|
Carli's
Express Bio
Pianist
Carli Muñoz has collaborated with some
of the major figures in the jazz and rock history. His impressive
resumé includes concerts and/or recordings with a wide variety
of jazz giants, such as Charles Lloyd , Chico
Hamilton, Les McCann, Wayne Henderson and
George Benson. And under his
leadership: Putter Smith, Paul Chambers,
Lenny White, Chris Potter, Eddie Gomez , Jack DeJohnette,
Don Byron , David Sanchez , Lucille
Dixon and Jeremy Steig.
Carli's
substantial contribution to rock includes concert and/or recordings
and collaboration with Wilson Pickett , The
Association, Jimmy Haskell, Jan and Dean,
Peter Cetera , Blondie Chaplin,
Evie Sands, Henry Gross and eleven years with
The Beach Boys . Carli's fourth solo album Maverick
marks his pinnacle in the mainstream jazz arena with an
all star cast including two Grammy Award recipients
for 2005, and was featured among the best CD's of 2006 on
Downbeat Magazine; January 2007 issue.
In
February 24th of 2007 Carli was featured on Marian McPartland's
Piano Jazz radio show on National Public Radio, shortly
following with the release of Carli Muñoz
Trio- Live at Carli's
Vol 2.
From
pop to bop
Carli
Muñoz was given a piano for a birthday gift at age
13 in 1961. After several month of ignoring the instrument and total
refusal to take music lessons, Carli says that out of boredom he
started playing the piano; "to my amazement the music flowed
as if I already knew how play!" Although born and raised in
Puerto Rico, his music of choice was jazz, European avant garde
and pop American music. "I was a hopeless romantic and adventurer,"
Carli says, "even at my pre-teens my choice of music ranged
between ragtime, early american ballads, boogie woogie and hard
core jazz. At the same time I had a particular affinity for the
music of Erik Satie and Edgard Varèse".

Carli in
1958
By age 15, after having
experimented with a local neighborhood garage dance combo and a
rock´n roll trio of his making, Carli got his shot to play
with the jazz veterans that were performing regularly at the jazz
city nightspots. Among some of those musicians were; bassist Freddy
Thomas, percussionist Sabú Martinez (who had several recording
guest appearances with Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers), drummers
Monchito Muñoz and Joe Morello (also a regular with the Dave
Brubeck Quartet), and late legendary trumpet player Juancito Torres.
From 1965
to 1969, Carli formed an original rock band with 2004 Grammy Award
winner Jorge Calderon called "The Living End", aka "Space",
performing as a house band at the famed Manhattan night spot Scott
Munny´s "Rolling Stone" creating waves in the mid
and late 60´s New York City rock scene.
After receiving
an invitation from a friend to visit Los Angeles for a weekend (the
weekend lasted 16 years), Carli went to LA where soon enough he
started getting calls from various artist to perform and record.
Some of those artists were: Wilson Pickett, The Beach Boys (11 years),
George Benson, Les McCann, Chico Hamilton, Wayne Henderson, Charles
Lloyd, Peter Cetera, and Evie Sands.

Carli at
home with Breaker
During the
70´s while working with The Beach Boys, Carli had an experimental
fusion group called "Your Own Space". Late night sessions
went on in-between tours through the decade at his home recording
studio in Mt. Washington, where local jazz musician would often
gather to play and record, often until day light. His band (Your
Own Space), also performed frequently at the LA underground jazz
spots playing Carli’s original songs and alternating regularly
with Al Jarreou and Ricky Lee Jones (before they became famous).
In those days Carli’s as well as Jarreou’s and Jones
band got paid only by the collections from happy patrons, passing
the hat. Some of the musicians in Carli’s band were: Duke
Mc Vinny (bass), Art Rodriguez (drums), Chris Pinnick (guitar),
Michael Turre (horns and flute), Bob Williams (trumpet), Larry “Nasty”
Latimer (percussion), and Carli on Fender Rhodes piano.
In 1985 Carli visited
Puerto Rico (another long weekend), reestablished home-base, and
has been performing with his jazz trio until now. In December 1998
Carli opened Carli Café Concierto, a world
class fine dining and live jazz restaurant where he performs. Carli
keeps close ties with the mainland where he often goes to record
under his own label Pelosenel Q Lo Records. Four of his most recent
CDs are: Love Tales (piano solo),
Both Sides Now; a series of duets, trio and quartet
pieces with bassist Eddie Gomez, drummer Joe Chambers and flautist
Jeremy Steig, Live at Carli's Vol. 1,
the first of a live series recorded at Carli Cafe Concierto, Maverick,
with Eddie Gomez on bass, Jack DeJohnnete on drums and special gueasts
Don Byron on clarinet and David Sanchez on tenor sax. Maverick
was select among the best of 2006 by Downbeat Magazine (January
2007 issue). In
February 24th of 2007 Carli was featured on Marian McPartland's
Piano Jazz radio show on National Public Radio, shortly
following with the release of Carli Muñoz
Trio- Live at Carli's
Vol 2.

Foto
of Carli live at Carli's
by
Guillermo Real for the "Jazz in Black & White" series
|
Link to Carli Muñoz web page in progress.

Carli's
portrait by artist
Carli Muñoz Reviews
Carli
worked
with:
The Beach
Boys, Wilson Picket, Jan and Dean, The Association, The Living End,
Peter Cetera, Dean Martin, George Benson, Wayne Henderson, Charles
Lloyd, Les McCann, Chico Hamilton, Jimmy Haskell, Eddie Gomez, Joe
Chambers, Jeremy Steig, Jack DeJohnette, Don Byron, David Sanchez,
Lenny White, Chris Potter, Lucille Dixon, Putter Smith, Michael
Simbelo, Sabu Martinez, Lucille Dixon, Chriss Pinnick, Duke Mc Vinnie,
Jorge Calderon, Alex Acuña, Nathaniel Phillips, James Gadson,
Reggie Mc Bride, Bussy Feiten, Lee Ritenour, Manolo Badrena, Paulinho
DaCosta, Victor Feldman, Bobby Lyle, Ian Underwood, Richard Tee,
Greg Phillingames, John Hartmann, Justo Almario, Kenny Gradney,
Dusty Springfield, Joel Peskin, Glenn Ferris, Sal Marquez, Rickie
Lee Jones, Blondie Chaplin, Ricky Fataar, Henry Gross, Evie Sands
Carli's
memorable jams:
Marian McPartland (on interview
on Piano Jazz, NPR February 13th, 2007), James Zitro, John Klemmer,
Joe Morello, Paul Horn, Benny Green, Tommy Bolin, Tom Trujillo,
Royer Mc Guinn, Paul Simon, Al Jarreou, Kenny Rankin, Elton John,
Chicago, Jimmy Smith, Shep Shepperd, Dave Santoro, Shepp Shepperd,
Carl Freedman and Miguel Zenon among many other fine musicians.
|