Greg Jarvis (musician): Difference between revisions
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=== Musical History === |
=== Musical History === |
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Prior to the [[Flowers of Hell]], Jarvis played on Prague’s underground music scene in the 90s,<ref name=velvet>[http://mattwelch.com/prognosis/velvetmag.html "Prague’s Music Scene"] March 20, 1994, ''Velvet Magazine'', By Matt Welch</ref> in Moscow rockabilly group Merzky Beat,<ref name=putin /> and in The Red Stripes in the early 2000s, a London based comedy-reggae [[White Stripes]] tribute act he formed with drummer Guri Hummelsund.<ref>[http://ww w.bbc.co.uk/berkshire/content/articles/2005/03/31/club_v_review_feature.shtml "Review Club Velocity"] March 25, 2005, By Emma Hughes, ''BBC Online''</ref><ref>[http://www.londonnet.co.uk/ln/out/music/rockpop_swearingatmotorists.html "LondonNet Gig Review"] November 07, 2004, By Steve Marshall, ''LondonNet''</ref> "We stopped (The Red Stripes) when it started getting crazy big with [[John Peel|Peel]], the [[NME]], [[BBC6]], [[The Face (magazine)|The Face]], [[Duran Duran]] and some peripheral members of [[The Clash]] and [[The Sex Pistols]] getting into it. We signed to a Universal imprint, met [[The Wailers]] in a medieval fortress in Serbia, shot a video in Africa and felt we had to kill it before we became too known for it," Jarvis said looking back in a 2015 Irish interview.<ref name=golden>[https://www.goldenplec.com/featured/the-flowers-of-hell-interview/ "Flowers Of Hell Interview"]. September 10, 2015, ''Golden Plec'', By Justin McDaid</ref> |
Prior to the [[Flowers of Hell]], Jarvis played on Prague’s underground music scene in the 90s,<ref name=velvet>[http://mattwelch.com/prognosis/velvetmag.html "Prague’s Music Scene"] March 20, 1994, ''Velvet Magazine'', By Matt Welch</ref> in Moscow rockabilly group Merzky Beat,<ref name=putin /> and in The Red Stripes in the early 2000s, a London based comedy-reggae [[White Stripes]] tribute act he formed with drummer Guri Hummelsund.<ref>[http://ww w.bbc.co.uk/berkshire/content/articles/2005/03/31/club_v_review_feature.shtml "Review Club Velocity"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130712134639/http://ww/ |date=12 July 2013 }} March 25, 2005, By Emma Hughes, ''BBC Online''</ref><ref>[http://www.londonnet.co.uk/ln/out/music/rockpop_swearingatmotorists.html "LondonNet Gig Review"] November 07, 2004, By Steve Marshall, ''LondonNet''</ref> "We stopped (The Red Stripes) when it started getting crazy big with [[John Peel|Peel]], the [[NME]], [[BBC6]], [[The Face (magazine)|The Face]], [[Duran Duran]] and some peripheral members of [[The Clash]] and [[The Sex Pistols]] getting into it. We signed to a Universal imprint, met [[The Wailers]] in a medieval fortress in Serbia, shot a video in Africa and felt we had to kill it before we became too known for it," Jarvis said looking back in a 2015 Irish interview.<ref name=golden>[https://www.goldenplec.com/featured/the-flowers-of-hell-interview/ "Flowers Of Hell Interview"]. September 10, 2015, ''Golden Plec'', By Justin McDaid</ref> |
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Jarvis produced and performed on an album of [[Northern Soul]] covers and originals by Emma Wilkinson, whom he managed after she won the 2001 [[Stars In Their Eyes]] TV talent series performing [[Dusty Springfield]]’s ‘[[Son Of A Preacher Man]]’.<ref>[http://www.thefreelibrary.com/The+great+pretender%3B+With+reality+TV+and+talent+shows,+15+minutes+of...-a085072492 "The great pretender; With reality TV and talent shows, 15 minutes of fame is ever more attainable - but what happens when the show is over?"]. April 25, 2002, ''Coventry Evening Telegraph''</ref> |
Jarvis produced and performed on an album of [[Northern Soul]] covers and originals by Emma Wilkinson, whom he managed after she won the 2001 [[Stars In Their Eyes]] TV talent series performing [[Dusty Springfield]]’s ‘[[Son Of A Preacher Man]]’.<ref>[http://www.thefreelibrary.com/The+great+pretender%3B+With+reality+TV+and+talent+shows,+15+minutes+of...-a085072492 "The great pretender; With reality TV and talent shows, 15 minutes of fame is ever more attainable - but what happens when the show is over?"]. April 25, 2002, ''Coventry Evening Telegraph''</ref> |
Revision as of 20:10, 23 October 2017
Greg Jarvis | |
---|---|
Born | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Genres | Space rock, post-rock, classical, experimental music, rockabilly, northern soul, reggae |
Occupation(s) | Musician, record executive, professor |
Instrument(s) | Guitar, keyboards |
Years active | 1990s–present |
Labels | Optical Sounds, Earworm Records, Shifty Disco, Benbecula, Universal Music, BMG |
Greg Jarvis is a Toronto-born musician and composer best known for his work leading the orchestral rock group the Flowers Of Hell.[1][2][3][4] Jarvis’s compositions are largely informed by timbre-to-shape synesthesia, a neurological condition which causes him to see all sounds as layers of three dimensional shapes.[5][6][7][8]
