JOHN MAYER

World Fusion • India
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John Mayer, who collaborated with Joe Harriott in developing a fusion of jazz with Indian musical elements, died on March 9, 2004, after being struck by an automobile. He was 73 years old. Born into extreme poverty in the Chandni Chawk section of Calcutta, Mayer played the violin for food as a child. His Roman Catholic family disapproved of him playing for Protestant churches and theater audiences, but Mayer did whatever he could to escape his destitution. In school he studied both Western and Eastern musical forms, knowing that a good, thorough base of knowledge would serve him best as a traveling musician.

After studying with Melhi Mehta in Bombay and playing drums in a jazz band to learn more about the style, Mayer was granted a scholarship to Britain's Royal Academy of Music in 1952. His Academy studies included comparative religion and music courses, which furthered his interest in musically fusing
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JOHN MAYER Etudes album cover 0.00 | 0 ratings
Etudes
World Fusion 1969
JOHN MAYER Asian Airs album cover 0.00 | 0 ratings
Asian Airs
World Fusion 1996
JOHN MAYER Regatal album cover 0.00 | 0 ratings
Regatal
World Fusion 1998
JOHN MAYER Inja album cover 0.00 | 0 ratings
Inja
World Fusion 2000
JOHN MAYER Shiva Nataraj King of Dance album cover 0.00 | 0 ratings
Shiva Nataraj King of Dance
World Fusion 2001
JOHN MAYER Dhammapada album cover 4.00 | 2 ratings
Dhammapada
World Fusion 2006
JOHN MAYER Indo Jazz Fusions with Larry Adler album cover 0.00 | 0 ratings
Indo Jazz Fusions with Larry Adler
World Fusion 2022

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JOHN MAYER Dhammapada

Album · 2006 · World Fusion
Cover art Buy this album from MMA partners
Sean Trane
Of all the John Mayer works that he played and recorded, it’s amazing that the present Dhammapada album never got a proper release until a few years after his death, thanks to his son’s efforts. Indeed, the Indian-born composer and violinist had emigrated to join the London jazz scene and also frequented the classical auditoriums by the early 60’s. In the mid to late 60’s, he had formed with Jamaican-born jazz saxman Joe Harriott the aptly-named Harriott-Mayer Double Quintet, which released three albums of the then nascent Indo-Jazz Fusion style. Further on, he worked in classical circles, which is plainly discernable on the present album, recorded in 76 with some of the usual-suspects of the London Jazz Scene, like wind player Chris Taylor, Henry Lowther, Tony Coe or ex-Arthur Brown associate and High Tide member percussionist (tabla drums, mainly) Drachen Theaker. For the more exotic soundscapes, tambura-sitar players Nil Coton and Clem Alford or player of koto & cheng (Far Eastern Asia instruments) John Leach provide a unique touch.

The album is filled with an outstanding fusion of Indian or Far-Eastern-Asian musics and jazz and even some classical passages. Interspaced by three different tambura-dominated Sannyasin piece, the main themes veer from enthralling jazzy passages where the sitar provides happily a bed of string sounds (this is particularly successful under Tony Coe’s sax solo, then Chris Taylor’s flute intervention in Mana-Samana), to some downright classically-inspired interludes (see the following paragraph).

Elsewhere Japanese instruments provide a different exotic feel over the same tambura in Yamabushi, before the tabla drums and Coe’s clarinet take the composition south of the Himalaya. Bikkhu opens on flutes and a very classical first part, somewhat reminiscent of what Bartok and Mussorgsky could pull if they’d worked together, but the Indian side of Mayer’s hasn’t given up and returns sporadically. Tri-Dandin opens like a long spiritual improvisation on sitar and tambura, before the wind instruments speed up the pace halfway through and segues almost immediately in the superb but short finale of Chakka.

Once again, the excellent British label of Vocalion (its jazz section anyway) has released an essential posthumous John Mayer release, thanks to his son’s dedication and patience. The present album should’ve definitely been a refrrnc in the genre, andd one can only wonder how the Indo-Jazz Fusion movment might have evolved had the album found a way to the store racks and musicians’ ears.

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