Biografía - Joe Satriani (www.satriani.8m.net)


(La biografía está en inglés, aún está siendo traducida)

As electronic music hits ever-higher peaks in the current market, the ability to create music has fallen into the hands of anyone with enough cash for a computer and sufficient time to learn how to run the latest music software. And as the scene floods with disk after disk of techno dreck, a question burns quietly among true music fans: What would happen if an actual musician got his/her hands on some of this highfalutin' gear? Would they produce a record with a crafty modernist sensibility and the heart and skill of a bona fide player? 
Engines of Creation can be said to mark a startling new phase of creativity for Joe Satriani, one of the most celebrated and accomplished guitar players of the last decade. The record is diversely cutting-edge, riddled with musical riddles and satisfying answers, laced with stunning sonic handiwork and astounding melodic assaults. At first listen, you may not realize this was a record made by a guitar player--but once you've heard the guitar, you'll most certainly know who's playing it. 
Yet Engines of Creation also simply represents a new level of sonic achievement for an artist who has for years been employing electronic textures, severely altered guitar tones and jump-cut dynamic and compositional gestures. The disk is as much a snapshot of where that evolution has taken him and his listeners as it is, only coincidentally, a musical statement which speaks directly to the current state of electronica, ambient, drum 'n' bass, and hip-hop. Since the beginning of his recording career, Satriani has been a searching producer and eccentric composer--one who, only coincidentally, happened to be a monstrously talented guitarist as well. His first album, a ground-breaking self-titled white-label job sold out the trunk of his car, was created entirely by altering, re-tuning, battering and otherwise manipulating the guitar in the pursuit of utterly new and striking sounds. 


And for all its wildness and scope, Engines of Creation is the result of a meticulous effort to again tap into those artistic areas, rather than simply to superimpose a batch of virtuoso guitar performances onto modernized rhythm tracks. The burning "Devil's Slide" is a classic Satriani structure underpinned by forward-thinking grooves and sinister harmonies, while cuts like "Borg Sex" and "Slow and Easy" radically morph any idea about what guitar melodies should sound like. 
With the exception of portions of the single "Until We Say Good-bye," which features bass work by noted guitarist Pat Thrall and the drumming of "Late Show with David Letterman" mainstay Anton Fig under the production eye of Kevin Shirley (Aerosmith, Black Crowes), all the Engines tracks were recorded by Satriani and his co-producer Eric Caudieux. Caudieux is best know for his expert digital editing and programming work alongside legendary producer Trevor Horn (Seal, Rod Stewart); and for his extensive editing of the recent Guns N' Roses live anthology. Engines of Creation grew from Satriani's experimental recording sessions in the wake of his recent band project Crystal Planet. Taking the rare opportunity to compose at a keyboard in his home studio, and entranced with such recent music as Crystal Method's Vegas album, the guitarist wrote a group of tunes which he gradually honed during breaks between tours and collected into malleable MIDI files. 


When enough friends and colleagues heard the material and insisted that he make the tracks into a proper album rather than an obscure side project, the guitarist acquiesced and turned to Caudieux for production assistance. Over a period of several months at a rented house in Laurel Canyon, Engines of Creation emerged through intensive sessions with nothing on hand but keyboards, guitars, effects and computers. 
The result is a heaping helping of sound collage, jarring leaps and mind-altering segues, ripped apart by sudden percussive blasts and liquid flurries of notes. Because of the conveniences afforded by the computer medium, lapses of near-silence can erupt into passages of huge orchestral splendor or ripping space-guitar, while synth pads and chugging basslines move in and out of the music seamlessly It's music equally at home on the dance floor or coming through headphones in the lava-lamp glow of the smoking room. 
Though thoroughly and aggressively rooted in topical tones and modern production, Engines of Creation recognizes and holds fast to Satriani tradition; "The Power Cosmic" contains many of the melodic filigrees and displays of warped fretboard virtuosity that landed the guitarist on magazine covers worldwide, while the coda of the bluesy "Champagne?" is a solo treatment of suspended chords as popularized by Keith Richards, the guitarist Satriani temporarily replaced as Mick Jagger's foil when the Rolling Stones frontman embarked on his first solo tour in 1988. 