Biography
Early life
Jarvis was raised in Toronto, Ontario where he was a Royal Canadian Air Cadet band leader and served briefly in the Canadian Army reserve forces.[9]
Career
Jarvis worked in marketing in the 1990s at the major label BMG in Toronto, Prague, Moscow, and Warsaw, and later for Universal International in London,[10] handling acts including Nirvana,[11][12] David Bowie, Patti Smith, Dolly Parton, Beck, Sonic Youth, Aerosmith, Malcolm McLaren, KISS, Deep Purple, and The Moody Blues, along with Death In Vegas, Spectrum and Spiritualized with whose members he would later collaborate as an artist.[13][14] Jarvis also worked as an executive at the BBC’s Top Of The Pops[10][13][14] where he conducted interviews with such acts as the Spice Girls, Queen, Alice Cooper, Depeche Mode, and Oasis.[15]
He is currently a professor at Durham College’s Media, Art, & Design School where he teaches about music history and the music industry.[10][14] Previously he worked as a lecturer in the United Kingdom at London Metropolitan University, and Buckinghamshire New University.[13][14]
He writes music related articles for the Huffington Post.[10]
Musical History
Prior to the Flowers of Hell, Jarvis played on Prague’s underground music scene in the 90s,[11] in Moscow rockabilly group Merzky Beat,[9] and in The Red Stripes in the early 2000s, a London based comedy-reggae White Stripes tribute act he formed with drummer Guri Hummelsund.[16][17] "We stopped (The Red Stripes) when it started getting crazy big with Peel, the NME, BBC6, The Face, Duran Duran and some peripheral members of The Clash and The Sex Pistols getting into it. We signed to a Universal imprint, met The Wailers in a medieval fortress in Serbia, shot a video in Africa and felt we had to kill it before we became too known for it," Jarvis said looking back in a 2015 Irish interview.[18]
Jarvis produced and performed on an album of Northern Soul covers and originals by Emma Wilkinson, whom he managed after she won the 2001 Stars In Their Eyes TV talent series performing Dusty Springfield’s ‘Son Of A Preacher Man’.[19]
He founded the Flowers of Hell in London, England in 2002 as a studio project, growing it into a live group in 2005 recruiting bandmates Abi Fry (later of British Sea Power and Bat For Lashes), Guri Hummelsund, Ruth Barlow, Steve Head, and Owen James.[20] He returned to Canada in 2007 and formed another branch of the group, expanding its line up to encompass musicians living in both Toronto and London.[8] He composes many of the pieces performed by the band,[21][22] and is its main guitarist.
Highlights of the group’s career include collaborating with members of their major influence Spacemen 3, Lou Reed of the Velvet Underground praising their artistry and commencing his final radio show by playing three of the groups recordings in a row,[23] being asked by Kevin Shields to open for My Bloody Valentine during the band’s 2008 reunion,[24][25] and NASA’s mission control staff declaring their enjoyment of the group’s ‘space rock’ with the shuttle launch team syncing footage of a Discovery mission to the Flowers Of Hell’s ‘Sympathy For Vengeance’.[26]
Synesthesia
Jarvis has auditory-visual synesthesia which causes him to see all sounds as abstract shapes surrounding him.[27] In 2013 he founded the Canadian Synesthesia Association as a way of meeting other synethetes and raising awareness of synesthesia.[28][29][30][31]
Education
Jarvis did summer studies under the octogenarian beat writer Bobbie Louise Hawkins at The Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics in Boulder, Colorado.[32][33]
He also completed a master of arts in higher education teaching for which his thesis focused on how the mind processes music and holds an Arts & Media MBA.[13][14]
Personal life
In 2010, Jarvis was chased by a group of protesters in West Papua New Guinea after photographing their activities. He played a ukulele to convince rebel soldiers from the Organisasi Papua Merdeka that he was a musician, not a government spy.[34][35][36]
He crossed the Atlantic Ocean as a lone passenger on a working cargo freighter in 2013, intending to complete the mixing of the Flowers Of Hell’s ‘Symphony No.1’ at sea.[18]
References
- ^ "Sound Advice: O by The Flowers of Hell". Torontoist. By Alex Nino Gheciu
- ^ Anon. (9 April 2009). "Hype Monitor: Brajo, Avi Buffalo, Flowers Of Hell". Rolling Stone. Rolling Stone. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
{{cite news}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help) - ^ O'Keefe, Niall (3 April 2009). "Album Review: The Flowers Of Hell, Come Hell Or High Water". NME. NME. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
- ^ Raber, Rebecca (28 July 2010). "The Flowers Of Hell, Come Hell Or High Water". Pitchfork.com. Pitchfork.com. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
- ^ The National - Blended Senses (Television news). Canada: CBC. 30 July 2013.
