Craig Chaquico
Music
- Play
- Play Next
- Add to queue
Songbird
5:20
2,793 plays- Play
- Play Next
- Add to queue
Lua Da Mae
4:51
1,330 plays- Play
- Play Next
- Add to queue
Circus Beach
4:58
1,146 plays- Play
- Play Next
- Add to queue
1,133 plays- Play
- Play Next
- Add to queue
Autumn Blue
4:34
3,405 plays
General Info
-
Genre: Acoustic / Jazz / Pop
Location Mill Valley, California, US
Profile Views: 47446
Last Login: 6/29/2010
Member Since 9/3/2008
Website www.craigchaquico.com
Record Label Higher Octave
Type of Label Major
-
Bio
...... .. ..Get your own ..Abstract MySpace Backgrounds.. at MySpaceLayoutSupport.com.. ..MySpace Layouts.. | ..MySpace Backgrounds.. | ..MySpace Codes.... .......... ....Free MySpace Layouts........ .. .. .. .. .. .. .. -
Members
______________________________________________________ ...... FOLLOW THE SUN REVIEW 2009 It's been a while - since 2004 to be exact - when Craig Chaquico took another step away from the land of smooth and continued to forge his distinctive rock instrumental style on the Midnight Noon CD. The smooth jazz hits he had have generally been rule-breakers - songs like "Cafe Carnival" and "Luminosa" that somehow sneak in the back door and climb the chart with energy, guitar solos and horn sections intact. From the beginning he has stayed far away from the cookie cutter. He started his solo career and his shift into the NAC/Smooth Jazz market by playing rock flavored instrumentals on acoustic rather than electric guitar, a transition that was motivated by the need for some quiet around the house after the birth of his son. Although he made some concessions to radio along the way by adding saxes and hooking up with Paul Brown to add some R&B textures and beats on the Four Corners CD he has pretty much stood in the corner with Jeff Golub as a rock based guitarist in a Benson/Brown-ish world. Hearing Follow The Sun for the first time is almost a sonic shock, especially if you listen to a lot of more traditional smooth jazz CDs and have gotten used to a studio oriented producer driven sound. This one sounds like a live band jamming in a club on a very hot night and has very little in the way of technological bells and whistles. The most noticeable thing here is that he has continued to add more types of guitar sounds, keyboard textures and horn arrangements to the music. There is a strong Latin influence, especially on the first two songs, and the whole album has this loose, open, almost jam-band type vibe. The songs stretch out around a lot of rhythmic and textural shifts with melody lines weaving in and out of stretches of improvisation. These songs don't work on the 10-second intro test either. A lot of them start out with deceptively simple straight melody lines then go off in fascinating directions. "Fantasy In Paradise" opens with a gentle lead line, then a sax solo, then moves into an energized jam. "Circus Beach" does too, with Chaquico shifting from a sitar-like guitar sounds into a semi-distorted lead that follows a horn section, then he goes into this low wah-wah thing behind driving percussion and wraps it up with blasts from a spirited horn section and a run of steel string harmonics like a tease from the early acoustic albums. The opener, “Lua Da Mae,” totally flipped me out. He's doing rock guitar solos over a bachata rhythm, you can actually even do the dance to it. Chaquico's guitar lead on "Azores Lisboa" will remind you of Santana, complete with the Latin-infused background and percussion breaks. "Island Breeze" and "Solar Wind" have the sound he popularized on his early CDs - the more gentle acoustic steel string leads and breezy melodies. There are a lot of showcase moments on this project but his reinvention of Kenny G's "Songbird" is a standout. He has done with this one what fellow rocker Russ Kunkel did with Bill Withers' "Lovely Day" - taken the basic framework of the song and turned it into something entirely different and totally his own that adds a new twist to the song that is infinitely superior to the original. More foreground than background, compelling instead of merely pleasant, with some scary fast guitar runs sneaking in under this arrangement's chilled out groove. . I wish I had a chance to interview him or see a press release before writing this because he has come to a really special place with Follow The Sun. Like most artists over the last few years he has been through another chapter of the record company shuffle, moving from the defunct Narada label to Shanachie. Maybe he saw the radio format shifting toward A/C vocals and felt that he might as well give his fans something they could hold onto and if a radio hit came about that would just be icing on the cake. Whatever the reason, he and long time collabarator Ozzie Ahlers have expanded on the themes that showed up on Shadow and Light and Midnight Noon and pretty much created a genre unto itself with this one. It's not fusion, it's not jam band, it's