At that time, Satriani was riding the first peak in his long career, having just released the instrumental, highly experimental Surfing with the Alien and watching it ascend the pop charts to eventually sell over two million copies worldwide. In just a short time, he was a long way from Carle Place, Long Island, where as a local guitar hero he was visited by a younger schoolmate named Steve Vai, who showed up at his house with a five-dollar guitar in search of lessons. After an inspired period of mentoring-- Joe's student roster would soon include jazz upstart Charlie Hunter, Metallica's Kirk Hammett, Primus' Larry LaLonde and many others-- Vai returned the favor by getting Satriani signed to his record label, beginning a whirlwind of global acclaim and a series of gold and platinum albums, including Flying In A Blue Dream, The Extremist, and Time Machine. 
The years since have seen Satriani mount similar challenges and scale new heights: countless readers' poll awards from magazines, numerous Grammy nominations and sold-out cross-continental tours. His versatility attracted a recent but politely declined invitation to join legendary heavy metal pioneers Deep Purple, with whom he toured in the '90s as a replacement for Ritchie Blackmore. Satriani also masterminded the phenomenal G3 tours, which brought to renewed worldwide attention the talents of guitar artists as varied as Steve Vai, Michael Schenker, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Robert Fripp, Eric Johnson and many others. 
Featuring nothing but computer-generated rhythms, timbres and his six-string, Engines of Creation is in some respects a throwback to Satriani's first solo recording, a personal journey through music and sonic mayhem now combined with a raging artistic desire to harness the technology that's developed so radically over the intervening decade. It's a complex blend, but remains Satriani, pure and simple.


Storming onto the music scene nearly a decade ago, Joe Satriani has been widely recognized as the archetypal post-modern hero. Since his emergence in 1986 with a self-released, self-titled debut album, Joe has become the most recognizable guitar voice of his time, earning his place alongside the great masters of rock guitar. As an instrumental artist in a pop-dominated field, Satriani's accomplishments are even more remarkable: He is perhaps the most successful rock instrumentalist in recent history, selling millions of records and consistently packing concert halls - yet always preserving a strong musical vision, as well as the respect of fellow musicians and forward-thinking music fans worldwide. Satriani's gift is creating highly evolved instrumental music, using the structure of popular standard songs that allows listeners to latch onto tuneful melodies before being dazzled by his acclaimed musicianship. His hallmarks are a warm, bluesy tone and delicate phrasing, combined with the bursts of superhuman technical facility which upped the ante well beyond the standards set by generations of great rock musicians before him. Satriani's latest disc, Crystal Planet - his first studio album for Epic Records - reunites the guitarist with G3 Live in Concert producer Mike Fraser, and finds the artist at a new peak of inspiration. From the pounding crunch and sizzling harmonics of "Up in the Sky," to the delicate strains of the solo closer "ZZ's Song," Crystal Planet ranks with Satriani's most adventurous and accessible discs. Crystal Planet teams Satriani with bassist Stuart Hamm and drummer Jeff Campitelli, two longtime collaborators who lend rich support to the album's striking variety of tunes. Satriani unleashes his heralded sounds and techniques throughout the album, reaching apocalyptic extremes on the title track and "Time." Typically, his soloing never disappoints, and on such new pieces as "Trundumbalind" and "With Jupiter in Mind," he hits new heights of stun-guitar artistry. Tunes like the moody "A Piece of Liquid" conjure cooler, more subdued atmospheres which balance the record's intensity. Elsewhere on the album, Satriani revisits the familiar sound that demanded the attention of millions of pop fans: "A Train of Angles" creates the joyous pop mood heard in such classic Satriani radio hits as "Summer Song." On new tunes like "Raspberry Jam Delta-V," the melodies escalate into passages so stunning, it's difficult to believe they were performed with just two hands on a single instrument. Joe Satriani was born in Westbury, New York, and began playing guitar at age 14. By 1971, he was teaching guitar to others, one of his students being Steve Vai. In 1974, Joe studied with two modern jazz masters, guitarist Billy Bauer and pianist/composer Lennie Tristano; four years later, he moved to Berkeley, California, where he began a 10-year guitar teaching career with students including David Bryson (Counting Crows), Kirk Hammett (Metallica), Larry LaLonde (Primus), and Charlie Hunter, among others. In 1984, Joe released a self-titled five-song EP on his own Rubina label, and the following year completed his first full-length album Not Of This Earth, which was financed on a credit card and released in 1986 on Relativity Records. In October 1987, Relativity released Satriani's second album Surfing With The Alien.

The record became a global phenomenon, going platinum with sales of over a million copies in the U.S. alone and landing Satriani's face on the covers of such magazines as Guitar Player, Musician, Guitar World, and dozens of other international publications. Surfing With The Alien was a landmark release which showcased the guitarist's stunning array of composing, playing , and producing talents. Consequently and deservedly, it became the most successful instrumental rock record since Jeff Beck's Wired. Each subsequent Satriani release - including Flying In A Blue Dream, The Extremist, Time Machine and the recent Joe Satriani, which was produced by the legendary Glyn Johns - has drawn great commercial and critical attention. The same seems certain to be the case with Crystal Planet, and it's not just Joe's fans who have been moved by his unique tone and feel: Players from all walks of musical life have been attracted to Satriani's work. After sitting in with Joe's band at New York's Bottom Line, Mick Jagger recruited Joe in 1988 as lead guitarist for the singer's very first tour apart from the Rolling Stones. Deep Purple tapped into Satriani's mastery when he assumed lead guitar position in the band for its 1994 tours of Europe and Japan. In 1996, the G3 Tour - featuring Joe Satriani, Steve Vai, and Eric Johnson - played 24 dates to some 90,000 fans across North America, a tour documented on the G3 Live In Concert album and home video (both Epic). In 1997, Joe united with jazz guitar great Pat Martino to record two tracks, "Ellipsis" and "Never and After," for Martino's acclaimed all-star collection All Sides Now (Blue Note); and enlisted in a second G3 summer tour, this one co-starring Steve Vai, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, and Robert Fripp. With its cunning marriage of well-structured songs, challenging sonic surprises, moody moments and breathtaking guitar playing, Crystal Planet has all the marks of a great Joe Satriani disc. After a decade of ground breaking work, this is one musician still willing to push the edge of conventional rock beyond what's come before.

