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GREGG KARUKAS
BIO
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Gregg Karukas
hails originally from the D.C. - Maryland area where
he was one of the top fusion and studio players in
town. Gregg moved to L.A. in 1983, not with the idea
of getting his own record deal, but with the desire
to expand his multi-keyboard style by playing with
as many other artists as possible.
That Gregg Karukas can write such compelling songs
in a variety of styles should come as no surprise to
anyone familiar with the Bowie, Maryland native's
diverse musical background. "What really got me
into music as a passion and a lifestyle was first
seeing the Beatles, and then hearing Stevie Wonder
and singer/songwriters like Carole King, James
Taylor, Leon Russell, Laura
Nyro and Joni Mitchell, he says. I was inspired
by the idea that you could touch people's emotions
with melodic songs and lyrics that meant something.
When my voice changed as a teenager, I lost my
singing chops and concentrated more on playing piano
and organ in various bands. Then I discovered
Jazz. I paid a lot of dues' in the Washington, DC
jazz clubs, working on my chops and writing songs by
day."
As a young musician who had natural ability and a
good ear, Karukas spent his early years close to the
jukebox in his father's roadside tavern absorbing
the hits of the sixties - from The Beatles to
Motown. While Karukas played organ in rock and soul
bands as a teenager, his interest in playing jazz
was sparked after hearing Dave Brubeck's "Take
Five," and Stan Getz's "Jazz
Samba." In his quest for jazz knowledge,
Karukas turned to the recordings of Miles Davis,
Ahmad Jamal, Les McCann, Chick Corea and Herbie
Hancock, as well as mainstream jazz players like
Clifford Brown and Lee Morgan. One of his biggest
influences was the master jazz pianist Bill Evans.
At age 17, right out of Bowie High School, Gregg
joined with Tim Eyermann to form East Coast Offering
where he honed his compositional skills and jazz
chops in the city's "jazz lounges. They quickly
became the city's top original crossover group -
playing together for five years, and then Gregg and
the rhythm section split to form Natural Bridge, a
band that included Shannon Ford (Danny Gatton, Paul
Simon, Gatlin Brothers) and Michael Manring (Windham
Hill, Michael Hedges, Montreux). They opened shows
at the famous Cellar Door for artists such as Angela
Bofil, Larry Carlton, The Robben Ford Band (pre-Yellowjackets
- this is where Gregg met Russell Ferrante), Jeff
Lorber (w/Kenny Gorelick....G.), and many others.
After
moving to Los Angeles in the mid '80s, thanks to
early recommendations by Yellowjackets keyboardist
Russell Ferrante, Karukas quickly found himself
performing with the likes of Patti Austin, Shelby
Flint , Richard Elliot, Grant Geissman, Ronnie Laws,
and Brenda Russell.
Beginning with his first independent recording, The
Nightowl, in 1987, Karukas has been
one of the few artists whose own creative growth and
commercial success perfectly parallels that of the
smooth jazz genre as a whole. His string of Top 5
Radio hits includes his most recent # 1, Nightshift,
Summerhouse (#1 Gavin in
'93), Key Witness (1991), Sound
of Emotion ('92), and his breakout
1998 major label debut Blue Touch,
which rose to ..4 on the Radio & Records airplay
chart. His most recent solo CD was Heatwave
on N-Coded Music and Looking Up
(Trippin 'N' Rhythm) was released Sept. 2005.
Prior to recording The Nightowl,
Karukas had already developed a reputation as a
solid keyboardist whose skills ran the gamut from
eclectic jazz to seductive Brazilian colorings to
hypnotic smooth grooves. Gregg had just
completed a 1-1/2 year stint with Melissa Manchester
(with Richard Elliot on sax) when he formed
his own band to be the among first groups to play at
Bon Appetit, At My Place and Le Cafe, the now
defunct music clubs which spawned most of L.A.'s
Contemporary/Smooth Jazz artists. Dave Koz,
and Gary Meek (Jeff Lorber, Airto and Flora)
and yes, Boney James, before his Warner
Brothers deal, were the first young undiscovered sax
talents to join Gregg's band and contribute to
Gregg's melodic, soulful style on his first few solo
CD's as the local Smooth Jazz scene blossomed.
