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JATOBA



Last Updated: 11/30/2009

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Status: Single
City: BRATTLEBORO
State: Vermont
Country: US
Signup Date: 11/2/2007

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Tuesday, November 04, 2008 

Category: Music
Check out a very pleasant interview/review from Holly w/ UPSTATELIVE MUSIC GUIDE.  

This publication is spread through out all of Upstate New York... obviously we are very excited to be invloved.





When I saw Jatoba for the first time at the Sterling Stage String Fling, it was also the first time I had ever heard them.  It didn’t take me long to realize that the musical versatility that they offered, along with their obvious love and knack for performing for the audience, gave them quite a bit of potential for being one of the great and loved bands here in the Central New York Music scene. Following their show I hooked up with the guys to find out more about what Jatoba is all about.

Holly: The music of Jatoba encompasses a wide variety of styles touching on acoustic rock, bluegrass, and even Eastern style music as well as many more. How is it that a three man band is able to do this?
   
Jason: Our music is eclectic because all three of us are from different backgrounds, musically. John and I hail from the Appalachian mountains of Virginia where you have a strong influence of bluegrass and folk music. Jeff is from New Hampshire where is has been studying Jazz and Classical music. Individually each one of us has studied different genres such as African rhythms, Middle Eastern music and gamelan music.

Holly: Being that you all play multiple instruments; can you give me an idea of the process you use to choose which instrument to play and which style to go with, when you get together to write songs? 

John: There’s not really a process that we go through to decide what to play. When somebody brings a song to the table we experiment with different instrumentations until we find the one that works best. Sometimes because we all can play an array of instruments we might change it up on the fly depending on our mood... or broken strings. Lately we have been writing more with Jason on the banjo and me on the mandolin. It keeps things fresh and exciting as well.     

Holly: You must be pretty comfortable together as a band to be able to run in the many musical directions that Jatoba does. So how exactly is it that you came to be Jatoba?

Jeff: I met Jason in Keene, NH one summer. We started an electronic groove pop band called, “Phil and The Fuzz”! We were in search of another guitar player so Jason recommended that John, who was living in Colorado at the time, audition for the band. We sent him a CD to play and record to and it sounded great! Phil and the Fuzz ran its course until Jason decided he wanted to go more acoustic.  After a couple of months later, Jason and John approached me to join their Acousta-groove-grass project.

Holly: Before Jatoba, what were you and Jason playing together John?

John: We made a pact while living in Vermont eight years ago that we would always, no matter what, do our best to keep the music going. Through these years Jason and I have been traveling around to different areas of the country, sometime together, sometimes not.  For example, when he was in northern Arizona and I was in Roanoke, VA we would call each other on the phone and write music. We couldn’t play in time with each other because of the delay in the phone line, so I would play a lick and he would follow with another. We’ve sent lyrics back and forth via email too. We did what we could and it worked out because here we are.

Holly: When did you become interested in playing the sitar and how did you go about doing so?

John: Well when I was young my Uncle John was a musician, and ever since I can remember he had a sitar. I would be taking a nap at my Grandma’s house and I would always sneak off to “play” it. In all actuality I would just strum the strings and laugh hysterically at the sound they made. I loved it from the start! So about 20 years later I found that very same sitar at my father’s house. My Uncle had passed away about 15 years ago and my Dad took care of all his instruments. So I found it and just sort of took it. He wasn’t very happy about that, but I vowed to learn how to play it. So that began my studies and eventually I had the privilege to study under the sitar master Roshan Jamal Bhartiya out in Boulder, Colorado. I studied about 1 ½ years and then left Colorado. So that’s where I am now with the sitar and I’m constantly looking for a teacher so that I may continue my studies. But I still love playing it and I am constantly trying to find ways to utilize it in our music.

Holly: Jason, what did you do musically during your hiatus from your best friend?

Jason: Well like John was saying in a previous question, their have been a few periods of time when we were not playing together. I love writing music and playing live for people so it was easy for me to just keep on doing so. I consider myself a strong singer/songwriter and am very comfortable with crowds so I would play solo gigs a bunch. There was one project I was in back in Virginia that was awesome. I met two guys that had similar ideas in the way we as musicians can perform. Muhanndes played African percussion and John Perry was an amazing spoken word artist. We would play the most beautiful music! I love recording music as well! I’ve recorded so many 1-2 min songs that all spawned from improvised playing. Each one seems to represent how I was feeling that day or where I was at in my life. I’m thinking about releasing a CD of them all.

