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Born
in Padova, Italy, but later relocating to Los Angeles, Enrico Crivellaro
has been able to prove that passion and talent can transcend political
and cultural borders, becoming a well-respected, upcoming figure in the
international blues scene. His versatility in different musical genres
has allowed him to build an extraordinary experience, playing all over
the world with blues, rock, jazz and country bands.
He began to play the guitar at a young age, soon showing a serious
interest in the blues and in the various forms of traditional American
music, such as jazz, swing, zydeco, country, gospel. Still in his teens
he formed his own trio, with which he began to perform professionally
all around Italy, averaging over twenty gigs per month--while in the
meantime he was taking lessons (and inspiration) from guitar great Tolo
Marton.
A scholarship, obtained through a demo tape, helped him become a student
at the National Guitar Workshop in Connecticut, USA, where he had the
opportunity to take classes with some of the masters of blues
guitar--Ronnie Earl, Duke Robillard,
Kenny Neal, Paul Rishell, Roy Bookbinder, John Jackson. Interestingly,
one of his classmates and friends--at the time only fourteen years old
and already a prodigy--was one of today’s guitar sensations, Sean
Costello.
The
experience at the Guitar Workshop and the encouragement of his teachers,
particularly Earl and Robillard, convinced Enrico to take the big step
and relocate to Boston. There he soon met Muddy Waters’ legendary
guitarist, Luther “Guitar Jr.” Johnson, with whom he played in several
occasions; he also enjoyed Boston’s stimulating music environment,
jamming frequently with some of New England’s best known blues and jazz
players, including Broadcasters’ pianist/organist Bruce Katz and drummer
Per Hanson. He also teamed up with a young local harmonica player, Jason
Ricci, who had lived in the Deep South and had been a member of Junior
Kimbrough and his Soul Blues Boys. The friendship was to grow very
significant for Crivellaro: in fact, Ricci became his guide in
Mississippi, introducing him to the great local bluesmen--Junior
Kimbrough, T-Model Ford, R.L. Burnside. The two ended up recording
together in Memphis, with two very special drummers: Junior’s son Kinney
Kimbrough, and Magic Sam and Earl Hooker’s band mate Bobby Little.
After the period in Boston, Enrico decided to move to the milder climate
of Los Angeles. Just two months later he scored second ranking in a
state competition organized by Fender Guitars, which awarded him with an
invitation to perform at the prestigious 1997 Fender Catalina Island
Blues Festival, opening for Jimmie
Vaughan. In addition, his relocation to California gave him the
chance to play, tour and record with some of the West Coast’s best blues
bands, including the James Harman
Band, the Janiva Magness Band, the Freddie Brooks Band, Lynwood
Slim, and the late Lester Butler’s incredible punk-rock-blues unit
called “13”. With all of these bands Enrico has toured the United States
and Europe extensively, playing some of the most renowned club and
festival stages, often sharing the bill with or opening shows for the
greatest names in the business--John
Lee Hooker, B.B. King, Mose
Allison, Anson Funderburgh, Bill Wyman,
Buddy Guy, Johnny Winter, John
Mayall. He also plays regularly with a myriad of top-notch artists, such
as singer and Freddie King’s bass
player Finis Tasby, John Lee Hooker’s
organist Deacon Jones, guitarists Junior Watson,
Alex Schultz, Kirk “Eli” Fletcher,
Kid Ramos, Rick Holmstrom, Abu Talib (aka Freddie Robinson), Roy
“Guitar” Gaines, Cal Green, Johnny Turner, and with Los Angeles’
legendary bluesman J.J. “Bad Boy” Jones. Among his best appearances can
be counted the 1999 Long Beach Blues Festival, where he performed with
Chicago harp player Sugar Blue, and was invited to jam with Al Green’s
band. He also recalls fondly a jam with a drunk Roger Clinton, brother
of President Bill.
In Los Angeles, Enrico’s mature knowledge of 1940’s jazz guitar styles
was recognized by the swing-rock band Royal Crown Revue, renowned for
being featured in the movie “The Mask.” The band took him to Australia
for a tour that included a performance at the Sydney 2000 Paralympics
Games, and the participation at the Livid Festival in Brisbane, in front
of 80,000 spectators and along with Lou Reed, The Cure, Green Day, No
Doubt and several other rock bands.
Despite the difficulties induced by continuous touring, Enrico found the
time to complete his studies and graduate at University of California
Los Angeles (UCLA). His interest in African-American culture, of which
music is undeniably a building block, allowed him to actualize the dream
to study with the director of the UCLA Jazz Department, his long-time
jazz guitar hero Kenny Burrell. Although Enrico doesn’t consider himself
a true jazz-bebop player, it is obvious that his refined rhythm playing
(so appreciated by blues singers and harmonica players!) displays echoes
of Burrell, as well as of those musicians who combine the sophistication
of jazz with the funkiness of blues--such as pianists Gene Harris and
Les McCann, organist Jimmy McGriff, and guitarists
T-Bone Walker and George Benson. The jazz
influence in his playing has definitely been stimulated by the lessons
that he took from George Benson’s bandmate Phil Upchurch, and by the
seminar that he attended with virtuoso Robben Ford.
Enrico Crivellaro is a quite articulate and elegant player, who not only
knows in detail several musical styles, but who also tries to smooth off
the boundaries between them. His attempt is to make music that is
interesting rather than conceptual, and that doesn’t forget the two
basic rules of blues and Black Music: groove and dynamics. A quick look
at some of Enrico’s regular or occasional jam partners can confirm that
his guitar playing branches out in hundreds of, often unexpected,
directions: from blues players, like Little Charlie and the Nightcats or
Junior Watson, to rockers such as Tracy Guns and Teddy Andreas of
Guns’n’Roses and L.A. Guns, Eric Singer (drummer for Kiss), and Peter
Tork of The Monkees; from jumping jazz organists like Red Young (Joan
Armatrading), Oscar Marchioni, Mike Finnigan (Jimi
Hendrix, Taj Mahal), to country pickers Al Bruno (Chet Atkins),
Marty Rifkin (Bruce Springsteen), or James Intveld; from lions of the
Doo-Wop such as Eddie Daniels of The Platters or Ice-T backing singers
The Real Seductions, to Brazilian bossa nova guitarist Beto di Franco
and to zydeco accordion players like Jimmy Thibodeaux.
No matter what kind of music he is playing--could it be gospel or
fusion--Enrico Crivellaro likes to be in the context, yet without
forgetting that the roots are in the blues.
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