Showing posts with label koinonia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label koinonia. Show all posts

Saturday, February 7, 2009

ALEX ACUNA

Alejandro Neciosup Acuña aka Alex Acuña (born December 12, 1944) is a Peruvian Afro-Cuban jazz drummer and percussionist.

Born in Pativilca, Peru, Acuña played in local bands from the age of ten, and moved to Lima as a teenager. At the age of eighteen he joined the band of Perez Prado, and in 1967 he moved to Puerto Rico. In 1974 Acuña moved to Las Vegas, working with artists such as Elvis Presley and Diana Ross, and the following year he joined the jazz-fusion group Weather Report, appearing on the albums Black Market and Heavy Weather. Acuña left Weather Report in 1978, and became a session musician in California, recording and playing live with (amongst many others) Paul McCartney, Joni Mitchell, Ella Fitzgerald, Jim Walker (musician), Chick Corea, Whitney Houston, Plácido Domingo, Phil Keaggy, Sergeant Petter, Sam Phillips, former Weather Report bandmates Wayne Shorter and Joe Zawinul, Herbie Hancock, Carlos Santana, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Beck, Roberta Flack, U2, and Al Jarreau. He can be found on recordings by musicians as culturally diverse as Lee Ritenour, Peter Gabriel, Johnny Clegg, Robbie Robertson & Jackson Browne.

In the 1980s Acuna also recorded and toured with the Christian jazz band Koinonia, which featured session musicians Abraham Laboriel, Justo Almario, Hadley Hockensmith, Harland Rogers, and Bill Maxwell. He played on Willy DeVille's Crow Jane Alley album.

He has also worked as an educator at University of California, Los Angeles and Berklee College of Music.

Discography

(1976) Black Market - Weather Report
(1977) Heavy Weather - Weather Report
(1992) Thinking of You - Alex Acuña and the Unknowns
(2000) Acuarela de Tambores - Alex Acuña
(2002) Los Hijos del Sol: To My Country - Alex Acuña

---------------

Alex Acuña was born on December 12, 1944 in Pativilca, Peru - a small coastal village 100 miles north of the capital city of Lima, Peru. His real name is Alexjandro Neciosup Acuña. A self-educated musician, he was inspired by his father and brothers (all of whom were musicians). By the time Alex turned ten, he was already playing in local bands. As a teenager, he was one of Peru's most accomplished session drummers, performing on many recording projects for artists as well as film and television productions. Alex also earned a glowing reputation for his skills as a live performer.

At the age of eighteen, Alex was chosen by the great Latin bandleader, Perez Prado, to join his big band. It was with the Prado band that Alex first traveled to the United States. Several years later, he began studying at the Puerto Rico Conservatory of Music, playing as classical percussionist with the Symphony Orchestra for the Pablo Casals Summer Festivals in San Juan, P.R. In 1974, Alex moved to Las Vegas and there, played with such greats as Elvis Presley and Diana Ross. Following this chapter of his career, Alex became both drummer and percussionist for one of the most innovative jazz groups of our time, Weather Report, recording “Black Market” and the famous “Heavy Weather” album.

After moving to Los Angeles in 1978, Alex quickly earned the position of a valued session drummer and percussionist for recordings, television and motion pictures. He became the recipient of many awards and honors, including the Emeritus MVP award from the L.A. chapter of National Academy of Recording for the Arts and Sciences and winner of the “Latin/Brazilian percussionist” Category of Modern Drummer's “Reader's Poll” for five years running.

His countless album credits and live performances are comprised of such diverse artists as U2, Paul McCartney, Joni Mitchell, Al Jarreau, Ella Fitzgerald, Roberta Flack, Andre Crouch, The Winans, Tracy Chapman, Sheryl Crow, Whitney Houston, Bruce Willis, Seal, Yellow Jackets, The Brecker Brothers, Chick Corea, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Carlos Santana, The Gipsy Kings, Julio Iglesias, Herbie Hancock, Koinonia, Juan Gabriel, Luis Miguel, Placido Domingo, Wayne Shorter, Joe Zawinul, and Integrity Music Productions internationally with artists such as Ron Kenoly and others.

Alex has recorded film scores under the direction of Dave Grusin, Alan Silvestry, Michele Legrand, Bill Conti, Michele Colombier, Marvin Hamlish, Maurice Jaree, Mark Isham, Hans Zimmer, John Williams and many more!

In 2007 he was the percussionist on the last Joe Zawinul record “Brown Street.”

Source: All About Jazz

Readmore...