Holly: How about you Jeff, what were you doing before Jatoba?

Jeff: After playing in a number of rock bands around southern New Hampshire, I played bass in a jazz trio around 2002 for a few years. In the fall of 2004 I began to study classical music and jazz at Keene State College. During this time I played with a number of other bands of varying styles, including Phil and the Fuzz. I have been playing with Jatoba since January of ‘08, and just recently I began studying Arnold Schoenberg’s Theory of Harmony, which has given me a new appreciation for classical Western theory.

Holly: Besides the musical creativeness that flows from Jatoba, the first thing I noticed when I saw you for the first time was the overwhelming energy and great vibe that you all send out to the crowd during your show. Where does this come from?

Jeff: Aside from disciplined rehearsal schedule, we are all great friends outside of the music realm. That ultimately results in onstage comfort! Since we listen to each other while we play we are able to relax and let the music flow during shows. That gives us the space to check out the crowd and involve them in what we are experiencing.

Holly: The Jatoba experience includes a great deal of dramatics and crowd interaction that leaves the audience feeling like they have been intimately involved in the unfolding of the performance. What has influenced you to perform in such a way?
   
John: The CROWD!!!  

Holly: Primarily you play to your locals in Vermont, do you plan on playing more to us Upstate New Yorker’s in the near future?

Jason: We are very excited to be welcomed back to the Sterling Stage at their “Last Daze of Summer” harvest festival in September.  While playing at String Fling we met and reconnected with some great bands to where there are already talks and workings to routing some dates in Syracuse, Rochester, Ithaca and Albany. Every NY show we’ve played we have met some really awesome people. All of them have been people that like our music and love to dance. There really is no reason for us not to play for you guys!

CLICK HERE READ THE ONLINE VERSION - Pages 20-21
Tuesday, November 04, 2008 

whats up everybody,

http://www.jatobamusic.com/flash_movie.php

this flash video of JATOBA was created a while ago when we had a flash website.  We were involved a great deal on how this turned out with our idea's being transfered to computer language.

HOPE YOU ENJOY and feel free to give feedback!

Wednesday, October 29, 2008 

Current mood:  blessed
Category: Music

we want to thank everyone who came and rocked out with us this past weekend. all the peps in Keene, NH and Johnson, VT!!!   A big shout out to you Plymouth kids.  we love that yall love ween!!!!

Keep checkin back and well see you soon.

much love

Jatoba

Saturday, February 09, 2008 

Current mood:  grateful

CHeck this link out.

http://www.18milesnh.com/2008/02/review-jatoba-shakes-beams-at-harlows.html

this goes out to all @ Harlow's!!!  We will see you soon!
  JATOBA

Friday, February 01, 2008 

Current mood:  blessed
Category: Music

Story by Sam Calhoun

The last time a sitar, two acoustic guitars, a baritone guitar, a banjo and a mandolin were all together on a stage in Boone, Anoushka Shankar gave a moving performance at Farthing Auditorium. This Saturday, those instruments are returning once again to the valley below Howard's Knob and will provide the connection between musician and audience when ..:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" />Brattleboro, Vermont's JATOBA takes the stage at Black Cat. Tickets are $5, and Gunslinger opens the show starting at 10:00 p.m.

Both natives of Roanoke, Va., Jason Scaggs and John Jamison started playing music together in 2000, having met in middle school. Since then, they have been in multiple bands in Colorado, Vermont and Virginia. Under the name Stillsounds, Scaggs and Jamison performed on the main stage at Yonder Mountain String Band's Northwest String Summit Festival in 2004, and they have shared stages with bands such as Lotus, RAQ, The Breakfast, The Ordinary Way and Deadwood Revival among others. The duo's most recent project is JATOBA.

Incorporating a unique blend of two acoustic guitars, baritone guitar, mandolin, sitar and harmonizing vocals, JATOBA defines their sound through collective songwriting and extreme rhythmic improvisations.

Shortly after Scaggs and Jamison joined forces and after realizing their symbiotic musical attachment, the duo made a pact in 2001 to always come back to play music together, no matter where life's travels took them. After Jamison moved to Colorado in 2002, Scaggs followed suit and moved to Colorado to form Stillsounds with Jamison. When Scaggs moved to Vermont in 2005, Jamison returned the favor and moved to Brattleboro where he and Scaggs were part of the jam-fusion band Phil and the Fuzz for a few years before splitting off and forming JATOBA.   

"By making the pact, well, it really worked out well," said Jamison. "We have been able to keep it all together and keep creating music."