not smooth jazz. I'd call it Adult Alternative instrumental and shout out that we need a lot more of it because there is a huge segment of the audience that grew up with rock and still considers that their home turf. Over 15 years ago his debut, Acoustic Highway, took off largely due to word of mouth buzz and launched a high profile career that led to Grammy nominations for similarly themed follow-up. Follow The Sun brings a similar vibe to a different era - but an era when we are going back to that same kind of buzz when it comes to finding music. The market is glutted right now and it's hard to dig in and find the standouts, but all this one needs is a few nudges into the light of day and it be on it's way into the hands of a lot of people, hopefully launching a trend toward more adult rock instrumental albums. There is a big audience out there looking for fresh new music that goes beyond the boundaries of smooth and that's what this one is all about! ...... Craig and Todd Nystrom work together to prepare the BEAMZ at Craig's studio in a secret laboratory deep inside a mountain near Ashland OR for the upcoming Follow The Sun to Area 51 tour and the live DVD recoding at Agua Caliente Dec 11. Heads up, all alien hybrids. I have been cleared thru national security to finally bring this to the public in concert from Area 51 and Roswell to our shows now. ...... ...... ...... .. .. ...... -
Influences
After breaking both arms, one thumb, one wrist, one leg, one foot and one ankle in a car crash, the hospital-bound Craig Chaquico, who was only 12 years old at the time, wrote "E-Lizabeth's Song." Named after his doctor, the song would later appear on his Grammy nominated album, "Acoustic Planet." "I wrote the song with one string (the E string) because it was the only song I could reach because my hands were all in casts," Chaquico says. These days, Chaquico, with 10 functional fingers and no casts, continues to strive for success in his musical career. if you go Who: Craig Chaquico; Trine When: 9 p.m. Friday, April 2 Where: CultureWorks, 310 Oak St., Ashland Cover: $15 Call: 541-488-4888 Chaquico, who moved to Southern Oregon about 10 years ago, will perform at 9 p.m. Friday, April 2, at CultureWorks, 310 Oak St., Ashland. The show will be part of CultureWorks grand opening weekend. The former Jefferson Airplane, Jefferson Starship and Starship guitarist can be credited with 18 gold albums recorded over 17 years. When the band dissolved in the 1990s, Chaquico exchanged his electric guitar for an acoustic one. Chaquico's acoustic solo career was met with unexpected success, he says. His first acoustic album, "Acoustic Planet," released in 1994, bumped Yanni out of No. 1 on Billboard's new age albums chart. Since then, he has released nine albums, selling more than a million copies combined. His most recent album, "Follow the Sun," was released in 2009, featuring a remake of Kenny G's "Songbird," which stayed in Billboard's Smooth Jazz Top 15 for about 10 months. Chaquico's performance at CultureWorks will include a demonstration of a new, modern instrument called a Beamz, which is shaped like a harp but uses laser beams to create the music. Chaquico will be preceded by the local, three-piece ensemble Trine, who will perform at 7:30 p.m. Friday. "Playing at CultureWorks means a lot to me because I am from the (Rogue) Valley," Chaquico says. "I love the Valley ... so when CultureWorks started to ask me, and I heard that they were involved locally with growers and artists and organic foods, I wanted to be part of that." CultureWorks, a new all-ages, nonalcoholic venue in Ashland, will feature a variety of live entertainment and visionary art by local and international artists for its opening weekend production. The venue will only be open for performances until it's café officially opens with a full lunch and dinner menu in June The café boasts a variety of organic, vegetarian and raw foods, from salads and pizzas to raw and Mediterranean sample plates. The café also serves healthy shakes and elixirs. CultureWorks manager Chris Decker says about 98 percent of the food served is grown in the bio-region between Sacramento, Calif., and Portland. "It's a really lovely and classy space that is community oriented," Decker says. "The concept is to promote lifestyles of health and sustainability." In the future, CultureWorks plans to offer a variety of music; be available for community meetings and gatherings; implement workshops such as yoga, dance and devotional chanting; and host Ashland Contemporary Theater performances. Admission to Chaquico's performance and other CultureWorks festivities on Friday is $15. Emcee Yogi and DJs David Starfire and Solus are scheduled to perform at 9 p.m. Saturday, April 3. For more information, call 541-488-4888 or visit www.culture-works.net. -
Sounds Like
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
Stream
No recent updates in this category.
Why not...