In 1987 he released his first solo album THE
NIGHTOWL , which quickly became a
Quiet Storm radio staple w/the songs "Walkin'
With You", "Talbot Street Cafe" and
"Drivetime." That same year he became the
original keyboardist with the Rippingtons,
recording the classic MOONLIGHTING project
with Kenny G. and David Benoit. Gregg recommended
Dave Koz to play EWI on the MOONLIGHTING
record and the rest, as they say, is
history.
He
has also been a popular guest artist on tours with
Boney James, Peter White, Eric Marienthal, Ricardo
Silveira and Larry Carlton and has produced a vast
array of artists at his own Nightowl Studios,
including Kirk Whalum, Peter White, Craig Chaquico,
Phil Sheeran, Gabriela Anders, The Pointer Sisters
and crossover pianist David Lanz. As a songwriter,
his tunes have been recorded by Richard Eliott,
George Benson, Chaquico, Arnold McCuller, Pauline
Wilson, Kenia and Deniece Williams.
Those fruitful all-star associations are only the
beginning of an amazing journey that would later
find the married father of two boys firmly ensconced
in the world of his first true musical love,
Brazilian music. In this genre, Karukas has toured
and recorded with Sergio Mendes, Ricardo Silveira
and Dori Caymmi. A career highlight came in
1992 at the Hollywood Bowl when he added his
multi-keyboard orchestrations to the music of Toots
Thielemans and Brazilian legends Ivan Lins, Caymmi
and the late Antonio Carlos Jobim.
Karukas feels lucky to work with singers and
musicians whom he feels a magical musical rapport
with. "People say my music sounds romantic and
uplifting - and I look so happy on stage, he says.
It's totally true. For me, the best music comes out
of an inner feeling of either intense happiness or
sadness. I always try to stay faithful to that
original inspiration, because that is where the true
sound of emotion' comes from.
"I think we all need music to be the soundtrack
to our soul," Karukas adds. "It can
inspire us, balance out our lives and relieve
stress. I appreciate that and I treat each CD or
concert as another opportunity to connect to those
sounds and emotions on a deeper level. I love
sharing that with others and try to make each
project a special event all its own."
back
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SmoothViews
Interview
September
22, 2005
Interview by Susan Johnson
Gregg
grew up listening to the jukebox at his dad's
roadside tavern in the DC/Maryland area. He had an
ear for music and the natural ability to put down
the tunes on the keyboard and organ. After playing
in rock, soul and jazz bands around the area, he
moved across country to L.A. in 1983 for the
opportunity to play with some of the great musicians
out there. His timing was perfect because the
contemporary jazz scene was just beginning. After
playing around the city, he started his own band
which included an “undiscovered” sax player
named Dave Koz for awhile. Gregg was also an
original member of the Rippingtons and has continued
to play solo and with many of the current popular
smooth jazz artists. Looking Up is
his tenth solo CD.
SmoothViews (SV): Hi
Gregg! Your new CD, Looking Up, has
hit the stores and sounds great! What is the
reaction of radio and the fans?
Gregg Karukas (GK): So far so
good. I've gotten a lot of nice emails from people.
It's tough these days to get an immediate reaction
from radio. You have to wait weeks before radio
stations really add the record en masse. The whole
science of radio promotion is something that I just
try to stay detached from. I'll take the news, but
I'm not going to be getting too involved in it
because it is really such a different situation
every year. Things change. It's kind of a crap
shoot. There's so many great artists putting out
great new music and the bottom line is that the
radio stations are playing a lot of other older
music. So everybody kind of gets in line and waits.
As far as CD sales and the response, it's fantastic.
I've definitely had to separate the radio situation
from everything else that I do. It's great when I
hear from people saying they've heard my stuff on
the radio, but I guess these days with the internet
we can only hope that there are new listeners who
are sampling tracks on either iTunes or whatever
website they happen to be on, or they get a
recommendation. That really has been a great way to
expose a new CD. This is the first year that we're
really seeing, especially with sites like yours, the
community really being more of a unified thing where
everybody talks about the new releases as they come
out. And then as soon as it comes out, there's
usually two or three reviews on Amazon.com and that
really helps.