Although the duo's musical tastes have now grown together, it wasn't always so. In middle school, Scaggs was an admitted Grateful Dead enthusiast, leaning more toward established and emerging jam band outfits. Jamison, although a fan of the Dead, focused more on teaching himself Doors and Led Zeppelin licks on the acoustic guitar.

"In high school, Jason was trying to pick up chicks playing Dave Matthews and Floyd on the guitar, and I was playing Jimmy Page licks," said Jamison.

But as the days of high school got further away, both Scaggs and Jamison took an interest in world music—Jamison gravitated toward Middle Eastern sounds based around the sitar and Scaggs studied African and Cuban rhythms. From the duo's case studies emerged a new sound that realized itself in an alternative acoustic atmosphere.

"Jason is more rhythmically based and I am more melody based," said Jamison. "That's the dynamic we have."  

From the moment Scaggs and Jamison's picks stroke the guitar, their hands slapping the guitar body and their voices weaving in and out of harmony—such as on the duo's single "Ready, Set Go!"—it is clear that the two musicians work well with each other. With piles of instruments in each musicians' corner, the songs seem more like a conversation between two different people on the same subject. The musicians answer each other's questions with whatever instrument they see fit. Offering very different answers—in the form of musical improvisation—the two have enough history of playing music together that it is rare to see one throw the other for a loop.

The most recent addition to the band is the sitar, played by Jamison.

Jamison's uncle—the same man responsible for Jamison's long love affair with playing music—owned a sitar while Jamison was growing up. When Jamison was a young boy, he took naps in the same room as the Indian instrument and strummed its chords in amazement. While visiting his uncle a few years ago, Jamison decided to take the sitar and learn how to play it.

Jamison took the sitar back with him to Colorado and began learning how to play the instrument from Roshan Jamal Bhartiya, a sitar master whom Jamison vows to return to one day for instruction.

Jamison plays the sitar often in JATOBA shows, but even when it is not in his hands, the rhythms, melodic progressions and influence of the sitar are present in JATOBA's music. JATOBA's song "Take Me Away" is comprised of dueling guitars, but the influence of the sitar is definitely present. 

"Staring to learn the sitar has strongly influenced me—adding Middle Eastern style to my playing," said Jamison. "I try to bring that Middle Eastern influence to guitar, or the style of Indian music in general. That music has a style to it and I really like that style."

And the name JATOBA? According to Jamison, the name is "more of a poetic explanation of our music and life" and refers to the jatoba tree of South America. The jatoba tree's roots run deep and are intertwined, much like Scaggs and Jamison's musical life, travels and fans across the country.          

For more information, click to www.sonicbids.com/jatoba or www.myspace.com/jatobamusic.

Want To Go?..:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

Date: Saturday, January 19

Time: 10:00 p.m.

Location: Black Cat, Depot Street, Boone

Cost: $5

Graphic:

[JATOBA 1] 

Roanoke, Va. natives Jason Scaggs (left) and John Jamison met in 2001 and now live in Brattleboro, Vermont. Since 2000, they have been in multiple bands and have progressed creatively as a duo. Under the name Stillsounds, Jason and John performed on the main stage at Yonder Mountain String Band's NW String Summit Festival 2004, and they have shared stages/bills with bands such as Lotus, RAQ, The Breakfast, The Ordinary Way and Deadwood Revival among others. Photo courtesy of JATOBA    

[JATOBA 2]

Standalone

Tuesday, January 08, 2008 

Current mood:  blessed
here is a link to check them out.
thanks to everyone who came out that night.
thanks to dave eagle for the great shots.
JATOBA

http://www.fatsquirrel.net/jatoba-boston/
Tuesday, December 18, 2007 

Current mood:  energetic
Hey everybody,
  Two of our songs, "The Blizzard" & "Good People" are going to be on Quickstar Productions newest Cd compilation, CHILL OUT VOL.6 scheduled to be released @ the beginning of '08!
Quickstar Productions is of Baltimore, MD.
 "The Blizzard" and "Good People" are going to be amongst many other great artists from around the nation.
 We are very excited about this and are eagerly awaiting the release which is due out @ the very beginning of '08!
 We will keep you guys posted and inform you of ways to get your own copy.
 
"Don't miss it... It's gonna be a good one!!" Joe Bird, Quickstar Productions
 
JATOBA MUSIC IS YOUR MUSIC
Wednesday, November 14, 2007 

Anyone interested in booking  Jatoba should email us @ Jatobamusic@gmail.com .  Please contact us asap to get us in and near a town near you.