Friday, February 6, 2009

ABRAHAM LABORIEL

Abraham Laboriel, Sr. (born July 17, 1947) is a Mexican bassist who has played on over 4,000 recordings and soundtracks. Guitar Player Magazine described him as: "the most widely used session bassist of our time". Laboriel is the father of drummer Abe Laboriel Jr. and of producer, songwriter, and film composer Mateo Laboriel.

Laboriel was born in Mexico City. Originally a classically trained guitarist, he switched to bass guitar while studying at the Berklee School of Music. Henry Mancini encouraged Laboriel to move to Los Angeles, California and pursue a recording career. Since then, he has worked with artists as diverse as Donald Fagen, Lee Ritenour, Larry Carlton, Dave Grusin, Andy Pratt, Stevie Wonder, Hanson. Barbra Streisand, Al Jarreau, Billy Cobham, Dolly Parton, Elton John, Ray Charles, Madonna, Paul Simon, Keith Green, Alvaro Lopez and Res-Q Band, Lisa Loeb, Quincy Jones, Russ Taff, Engelbert Humperdinck, Umberto Tozzi,Ron Kenoly, Rabito, Mylène Farmer, Crystal Lewis, Chris Isaak, Paul Jackson Jr. and Michael Jackson. When Laboriel recorded his three solo albums (Dear Friends, Guidum ,and Justo & Abraham), he recruited a cast of musicians that included Alex Acuña, Al Jarreau, Jim Keltner, Phillip Bailey, and others.

Laboriel was a founding member of the bands, Friendship and Koinonia. He plays live regularly with Greg Mathieson, drummer Bill Maxwell ,and Justo Almario. Abraham is now in the band Open Hands with Justo Almario, Greg Mathieson and Bill Maxwell

In 2005, Abraham was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Music by the Berklee College of Music.

References

Spectrasonics: Abraham Laboriel Sr.

Bass Player magazine Studio Legend Recognized With Honorary Degree

---------------

Abraham Laboriel is a world renowned bassist and the founder of the band KOINONIA. He was born and raised in Mexico City where he received his earliest musical training from his father, a gifted guitarist and composer. His first recording was at age 10 as part of a "rock and roll" group called "Los Traviesos". After performing in Mexico thru his teen years as both a musician and an actor, he moved to Boston where he earned a Bachelor of Music degree in Composition from the Berklee School of Music in 1972. During that time he recorded with faculty member, famed vibraphonist Gary Burton. He traveled with Johnny Mathis, Michel Legrand, and Henry Mancini and moved to Los Angeles in 1976 to begin a very diverse and fruitful studio recording career.

He has performed and recorded with many jazz artists including George Benson, Larry Carlton, the Crusaders, Ella Fitzgerald, Dave Grusin, Herbie Hancock, Freddie Hubbard, Al Jarreau, John Klemmer, Manhattan Transfer, Joe Pass, Joe Sample, Lalo Shifrin, Diane Schuur, Sara Vaughan, and Joe Zawinul. He recorded with Lee Ritenour, Ernie Watts, and Alex Acuna in a band called "Friendship" and has continued to record and travel with Lee and Dave Grusin for GRP Records. He also has been much in demand for work with artists like Lionel Richie, Quincy Jones, Jeffrey Osborne, Chaka Khan, Robbie Robertson, Kenny Rogers, Kenny Loggins, Ruben Blades and countless others. He was in fact voted by his peers in the LA Chapter of NARAS as the "Most Valuable Player" in the Bass chair for the three years in a row, joining Ray Brown and Chuck Domanico in that honor.

Born: July 17, 1947
Birthplace: Mexico City, Mexico
Instruments: Bass
Genre: Jazz
Style: Crossover Jazz

---------------

Larry Carlton once said,"There are a lot of great bass players in this world, but there is one, and only one Abraham Laboriel." 

This tribute best describes the unique artistry of the Mexico City born virtuoso of the Bass Guitar. To witness Abe play one immediately understands that music is essentially about passion and he is truly one of the most gifted interpreters. 

Originally a classically trained guitarist, Abraham infused his flamenco style on the bass guitar when he made the transition to four strings at the Berklee School of Music. Since the day that the late Henry Mancini encouraged him to come to Los Angeles, Abe has played on over 3000(!) recordings and soundtracks, prompting Guitar Player to succinctly peg him as "...the most widely used session bassist of our time." You have undoubtedly heard the diversity of his contributions to recordings by music's creme de la creme including: 

Stevie Wonder, Robbie Robertson, Joe Zawinul, George Benson, Barbara Streisand, Al Jarreau, Dave & Don Gruisin, Elton John, Joe Sample, Dori Caymmi, Quincy Jones, Justo Almario and Michael Jackson to name a few. He was also a founding member of the internationally acclaimed fusion groups Friendship and Koinonia. 