- ^ Everett-Green, Robert (3 December 2010). "For Musician With Synaethesia, The Cello Can Sound Too Fury. Or Too Red". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
- ^ "If You Could Hear A Book, This Is How It Would Look". The Millions. Buzz Poole, January 12, 2012
- ^ a b "The Flowers of Hell". Drowned in Sound by Dom Gourlay November 16th, 2010
- ^ a b "Westerners Don’t Get That Russia Needs Putin". Huffington Post, February 10, 2014
- ^ a b c d "From vinyl to torrents - Who buys music anymore?" Water Buffalo Magazine By Cody Orme
- ^ a b "Prague’s Music Scene" March 20, 1994, Velvet Magazine, By Matt Welch
- ^ "20 Years Ago I Watched Nirvana’s Penultimate Show In Slovenia" "20 Years Ago I Watched Nirvana’s Penultimate Show In Slovenia" February 27, 2014, Huffington Post
- ^ a b c d "Program Guide" Program Guide, 2011
- ^ a b c d e "The Sights And Sounds Of Success" Reflections, By Joshua Zarobiak
- ^ "Symphony No.1 With Flowers Of Hell - An Interview" "Symphony No.1 With Flowers Of Hell - An Interview" January 2, 2017, The Blog That Celebrates Itself
- ^ w.bbc.co.uk/berkshire/content/articles/2005/03/31/club_v_review_feature.shtml "Review Club Velocity" Archived 12 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine March 25, 2005, By Emma Hughes, BBC Online
- ^ "LondonNet Gig Review" November 07, 2004, By Steve Marshall, LondonNet
- ^ a b "Flowers Of Hell Interview". September 10, 2015, Golden Plec, By Justin McDaid
- ^ "The great pretender; With reality TV and talent shows, 15 minutes of fame is ever more attainable - but what happens when the show is over?". April 25, 2002, Coventry Evening Telegraph
- ^ "Mundo Musique: The Transatlantic Space-Rock Orchestra, Flowers of Hell". The Revue. June 9, 2014 by Ben Yung
- ^ "". November 6, 2012, T-Mak
- ^ "The Flowers of Hell: Shapes of things" by Eden Munro, Vue Weekly.
- ^ Anon. (20 July 2012). "July 20, 2012 Playlist". LouReed.com. Retrieved 9 September 2012.
- ^ Now magazine Perlich's Picks
- ^ Mondo magazine concert review
- ^ Louche, Liz (15 March 2010). "Flowers of Hell enlist musicians from Broken Social Scene, Spiritualized, Guided by Voices, and more to join their NASA-approved space rock jam session". Tiny Mix Tapes. Tiny Mix Tapes. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
{{cite news}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help) - ^ Everett-Green, Robert (3 December 2010). "For Musician With Synaethesia, The Cello Can Sound Too Fury. Or Too Red". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 9 September 2012.
- ^ "Life with synesthesia: Toronto man who can see sounds shares his story". January 28th 2015, Metro – Toronto Edition.
- ^ "Sound Takes Shape". October 18th 2015, by Allison Shouldice, Toronto Star – Star Touch.
- ^ "Blended Senses". July 30th 2013, CBC The National.
- ^ "Synesthesia". February 6, 2015, CBC Ontario Today.
- ^ "Growing the Flowers Of Hell – An interview with bandleader Greg Jarvis". October 2012, By Daniel Korn, Cadence Magazine
- ^ "The Flowers Of Hell Interview" October 21st 2012, Northern Transmissions
- ^ "Flowers of Hell Leader Greg Jarvis Mistaken for Spy in Papua New Guinea, Forced to Play for His Life". Exclaim!, By Alex Hudson. Oct 12, 2010
- ^ "Flowers of Hell Leader Mistaken for Spy". Pitchfork, By Ryan Dombal. Oct 12, 2010
- ^ "Flowers of Hell Mainman Mistaken For MI5 Spy in Papua New Guinea – Greg Jarvis had to ‘play for his life’ while holidaying". NME, By Adam Bychawski. Oct 12, 2010