 

Cronología de Joe Satriani

15 de julio de 1956
Joe Satriani nace en Westbury, New York
1970 Consigue su primer guitarra

1971
Joe enseña guitarra por los próximos tres años en Westbury, Long Island (New York) Steve Vai es uno de sus primeros estudiantes.

Septiembre de 1972
El profesor de la escuela de música Bill Wescott introduce a joe la teoría Pitch Axis.

1974
Autoenseñansa por los últimos cuatro años, Joe toma lesiones por tres semanas con Billy Bauer en Glen Cove, New York. El mismo año estudia con Lennie Tristano en Queens, New York, por dos meses.

1978
Comienza una esneñansa limitada en Second Hand Guitars en Berkeley, California; algunos de sus alumnos fueron David Bryson (Counting Crows), Kirk Hammet (Metallica), Charlie Hunter, Larry LaLonde (Primus), Alex Skolnick y otros.

1979
Forma la banda de pop The Squares en San Francisco con Jeff Campitelli en bateria y Andy Milton en el bajo.

1984
Graba un EP de 5 canciones en el sello independiente que él llamó Rubina (Por su esposa). El album contiene guitarra exclusivamente.

1985
Completa los temas para Not Of This Earth, financiando el album con tarjeta de crédito, introducido a Relativity Records por Steve Vai.

Septiembre 1986
Gira con el pop-rocker Greg Kihn mientras aguarda una respuesta de Relativity Records.

Noviembre 1986
Quince meses después de que fue grabado, "Not Of This Earth" es producido por Relativity Records.

Diciembre 1986
Contratado por Relativity Records, Joe pone demos de canciones que aparecerán en "Surfing With The Alien".

Octubre 1987
"Surfing With The Alien" es producido y realizado (Rapidamente consigue disco de oro y platino).

Febrero 1988
En la fuerza de "Surfing with the Alien", Relativity da una segunda camada de "Not of this earth" (la primera se vendió completamente); y como el arte original se perdió, una nueva tapa adornó la segunda tanda de Not of this earth. Febrero-Marzo, Septiembre-Octubre 1988 Joe interrumpe su propia gira dos veces para ir de gira con Mick Jagger.

11 de junio, 1988
Durante la gira de Surfing with the alien, tres temas en vivo son grabados para el EP en vivo titulado "Dreaming #11" (un corte de estudio, "The Crush of Love" originalmente grabado por un guitarrista, completa el paquete.)

Noviembre 1988
Dreaming #11 es realizado (Obtiene disco de oro y consigue la segunda nominación de Joe para un premio Grammy)

Octubre 1989
"Flying in a blue dream" es realizado (Joe recibe su tercera nominación al Grammy y el album vende 750.000 unidades), e incluye por primera vez canciones cantadas por Joe siendo 6 de 18.

Julio 1992
Luego de dos intensos años de componer y grabar, The Extremist es grabado (inmediatamente obtiene disco de oro, debuta en "24 on Billboard" y obtiene otra nominación al Grammy); contiene el hit "Summer Song", que luego fue usada en un comercial de Walkman de Sony.

Octubre 1993
El doble CD "Time Machine" es realizado, el disco uno contiene temas con estilos extranjeros como "Banana Mango", ensanchando el prestigio de Joe Satriani, más cuatro del EP orignal Joe Satriani y tres nuevos cortes, el disco dos contiene 14 temas en vivo.

Octubre 1994
Time Machine obtiene disco de oro, y Joe comienza su séptimo album.

Octubre 11,1995
Joe Satriani realiza su séptimo album, titulado "Joe Satriani", producido por Glyn Johns. (You're) My World fue nominada para un Grammy.

Octubre 1996
El G3 tur, incluyendo a Joe Satriani, Steve Vai y Eric Johnson, tocó en 24 conciertos para 90.000 fans en Norte America.

Mayo 1997
Otro G3, incluyendo a Joe Satriani, Steve Vai, y Adrian Legg, vista Europa.

Junio 1997
"G3 Live In Concert" CD y video son realizados.

Junio 15, 1997
G3 incluyendo a Joe Satriani, Steve Vai, Kenny Wayne Shephard, y Robert Fripp, hace gira por U.S.A..

1998
Joe Satriani saca a la luz su octavo disco "Crystal Planet".

2000
Joe Satriani graba con Erix Candeaux su noveno album "Engines of Creation"

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