Photos
Music
-
10 Songs | May 19, 2009
-
12 Songs | Oct 25, 2005
-
10 Songs | Oct 25, 2004
-
14 Songs | Oct 25, 2004
-
10 Songs | Sep 28, 2004
-
1 Song | Aug 16, 2004
Comments
Post a comment...
Bio:
..
Get your own Abstract MySpace Backgrounds at MySpaceLayoutSupport.com
MySpace Layouts | MySpace Backgrounds | MySpace Codes
Member Since:
September 03, 2008Members:
______________________________________________________
FOLLOW THE SUN REVIEW 2009
It's been a while - since 2004 to be exact - when Craig Chaquico took another step away from the land of smooth and continued to forge his distinctive rock instrumental style on the Midnight Noon CD. The smooth jazz hits he had have generally been rule-breakers - songs like "Cafe Carnival" and "Luminosa" that somehow sneak in the back door and climb the chart with energy, guitar solos and horn sections intact. From the beginning he has stayed far away from the cookie cutter. He started his solo career and his shift into the NAC/Smooth Jazz market by playing rock flavored instrumentals on acoustic rather than electric guitar, a transition that was motivated by the need for some quiet around the house after the birth of his son. Although he made some concessions to radio along the way by adding saxes and hooking up with Paul Brown to add some R&B textures and beats on the Four Corners CD he has pretty much stood in the corner with Jeff Golub as a rock based guitarist in a Benson/Brown-ish world.
Hearing Follow The Sun for the first time is almost a sonic shock, especially if you listen to a lot of more traditional smooth jazz CDs and have gotten used to a studio oriented producer driven sound. This one sounds like a live band jamming in a club on a very hot night and has very little in the way of technological bells and whistles. The most noticeable thing here is that he has continued to add more types of guitar sounds, keyboard textures and horn arrangements to the music. There is a strong Latin influence, especially on the first two songs, and the whole album has this loose, open, almost jam-band type vibe. The songs stretch out around a lot of rhythmic and textural shifts with melody lines weaving in and out of stretches of improvisation. These songs don't work on the 10-second intro test either. A lot of them start out with deceptively simple straight melody lines then go off in fascinating directions. "Fantasy In Paradise" opens with a gentle lead line, then a sax solo, then moves into an energized jam. "Circus Beach" does too, with Chaquico shifting from a sitar-like guitar sounds into a semi-distorted lead that follows a horn section, then he goes into this low wah-wah thing behind driving percussion and wraps it up with blasts from a spirited horn section and a run of steel string harmonics like a tease from the early acoustic albums. The opener, “Lua Da Mae,” totally flipped me out. He's doing rock guitar solos over a bachata rhythm, you can actually even do the dance to it. Chaquico's guitar lead on "Azores Lisboa" will remind you of Santana, complete with the Latin-infused background and percussion breaks. "Island Breeze" and "Solar Wind" have the sound he popularized on his early CDs - the more gentle acoustic steel string leads and breezy melodies.
There are a lot of showcase moments on this project but his reinvention of Kenny G's "Songbird" is a standout. He has done with this one what fellow rocker Russ Kunkel did with Bill Withers' "Lovely Day" - taken the basic framework of the song and turned it into something entirely different and totally his own that adds a new twist to the song that is infinitely superior to the original. More foreground than background, compelling instead of merely pleasant, with some scary fast guitar runs sneaking in under this arrangement's chilled out groove. .
I wish I had a chance to interview him or see a press release before writing this because he has come to a really special place with Follow The Sun. Like most artists over the last few years he has been through another chapter of the record company shuffle, moving from the defunct Narada label to Shanachie. Maybe he saw the radio format shifting toward A/C vocals and felt that he might as well give his fans something they could hold onto and if a radio hit came about that would just be icing on the cake. Whatever the reason, he and long time collabarator Ozzie Ahlers have expanded on the themes that showed up on Shadow and Light and Midnight Noon and pretty much created a genre unto itself with this one. It's not fusion, it's not jam band, it's not smooth jazz. I'd call it Adult Alternative instrumental and shout out that we need a lot more of it because there is a huge segment of the audience that grew up with rock and still considers that their home turf. Over 15 years ago his debut, Acoustic Highway, took off largely due to word of mouth buzz and launched a high profile career that led to Grammy nominations for similarly themed follow-up. Follow The Sun brings a similar vibe to a different era - but an era when we are going back to that same kind of buzz when it comes to finding music. The market is glutted right now and it's hard to dig in and find the standouts, but all this one needs is a few nudges into the light of day and it be on it's way into the hands of a lot of people, hopefully launching a trend toward more adult rock instrumental albums. There is a big audience out there looking for fresh new music that goes beyond the boundaries of smooth and that's what this one is all about!
