988) and an
especially edgy album titled “Cornucopia” (1990, a Grammy
nominee in the Best Pop Single category for the title track), half
of which was straight ahead jazz recorded live and the other half,
multi-dimensional originals recorded in the studio. Still later
in 1994, after a move to Arista Records (then-helmed by pop music
maverick Clive Davis), he recorded the bracingly eclectic “Bolero”
album, featuring covers of Herbie Hancock’s “Chameleon,”
Jimi Hendrix’s “Drifting,” his original “Plato's
Blues” and the CD’s centrepiece, a 17-minute arrangement
of Ravel’s “Bolero” broken up into rock, African,
Latin, ‘groove’ and industrial versions. |