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GEORGE LESIW BAND
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Thousands of fans of in your face, honest to goodness, rockin' jazz fusion
better get ready for an explosive earful now that The George Lesiw Band is
exploding from its East Coast cocoon and hitting the national circuit.
Over the past five years, the progressive trio --electric guitarist/composer
Lesiw, acoustic bassist Preston Murphy and drummer Gil Hawkins, Jr.-- have
forged a wild, off the beaten path sound Hawkins likes to say is "slightly
out of the mainstream, but burns like crazy." Based alternately in Connecticut
and Boston, they've developed a loyal following with hundreds of gigs throughout
the Northeast at a unique array of hotspots, ranging from famed clubs like
Toad's Place in New Haven to Café 9 (also in New Haven), The Middle
East in Cambridge, Mass., and Acme Underground In New York.
Ask any of their legion of fans--there's nothing like hearing The George Lesiw
Band live. But the group's dynamic debut CD Anuta Was Here --named for Lesiw's
ex-wife, who plays electric guitar on the nine-track collection and composed
four of the tunes-- is a perfect snapshot of a multi-faceted, adventurous
unit that's constantly evolving and charting new territory.
The artistically expansive project combines the true improvisational essence
of jazz, the daring electricity of classic guitar-based fusion and the gritty
fire of rockin' blues. The title of "Blue Skeleton" refers to its
hybrid sound, a 12 bar blues form featuring more complex jazz changes; "Gone
By The Woodbine," whose name comes from an expression Lesiw's grandfather
always used, incorporates a fascinating eight tone row (pitches that don't
relate to any one scale) as the foundational bassline.
"The pieces here are designed as frameworks for improvisation, just as
the old jazz masters would do on standards, only we're working with originals,"
says Lesiw, who leaped into the jazz fusion world after some life changing
years at Berklee College of Music, where he received a degree in performance
and songwriting.
"They were created over different periods of time through an interesting
creative process which involves clearing your mind, being receptive to new
ideas and, most importantly, forgetting everything you've learned so that
you're always thinking ahead," he adds. "Of course, that covers
an incredible amount of territory. I started out as a teenager playing rock,
then blues before I got into jazz. I think hearing Hendrix's 'Foxy Lady' when
I was 14 was the breakthrough. I started playing a beat up acoustic before
switching to electric, then played rock in high school before I began studying
the blues masters and later, the whole Blue Note jazz generation."
Lesiw wasn't just listening to and emulating T Bone Walker, BB King and Stevie
Ray Vaughn; he was transcribing solos religiously, responding to what he calls
"something soulful, that touched me deeper than any rock music ever did."
Then he got crazy with Blue Note legends Kenny Burrell, Wes Montgomery and
Grant Green before opening his ears to modern electric fusion greats like
guitarists John Scofield and Scott Henderson.
"When I was living in Boston , I played in Top 40 and wedding bands,
but creatively, that took me only so far," he adds. "My goal was
to devote my life to learning how to improvise, getting deep into the languages
of jazz, blues, and jazz fusion. Each genre has its own language. In improvisational
music, you can play what you want, and with odd signatures. There's so much
more freedom, and I can't imagine following any other path."
Before forming The George Lesiw Band with Murphy (who he met at Berklee in
Boston) and Hawkins (whom he first played with in a New Haven blues band in
the mid-90s), the guitarist led bands that shared the stage with a proverbial
list of who's who in the blues world: The Fabulous Thunderbirds, Debbie Davis,
Roomful of Blues and Luther "Guitar" Junior Johnson (Muddy Waters'
former guitarist).
Murphy's numerous associations include stints with numerous quintets, quartets
and trios led by Jason Palmer, Cecil Brooks III, Dave Tronzo, Kevin Harris,
et al. A mainstay within the jazz/blues circles of New England , Hawkins'
background includes opening for Dizzy Gillespie as part of the band Suite,
performing with Vincent Lyn's jazz quartet, and playing with guitarist Eran
Troy Danner of the blues trio Hot Dallas Nite and the Cobalt Rhythm Kings.
"When we started playing as The George Lesiw Band five years ago, the
chemistry just worked, and it was easy, like we'd been playing together our
whole lives," says Hawkins, whose influences include fusion greats Billy
Cobham, Bill Stewart, and Max Roach. "Like most musicians, I have been
playing drums all my life in many different genres, but jazz is my home base.
Over the years, I've found that fusion is the format that best allows me to
express myself. With this group, we enjoy using the basic format of jazz and
throwing in a ton of fresh, electrifying energy. My job in the back is to
keep that energy constant, keeping the soup stirred and adding cool seasoning
where it counts."
Currently in the studio working on a follow-up collection, Lesiw promises
some exciting departures from what we hear on Anuta Was Here --including a
lot of odd multiple signatures, multiple tonalities and more complex rhythmic
foundations. "It's great to commit this music to a recording, but the
real art of what we do is the passion we convey in live performances,"
he says. "The music we play isn't like a sculpture you can look at, it's
really about the ongoing movement that's taking place onstage. There's nothing
quite like the moment when fans come up after a show and says that our music
makes them feel good and healthy and alive. Making that connection with the
audience makes everything worth it."
Contact Us: Temecula Valley International Jazz Festival
Temecula, CA 92590 - Southern California's Wine Country - A Vacation is waiting for you
Jon Laskin - founder / CEO (951) 678-2517 or (928) 222-3009 fax
email@musiciansworkshop.org or email@jonlaskin.com
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Temecula Valley International Jazz Festival,
Musicians Workshop