Craig and Todd Nystrom work together to prepare the BEAMZ at Craig's studio in a secret laboratory deep inside a mountain near Ashland OR for the upcoming Follow The Sun to Area 51 tour and the live DVD recoding at Agua Caliente Dec 11.
Heads up, all alien hybrids.
I have been cleared thru national security to finally bring this to the public in concert from Area 51 and Roswell to our shows now.
..
..

Influences:
After breaking both arms, one thumb, one wrist, one leg, one foot and one ankle in a car crash, the hospital-bound Craig Chaquico, who was only 12 years old at the time, wrote "E-Lizabeth's Song." Named after his doctor, the song would later appear on his Grammy nominated album, "Acoustic Planet." "I wrote the song with one string (the E string) because it was the only song I could reach because my hands were all in casts," Chaquico says. These days, Chaquico, with 10 functional fingers and no casts, continues to strive for success in his musical career. if you go Who: Craig Chaquico; Trine When: 9 p.m. Friday, April 2 Where: CultureWorks, 310 Oak St., Ashland Cover: $15 Call: 541-488-4888 Chaquico, who moved to Southern Oregon about 10 years ago, will perform at 9 p.m. Friday, April 2, at CultureWorks, 310 Oak St., Ashland. The show will be part of CultureWorks grand opening weekend. The former Jefferson Airplane, Jefferson Starship and Starship guitarist can be credited with 18 gold albums recorded over 17 years. When the band dissolved in the 1990s, Chaquico exchanged his electric guitar for an acoustic one. Chaquico's acoustic solo career was met with unexpected success, he says. His first acoustic album, "Acoustic Planet," released in 1994, bumped Yanni out of No. 1 on Billboard's new age albums chart. Since then, he has released nine albums, selling more than a million copies combined. His most recent album, "Follow the Sun," was released in 2009, featuring a remake of Kenny G's "Songbird," which stayed in Billboard's Smooth Jazz Top 15 for about 10 months. Chaquico's performance at CultureWorks will include a demonstration of a new, modern instrument called a Beamz, which is shaped like a harp but uses laser beams to create the music. Chaquico will be preceded by the local, three-piece ensemble Trine, who will perform at 7:30 p.m. Friday. "Playing at CultureWorks means a lot to me because I am from the (Rogue) Valley," Chaquico says. "I love the Valley ... so when CultureWorks started to ask me, and I heard that they were involved locally with growers and artists and organic foods, I wanted to be part of that." CultureWorks, a new all-ages, nonalcoholic venue in Ashland, will feature a variety of live entertainment and visionary art by local and international artists for its opening weekend production. The venue will only be open for performances until it's café officially opens with a full lunch and dinner menu in June The café boasts a variety of organic, vegetarian and raw foods, from salads and pizzas to raw and Mediterranean sample plates. The café also serves healthy shakes and elixirs. CultureWorks manager Chris Decker says about 98 percent of the food served is grown in the bio-region between Sacramento, Calif., and Portland. "It's a really lovely and classy space that is community oriented," Decker says. "The concept is to promote lifestyles of health and sustainability." In the future, CultureWorks plans to offer a variety of music; be available for community meetings and gatherings; implement workshops such as yoga, dance and devotional chanting; and host Ashland Contemporary Theater performances. Admission to Chaquico's performance and other CultureWorks festivities on Friday is $15. Emcee Yogi and DJs David Starfire and Solus are scheduled to perform at 9 p.m. Saturday, April 3. For more information, call 541-488-4888 or visit www.culture-works.net.Sounds Like:
Record Label:
Higher OctaveShows & Events
No upcoming shows/events
Top Friends (28)
- Rolf Hartley
- Leanne
- ~ARIZONA HEAT~
- Tiziana Rivale
- Patricia
- Tobi Lee Page
- Trixy
- midnight butterfly
- Shari Kenlo Weinstein
- Lisa Chapman~Goulston
- Liz
- Shelley Arce
- Lonna Starr
- Sheila G
- ~Toni~
- Kay
- Alicia Cocco
- CCAIN
- mimi
- Carmen Milagro
- Stacey
- Maureen Sullivan
- Sara
- Tara
- Lisa L
- Rob Carbone
- Tom Anderson
- Janis


