(SV): This CD focuses
on the acoustic piano. What led you to that
decision?
(GK): You would think, being a
piano player, why is that such a big thing? Not many
people know this, but on my first record there
wasn't a lot of acoustic piano… there were only a
couple songs with acoustic because I didn't have a
good piano in my studio. In the early days, I really
considered myself a composer first, and the songs I
was writing… I just heard saxophone on a lot of
them. So over the years, the percentage of piano to
sax has gotten a little more piano on every record.
Then just by coincidence, this new record seems to
have all piano or 98% piano. There is saxophone on
one song only, and it's just a background part. So
when I noticed that, as I was writing songs and
recording them, I said, “Yeah. This is kind of
cool now. Let's stay on this theme. It's nice that
the way I'm hearing these melodies is the way I'm
playing them.” It wasn't like, “this melody
would be much better on sax. Why don't I call up
Dave Koz or whoever to come in and play this
part?” It just started to develop as all piano.
No vocal songs this time either. I love
collaborating and writing vocal songs with either
Ron Boustead or Shelby Flint. It's just that we
haven't done much of that this last year or so. It's
not really a prerequisite to me to have vocals. Most
people in the past may have added a vocal track for
promotional reasons to try to get radio airplay or
something. That used to be a school of thought and I
have never done that. Some people do a vocal track
that's a cover. I'm a “… no covers, kind of
guy” never on my CDs. My Holiday CD is, of course,
an exception, but then again there are four original
songs on there too. I'm very proud of the vocals
I've had on my CDs over the years. The one cover I
was planning on doing years ago… it was probably
in '95… was “People Make the World Go Round”
or “You've Got it Bad Girl.” I forget which one.
Those are two of my favorite songs. Then I heard on
the radio Ramsey Lewis doing the same song and I
said, “Oops! Well, can't do that.” And then here
we have today Richard Elliott has a big, big radio
hit with “People Make the World Go Round.”
That's cool for him.
(SV): Besides writing
and mixing your own music, you also produce CDs for
others and work in TV and movies.
(GK): Yes. Over the years that
is the kind of work that allowed me to afford to do
my own solo records because I am certainly, at this
point, not making any money on my own CDs. But just
being able to be versatile is good. I also do a lot
of engineering for people. Sometimes people call me
to just mix their records. When I work on films and
TV stuff, a lot of it is either as a programmer or a
recording engineer or mixing engineer. I will
inevitably end up playing some keyboards on each
project.
The main TV/Film composer that I work with, his name
is Craig Safan, has been getting more involved in
Broadway-type musicals, so we've done a lot of music
for that. We always do one or two made-for-TV movies
a year. It has slowed down a bit. For his musicals,
we make a whole record of all the songs first and
treat it as if it's a whole soundtrack record. Then
as the musical gets developed before it actually
hits the stage, he takes that record around and
presents it to the various promoters and backers and
agents to try to get the backing to mount the
production. It really does take a lot of money to
get any play or musical produced. So that's a whole
new field.
Some of my most favorite sessions were doing stuff
like the music for Cheers.
Every couple of weeks we would go in and record a
new set of cues. And it was such a relaxed thing; to
do those sessions was fun. And then we did some
movie scores with a full orchestra. (Mr.
Wrong, Major Payne)
So there would be an 80-piece orchestra playing
along with either my bank of computers and
synthesizers, or I'd be running the computers,
playing grand piano as well and watching the
conductor. So those were definitely some interesting
sessions.
Right now I'm producing an artist I worked with…
this is my 2nd production with him. His name is
Omar, and he's a piano player in the kind of world
music, new-age field. We're co-writing songs and
recording here, and it's another extension of what
he did before where we featured a lot of the
musicians who had played with Yanni over the years,
Charlie Bisharat and Pedro Eustache and Ramon
Stagnaro, a great guitarist. So this project we'll
probably have the same guys come in and add violin
and guitar. It's a very interesting kind of
cross-over world/classical/new-age. It'll be out
next year. We don't have a title yet.