Abraham's solo albums,"Dear Friends", "Guidum" and "Justo & Abraham" are stunning collections of contemporary urban and jazz originals that gather super talents from all over the music industry such as: Steve Gadd, Alex Acuña, Al Jarreau, Jim Keltner, Ernie Watts, Greg Mathieson, Paul Jackson Jr., and Phillip Bailey. 

I can't think of anyone that embraces the joy of music more than Abraham Laboriel.

---------------


Readmore...

Monday, February 2, 2009

KOINONIA

Koinonia was a Christian jazz band that published several primarily instrumental recordings between 1982 and 1990, when the band disbanded.

Koinonia was a light that shined brightly, if for only a few years. There just were not, and still are no intelligence for marketing within the Christian music industry. There have not been that many all instrumental groups that have come out of the CCM world and of those who have come forward Koinonia and Seawind are really the only two that were on a level playing field with the secular jazz world in terms of talent and production quality.  

There have been solo efforts by Justo Almario, Richard Souther and Phil Keaggy – but they were mostly to compete in the New Age market of the late eighties and early nineties. So putting yourself head to head with George Winston, Alex DeGrassi and Yanni is no little feat.  

This isn’t an issue to either most Christians, and especially not to the record executives who are in charge of that particular industry. Those people, given the right profit margin, would eat their children. There was a pastor in Tulsa once who said, “you never been burned in a business deal like you can get burned by a Christian.”  

I think he meant that for some reason they expect to be able to get away with breaking contracts, not paying people royalties, ignoring basic business principals, because “God said” to do this or that. It is only the god of their egos.

Koinonia stopped making records in the nineties, but they are all still playing and recording frequently. They were a brilliant and interesting combination of CCM (contemporary Christian music) musicians and jazzbos. Harlan Rogers (keyboards), Abe Laboriel (bass), and Billy Maxwell (drums) were all a part of Andre Crouch’s roving band of life affirming minstrels for many years (the Disciples). They traveled the world over with Andre, playing concerts and sharing their faith. The “Andre Live in London” album is a particularly powerful statement from this band. Hadley Hockensmith sat in with the same group of guys on many CCM sessions, working for Bill Maxwell on Keith Green’s projects when Billy produced them.  

And then there is Acuna, the quintessential Latin percussionist. He earned a ton of jazz street cred playing with Weather Report on both the Black Market and Heavy Weather albums, and as jazz-fusion bands go, that lent a lot of credibility points to Koinonia as well. Heavy Weather set many sales records for jazz music, and is still considered one of the most ground breaking jazz rock fusion albums of all time. They were mostly all musicians you had or might have heard before, but with Acuna, they took on a whole new dimension. The seldom heard of John Phillips played sax on this first record and was never heard from again. These two added to the already burgeoning talent pool made a serious band in the making. They stayed on Sparrow Records (to their misfortune) and Sparrow didn’t have the first idea what to do with a jazz-fusion band. So their marketing was a fraction of what it should have been.

The drumming duties were split between Acuna and Billy Maxwell, and you can clearly hear Billy’s influence on the heavier songs, the more rock influenced. Acuna plays with a flare from many years of Samba and hard core Latin. Dean Parks and Hadley Hockensmith trade back and forth on the guitar work. It is an interesting combination, and they made four really remarkable records. 

The Tunes Themselves  

1 – More Than A Feelin’ An easy flowing groove with Billy Maxwell beating the drums down hard, and the rest of the band adding to the stew. The head is taken by Hadley Hockensmith and John Phillips, the tenor and rock guitar playing it in unison. Harlan plays a laid back country jazz solo on organ, and then Phillips tenor solo is the highlight of the first song with a screaming high journey into the overtones. His ideas are melodic and pretty, but he essentially does a Mariah Carrey screaming high top sound, which is entertaining. Then Harlan and Dean Parks come in to take it home.  

2 – Rescue This starts with an Abe Laboriel solo over the top of Acuna drums and percussion. There is a Latin feel to the beginning of this, with the band coming in over the top of it all. This does have the feel of some earlier Return to Forever. The keys are different, Harlan Rodgers is no Chick Corea – his feel is a lot more Okie than that, but that makes it a funkier feel than RTF.  

3 – Graceful This is the first ballad of the album, with Harlan Rodgers taking an extensive solo early on. Billy Maxwell plays his drums slow and steady, but is one of the hardest punchers in studio biz. He really beats the living daylights out of his drums. The melody is a synthesizer affair, and this is decidedly the eighties idea of smooth jazz. It is noteworthy that Koinonia were around before the Rippingtons or the Yellowjackets.  

