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JORMA
KAUKONEN
Thursday, February 18, 2010 - 8:00pm & 10:00pm
Saturday, February 20, 2010 - 8:00pm & 10:00pm
McCabe's
Guitar Shop
In a career that has already spanned a half-century, Jorma
Kaukonen has been the leading practitioner and teacher of fingerstyle guitar,
one of the most highly respected interpreters of American roots music, blues,
and Americana, and at the forefront of popular rock-and-roll. He was a founding
member of two legendary bands, The
Jefferson Airplane and the still-touring
Hot Tuna, a Grammy nominee, a member of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame
and the most in-demand instructor in the galaxy of stars who teach at the Fur
Peace Ranch Guitar Camp that he and his wife operate in picturesque
Southeastern Ohio.
The son of a State Department official, Jorma Kaukonen, Jr.
was born and raised in the Washington D.C. area, with occasional extended trips
outside the United States. He was a devotee of rock-and-roll in the Buddy Holly
era but soon developed a love for the blues and bluegrass that were profuse in
the clubs and concerts in the nation's capitol. He wanted to take up guitar and
make that kind of music himself. Soon he met Jack Casady, the younger brother
of a friend and a guitar player in his own right. Though they could not have
known it, they were beginning a musical partnership that has continues for over
50 years.
Jorma graduated from high school and headed off for Antioch
College in Ohio, where he met Ian Buchanan, who introduced him to the elaborate
fingerstyle fretwork of the Rev. Gary Davis. A work-study program in New York
introduced the increasingly skilled guitarist to that city's burgeoning
folk-blues-bluegrass scene and many of its players. After a break from college
and travel overseas, Jorma moved to California, where he returned to classes
and earned money by teaching guitar. It was at this time, that a banjo-playing
friend invited him to join a rock band, and although Jorma's true passion was
roots music, he decided to join. In fact, the new band The Jefferson Airplane
got its name from Jorma, who was given the joke nickname Blind Thomas Jefferson
Airplane, parodying the names of blues legends.
Jorma invited his old musical partner Jack Casady to come
out to San Francisco and play electric bass for The Jefferson Airplane, and together they created much of The
Jefferson Airplane's signature sound. Jorma and Jack would jam whenever they
could and would sometimes perform sets within sets at Airplane concerts. The
two would often play clubs following Airplane performances. Making a name for
themselves as a duo, they struck a record deal, and Hot Tuna was born. Jorma
left The Jefferson Airplane after the
band's most productive five years, pursuing his full-time job with Hot Tuna.
Over the next three and a half decades Hot Tuna would perform thousands of concerts and release more than
two-dozen records. The musicians who performed with them were many and widely
varied, as were their styles-from acoustic to long and loud electric jams but
never straying far from their musical roots. What is remarkable is that they
have never coasted. Hot Tuna today sounds better than ever, playing with the
energy of their youth and the skill that they have developed over the year.
In addition to his work with Hot Tuna, Jorma has recorded
more than a dozen solo albums on major labels and on his own, beginning with
1974's Quah and continuing with his recent acoustic releases on Red House
Records-2007's Stars in My Crown and
his new CD River of Time, produced by
Larry Campbell and featuring Levon Helm. With experience that would have many
musicians putting together retrospectives.
But performance and recording are only part of the story.
Jorma and his wife Vanessa Lillian have operated one of the worlds most unique
center's for the study of guitar and other instruments. Jorma Kaukonen's Fur
Peace Ranch Guitar Camp is located on 125 acres of fields, woods, hills, and
streams in the Appalachian foothills of Southeastern Ohio. Since it opened in
1998, thousands of musicians whose skills range from basic to highly
accomplished gather for weekends of master instruction offered by Jorma and
other instructors who are leaders in their musical fields.
A multitude of renowned performers make the trek to Ohio to
teach at Fur Peace Ranch and play at the performance hall, Fur Peace Station.
It has become an important stop on the touring circuit for artists who do not
normally play intimate 200-seat venues, bringing such artists as David
Bromberg, Roger McGuinn, Ramblin' Jack Elliott, Warren Haynes, Lee Roy Parnell,
and Chris Hillman. Students, instructors, and visiting artists alike welcome
the peace and tranquility -- as well as the great music and great instruction
-- that Fur Peace Ranch offers. Jorma Kaukonen is constantly looking to take
his musical horizons further still, always moving forward and he is quick to
say that teaching is among the most rewarding aspects of his career. "You just
can't go backward. The arrow of time only goes in one direction."
McCabe's Guitar Shop
3101 Pico Blvd., Santa Monica, CA
310-828-4497
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