(SV): You've said that
you “think we all need music to be the soundtrack
to our soul.” In what ways do you hope to connect
to the people listening to your music?
(GK): For me, I relate to my
own experience growing up listening to music…
listening to songwriting, in particular… starting
from the Beatles, Stevie Wonder, Joni Mitchell,
James Taylor… people like that. When you are
listening not for notes but just for the overall
feeling of a song, that is a whole new experience
compared to when you're listening to see how hot
this particular player is or how great a jazz player
this guy is. You're taking more of a technical
approach to listening. Being a musician, I have to
do both things, but I'm very glad that growing up I
had an appreciation for the more intangible, if you
will, emotional aspects of music. That is the kind
of feedback I love getting from people because
people… smooth jazz fans, whatever… are not
generally musicians or music types. They're people
who have come across this music, however they have
been exposed to it, something about it touched them.
Whatever it is, I can't define it specifically, but
I can certainly define the way I approach how I
write music and what I like. And that is, I try to
be as lyrical as possible with the melodies. It's
really all about the melodies for me… and the
grooves. I really concentrate a lot on working on
different kinds of grooves. I don't use too many
stock grooves. I try to put a little twist on things
always. And then when you do that and have a great
melody, that's something that I consider a great
accomplishment and then if everybody else likes it,
that's even better!
(SV): Your label is
located in England. Are there advantages to having a
label outside of the U.S.? And why does the address
on your CD show Illinois as the address?
(GK): Good question. The label
is owned and run by Les Cutmore in England. He
started in the business working with Paul Hardcastle
and Jazzmasters. That's how things started
originally. None of the physical business of my CD
gets done in England. He uses a U.S. distributor,
and he uses U.S. promotional people, and that's why
it has the U.S. address. He has people that work on
the day-to-day operations here.
(SV): When you write
your music, do you know which guest musicians you
want to have and you write for them or do you write
a song and then decide who might fit the music?
(GK): It usually happens right
during when I'm writing the song. There's something
about the melody or the style or groove that I'll
say, “This is a perfect song for Ricardo
Silveira”, for instance, or Michael O'Neill who's
been my main guy for so many years with such great
pocket-groove ideas and solos, too. In fact, I'm
really happy to give him a chance to stretch out a
lot more on this CD, Looking Up,
because he really has a great solo voice. For
instance, on the last CD… "Remember
When" the song that's just me and Dave Koz. I
knew right away that I wanted to do a duet with just
piano and Dave on sax. So I actually wrote three
songs and sent them to him and said pick your
favorite and come on over and we'll play it
together. That's what happened. He picked the one he
liked the best.
(SV): Let's talk a
little about the Brazilian influence in your music.
That track “Lost in Negril” is hypnotic and such
a “feel good” song! And who is that on vocals
and trills?
(GK): I would call that more
of a Caribbean island influence. There are a couple
of others, "Corner Club" and "CrossRhodes"
that are more of a Brazilian groove. The vocals
actually are… no one I know. It comes from a CD of
all sorts of vocal effects from all over the world.
(SV): If people who
purchase your CD read the liner notes, they'll find
a “secret” website to visit for a surprise. What
a great idea! Do you have a lot of response to that?
(GK): I've had a great
response. In fact, I'm hoping to do something like
that at some of the concerts that I have coming
up… something special for the people who were just
at that concert. For instance, Catalina JazzTrax
Festival… I'll just say something from the stage
and there will be a secret word they'll have to find
on www.karukas.com.
We get a few emails every day from people, and part
of that is if they go to the secret page we offer to
send them an autographed photo or sheet music score
or something.
(SV): You're headed
out to sea on Rick Braun's All Star Smooth Jazz
Cruise. Will you play solo sets along with playing
with the other musicians? Will you go on any
excursions?
(GK): It looks like I will be
playing every single night at least for two hours!
We haven't figured exactly what shows there are
going to be. We'll have to figure that out pretty
soon. I can't say for sure. I was not originally
asked to do my own show. Rick asked me to be
involved as his musical director and also be musical
director for five other artists for five other
shows. Somewhere between that and all the jam
sessions I'm sure I'll play some of my own stuff,
but I don't think they have me on the schedule to do
my own show. I'm hopeful that we're all going to be
playing different stuff too. Stretch out more.