4 – Cuando This is a hard groove, straight up and down with a solid rock drum beat. John Phillips is playing the head, and screaming high with his smooth and silky tone. The guitar solos are not bad, but not inspiring. The interplay between Acuna, Laboriel and Maxwell is really the highlight of this song. They are playing a Latin beat with the clave being handled by a rock drummer.  

5 – Divina Singing over the mellow movement of the band, the melody and harmony are played in unison with the flute. And the flute solo is not terrible, but the vocal element really takes away from the song in general. There was a lovely flute led ballad happening, but the vocals really spoil the song on this one.  

6 – Give Your Love Here we have Phillips in the weaker moment of his on the album, he had an extended solo and it starts out with such promise, but then dies off. Again the vocal element on this song really puts it in the toilet. The vocals are like a gang shout almost, so in my book if this were ice dancing, the guys would get penalized for dropping their partner on this one. The groove is funky as hell though. The drums are rock hard and pumping.  

7 – Valentine The bass and guitar are playing together, and this features either Dean or Hadley on guitar laying down a nice lead. This song is more of a lament than the previous. The sax plays along with it, and the mood is blue, it is sad, it is the wrong feel for a Valentine. The sax then takes charge and Phillips rather leaves us hanging. The chords are nice though, sweet and sad.  

8 – Funky Bumpkins This is probably the funkiest sound of the album, with a hard rock/funk/fusion feel. The trick with the guitar and sax together works well on this melody. The guitar solo is okay, but Abe Laboriel plays his fretless bass solo effortlessly, with grace and aplomb, dancing over the top of the iron beat of Maxwell and the crazy jangling percussion of Acuna. His solo rambles on and on, chorus after chorus until the band is ready to head back in.  

9 – On My Way Home This is another gorgeous ballad, with tender piano parts. The soprano sax and electric guitar is done tastefully, and the solos that do come down are fine. The feel of this song makes you sadder than any other part. And for a Christian artist, being on their way home could very well mean home to God, which is a long and sad journey indeed. The guitar lines with piano fills feel like a warm and fuzzy death, a subtle trip. This is an interesting ending to a sometimes fire breathing album.  

And In The End This was the first of four really quality jazz fusion albums from a unique sounding band. They didn’t hand over the reigns of their work to anyone; there was no successor in the wings. The album was uneven in parts, and it was an excellent thing that they dumped John Phillips for Justo Almario. Justo did two albums on Sparrows New Age (Meadowlark) label after the Koinonia stuff dried up, as did Richard Souther from A Band Called David. I later found copies of all four of them on LaserLight, clearly sold down the river to be re-released by them.

The band consisted of several Los Angeles based R&B session musicians:

Alex Acuña (formerly of Weather Report), percussion; 
Abraham Laboriel, bass; 
Justo Almario, sax, flute, and wind controller; 
John Phillips, woodwinds; 
Lou Pardini, keyboards and vocals; 
Hadley Hockensmith and Dean Parks, guitar; 
Harlan Rogers, keyboards; 
Bill Maxwell, drums.

Koinonia's albums include:

More than a feelin' (1982) 
Celebration (1984) 
Frontline (1986) 
Koinonia (1989) 

In 2005 a live recording from Gothenburg in Sweden called Celebrate In Gothenburg (1983) was released on DVD.

---------------

Koinonia is a music group that were around in the early 80's -- their first public appearance was in LA's "Baked Potato" in 1980. The name comes from Greek, and means "to fellowship" or "to communicate by the act of using as common". They are all Christian (studio) musicians that have been (and still are) playing with a lot of other top names, and they decided to name their own "fellowship" group like that because of their common roots. 

They made 3 recordings - More Than a Feelin' (1983), Celebration (live in 1984) and Frontline (later, also includes some vocals). They performed live here in Denmark, and they are really good! They have not made any subsequent recordings as a group. 

The "original" band consisted of Abraham Laboriel on bass, Bill Maxwell on drums, Harlan Rogers on keys, Hadley Hockensmith and Dean Parks on guitar, John Phillips on woodwinds and Alex Acuna on percussion. At some stage Dean Parks left, and they replaced John Phillips with Justo Almario. 

You can search for more info on each of the individual members. In particular, Abraham (Abe) Laboriel, Alex Acuna and Justo Almario have been doing a lot with other bands -- and hence appear on quite a number of other records. Abe and Justo has done a CD together, and they have some of the others on it as well.

Source: http://www.angelfire.com/music/worldpop/MU110/koinonia.html

Readmore...