That's one of those things about the cruise. Once
everyone gets to know everybody they want to hear
something different. They like to hear the musicians
stretch out a little bit beyond what would be a
normal show. Because we're bringing the family,
we're looking forward to doing anything and
everything we can. But because I've got a big
responsibility doing a show every night I don't know
whether I'll be that free to go out and do a
full-day excursion. But if they're early in the
morning and it works out, yeah!
(SV): How do you come
up with the names for your songs? Let's go through
of a couple of them. “Girl In The Red Dress”?
(GK): That one was easy
because we worked on the cover for a long time. I
had the cover design before I had the title. I
thought that was a good way to open up the CD with
that song and that title to establish kind of a
vibe.
(SV):
“First Flight Home”?
(GK): That is dedicated to my
wife and kids because that's the one thing that we
have to cope with as musicians. We have to leave
town from time-to-time. I don't go out of town as
much as I did a few years ago, like when I was
touring with Boney. It's just one of those things
you think about… getting back home. It's great to
be out playing music for people and I'm the first to
go and play a show anywhere it's offered, but it's
also great to get back home, too!
(SV):
“Isabella”?
(GK): That is another one of
those songs that I knew had that romantic vibe and I
wanted it to be a girl's name. I wanted it to be
Ingrid because Ingrid Bergman is one of my favorite
actresses. Yvonne, my wife, said, “Ingrid. I don't
like that. That doesn't sound that great as a
title.” I said, “Okay. What about Isabella?”
She said, “That sounds great!” Sold! Now it's
not Ingrid Bergman, it's her daughter, Isabella!
(SV): I like the
spelling of the title “CrossRhodes,” too.
(GK): Well, there you go! It's
a play on the Fender Rhodes which is featured on the
whole song. I came up with that one, too. Normally
I'm terrible with titles. Look at this! I've
actually come up with a lot of titles on this CD.
Normally I'm always asking my fans and friends, and
especially Ron Boustead… of course, he did come up
with a couple… but I'm always asking people for
help. Those songs you've asked me about are all ones
I just came up with pretty quickly! I leave them
untitled for the longest time. They'll just be
titled by the date that I wrote them or by the
groove… “Latin- this date” or “R&B- this
date.” When it really gets down to it and I have
to get the copy together for the CD package, that's
when I really have to sit down and work on the
titles. Now that I look at it, “Relentless” was
suggested by Ron Boustead and “Deep Into You”
was also suggested by him, so he has two titles on
this CD.
(SV): What CDs are
your “sound of emotion”? What would you take on
a road trip?
(GK): Oh, wow. That's a hard
one. There are so many. But I would definitely
include a couple Milton Nascimento CDs. Milton is
pretty much known as the most famous
singer-songwriter in Brazil from the 70s onward.
He's kind of like the Paul Simon of Brazil. He's
done collaborations with many different people, many
different styles and everybody loves his music. He's
really a big, big part of the Brazilian music
culture. Of course, I have to include Dori Caymmi in
this topic because Dori is… if Milton is the Paul
Simon of Brazil then Dori is the… let's see if I
can think of the best metaphor… Dori is almost
like the Arlo Guthrie of Brazil but completely heavy
musically. Dori's father is the Woody Guthrie of
Brazil. His songs are the folk songs of Brazil. Just
like Woody wrote “This Land is Your Land” and
“If I Had a Hammer,” Dori's father Dorival
Caymmi, who is over 80 years old and still going
strong... his songs are known by all kids in Brazil.
Everybody in Brazil knows his songs because they
sing about the land. They sing about their regions
and customs. Carmen Miranda recorded Dori's songs
about Bahia in the early 1930s. Anyway, I had the
great honor to work with Dori for years back in the
90s, both with Sergio Mendes and then in Dori's
group. We played on his records and went to Montreux
Switzerland and played for Brazil night. So Dori's
music for me is the ultimate cross-over of
Brazilian, jazz and lyrical melodies. So I would
definitely take some of his CDs. Then we get to
American music where it would have to be some Miles
Davis and I would have to include a Weather Report
CD ( probably Heavy Weather)
and a David Sanborn CD (Voyeur)
and… let's think about somebody modern… Angie
Stone, Stone Love, and…
someone in smooth jazz… that's a hard one. Joe
Sample… A lot of guys are my friends, and I don't
necessarily listen to their CDs the same way as the
ones that I'm talking about where you just listen to
the whole CD and let it wash over you. That's really
what I try to do, but I don't tend to do that so
much with my buddies CD. I put it on once, and I
listen to it. Yeah. Sounds great. Then I put it on
the shelf. (laughs) The Yellowjackets CD, for sure.
There's a few that are some of my favorites. Greenhouse
and The River.
and… I love Richard Smith's CD. That's one that
I've listened to multiple times. Oh, and Dave Koz's
CD. Saxophonic, in
particular. It's really a varied, top-notch CD. The
production is incredible. The sound is great. And
Dave is just always great! Ever since we started
together in my band! Back then he definitely had
that great sound. That great restrained, but melodic
sound.
(SV): In any free time
that you have, what do you like to do?
(GK): It's usually outdoors
stuff with Yvonne and my two boys Alex (11) and
Stevie (8), like hiking, camping, riding bikes.
Those kinds of things.
(SV): Any final
thoughts, Gregg? Anything you want your fans to know
about Looking Up or yourself?
(GK): I feel very fortunate to
be in this position where I'm writing and recording
my own music and able to still get it out there and
have people respond to it right away. The place that
we're at right now with the internet and all that,
really makes it ideal for anyone, even struggling
artists, to be able to get their stuff out. And I
think that's a pretty cool situation because anybody
who takes the time to record their own music and
press CDs… however small, however home-grown it
is… I definitely give them a lot of credit for
making all that effort.
Gregg
Karukas Bio (Short)
After
moving to Los Angeles from
the Maryland/DC area in the mid '80s, Gregg
Karukas quickly developed a reputation as a
solid keyboardist/arranger as he found himself
performing with the likes of Patti Austin,
Shelby
Flint
,
Richard Elliot, Melissa Manchester, Ronnie Laws,
Sergio Mendes, Ricardo Silveira and Brenda Russell.
and his own band which featured a young,
undiscovered sax player named Dave Koz.
In 1987 Gregg released his first solo album, The
Nightowl, which quickly became a Quiet Storm
radio staple. That same year he became the original
keyboardist with the Rippingtons, recording
the classic Moonlighting project with
Kenny G and David Benoit. Over
the course of his 10 solo CD's, Karukas has been one
of the few artists whose own creative growth and
commercial success perfectly parallels that of the
smooth jazz genre as a whole.
Riding high on the success of his
critically-acclaimed #1 radio hit Nightshift
and his recent Best Keyboardist nomination at the
National Smooth Jazz Awards, Gregg Karukas has
created another gem in his latest solo CD, Looking
Up, which reached Top 5 status in 2007. True
to the optimistic, forward thinking title, Looking
Up is a melodic, rhythmically diverse oasis
in the midst of these challenging times, and his
trademark sophisticated acoustic piano melodies
sound warmer and more up-front than ever before.
That uplifting attitude shows in his concerts,
as Karukas has emerged over the years as one of the
genre's most dynamic and inspiring live performers
since he first took the stage at the 1987 Catalina
Jazz Festival with the original Rippingtons and
toured through the years with superstars Boney
James, Rick Braun, Eric Marienthal and Larry Carlton.
"What
really got me into music as a passion and a
lifestyle was first seeing the Beatles, and then
hearing Stevie Wonder and singer/songwriters like
Carole King, James Taylor, Leon Russell, Laura Nyro
and Joni Mitchell, he says. "I was inspired by
the idea that you could touch people's emotions with
melodic songs and lyrics that meant something.
People say my music sounds romantic and
uplifting - and I look so happy on stage, he says.
"It's totally true. For me, the best music
comes out of an inner feeling of either intense
happiness or sadness. I always try to stay faithful
to that original inspiration, because that is where
the true sound of emotion comes from. www.karukas.com
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