
The 1970s was a decade dominated by glam,
punk, heavy metal, new wave, disco and funk. It was a decade
where notions of pop and rock authenticity and hipness were
constantly being contested and redefined. In the midst of such
a heady maelstrom, a handful of artists such as Gino Vannelli
and Steely Dan opted to buck all the trends, writing and producing
sophisticated jazz-inflected pop. In Vannelli's case, such
decade defining hits as "People Gotta Move" and "I Just Wanna
Stop" came wrapped in elaborate arrangements dominated by multiple
synthesizers while being totally bereft of guitars. While Vannelli
wasn't a favorite with the
Rolling Stone wing of rock
critics, he managed to rack up ten
Billboard pop chart
hits, seven of which also charted Adult Contemporary, three
of which crossed over to the R&B charts. Gino Vannelli
remains one of the most distinctive voices in contemporary
pop music.
Born
in Montreal in the summer of 1952, Vannelli grew up in a
family headed by a jazz singing father and a keen eared mother.
Enamored with a bevy of jazz drummers such as Joe Morello,
Gene Krupa, Ed Thigpen and Elvin Jones, as a child Vannelli
studied drums and music theory for five years. By the age
of 12 he had formed a rock band dubbed the Cobras and a year
later, with his brother Joe holding down the keyboard chair,
Vannelli headed up the Motown-influenced Jacksonville 5 (note
this is five years before the Jackson 5 recorded their first
record). Along the way he picked up guitar and piano and
began to sing.
By age fourteen he had fallen in love with classical music,
attending concerts by the Montreal Symphony every last Thursday
of the month.
"I had a double standard," reflects Vannelli. "I used to
defend Charlie Watts and Ringo Starr, thinking they were
part of something new and exciting. Yet, when I'd listen
to Dave Brubeck Live at Newport, my standards would be totally
different. I also fell in love with the French Impressionists.
I remember hearing the Montreal Symphony playing "Daphne
and Chloe" and walking away saying, 'What was that? I felt
altered. What it really was all about was finding the magic
in the down and dirty and the celestial."
Before his seventeenth birthday, Vannelli had signed with
RCA Records in Canada, releasing a single under the pseudonym
Van Elli, "Gina Bold" b/w "Never Cry Again." Bitten by the
music industry bug, Gino and his brother Joe headed for New
York and then later Los Angeles, pounding the pavement looking
for an American record deal. While lots of record execs were
suitably impressed by Vannelli's songwriting abilities and
his near three octave vocal range, no one was willing to
take a chance on an artist who so clearly was working with
music outside of the mainstream tastes of the day.
Discouraged to the point of giving up, the Vannelli brothers
were ready to head back to Montreal to find work outside
of music. In an oft repeated story, Gino decided make one
last desperate effort to get signed. Early one morning he
headed out to the offices of A&M Records where he waited
outside the gates for any sign of company co-owner Herb Alpert.
When Alpert appeared in the parking lot many hours later,
Vannelli ran through the gates past a startled security guard
and begged a slightly apprehensive Alpert for a chance to
audition. Acting on a hunch, Alpert acceded to his request
and Vannelli proceeded to play on acoustic guitar some of
the songs he had recently written including "People Gotta
Move," "Crazy Life," "Mama Coco," "Powerful People" and "Lady." All
five songs would end up on the six albums Vannelli would
record for A&M between 1974 and 1978.
Five of those six albums made the Billboard album charts,
culminating with Brother to Brother (produced by
brothers Gino, Joe, and Ross Vannelli) , which achieved a
coveted Top 20 position in the fall of 1978. A classy, elegant
and impassioned artist, on Vannelli's A&M albums he recorded
contemporary songs inspired by R&B and Jazz and developed
a significant cross over audience. With his records climbing
the charts, Vannelli toured as the opening act for Stevie
Wonder, was the first white artist to appear on Soul Train,
was nominated for a handful of Grammy Awards and soon headlined
his own concerts at major venues in key US cities. In his
native Canada, his talents were recognized with a plethora
of Juno Awards.
With Herb Alpert and Jerry Moss getting ready to sell A&M,
and a new CEO at the company informing him that he should
follow Rod Stewart's lead and record a disco album, in 1980
Vannelli elected to sign with Arista Records. His sole Arista
album, Nightwalker, provided him with a #6 pop hit in "Living
Inside Myself." When Vannelli opted to follow it up with
a stripped down edgier album called Twisted Heart, the powers
at be at Arista refused to release it. For the next three
years, in a move reminiscent of similar episodes in the careers
of George Michael and Prince, Vannelli and his record company
engaged in all-out war.
After a four year hiatus, Vannelli was finally released
from his Arista contract and in 1985 he released the successful Black
Cars album and single on HME. Two years later, he recorded
Big Dreamers Never Sleep for CBS, whose single, "Wild Horses," stormed
its way to the Top 10 in several countries.
Black Cars and Big Dreamers Never Sleep proved
to be big sellers in continental Europe and Vannelli spent
much of the latter part of the decade touring overseas. To
this day, he continues to have a large European following,
usually mounting at least one major tour of the continent
every year.
By 1990, Vannelli had grown weary of the music industry
and Los Angeles and decided to move his family to the quieter
environs of Portland, Oregon. He built his own studio, started
his own label, on which he released the live Inconsolable
Man in 1990, and spent a number of years studying a profusion
of world religions and philosophers.
"I decided to pull myself out of the mainstream," he explains, "and
take the side streets."
Signing with Verve, Vannelli's commercial output took a
radical left turn with the largely acoustic jazz albums Yonder
Tree and Slow Love, released in 1995 and 1997
respectively. By the end of the decade his muse was taking
him still further afield, toward one of his earliest loves,
classical music. To prepare himself, he took voice lessons
for a couple of years and began working on the material that
would appear on Canto, released by BMG Canada in 2003. Featuring
songs sung in English, Italian, Spanish and French, Canto
was warmly received in Europe while also being purchased
by a core of his faithful North American fans.
Satisfied with his forays into jazz and classical, Vannelli
felt that it was time to return to pop and in 2005 signed
a new deal with Universal Music. These Are The Days,
a compilation that combined seven of his earlier classic
hits with seven new songs, marked the debut of yet another
phase of Vannelli's continually fascinating career and a
return to the pop genre that made him an icon.
Gino's international recognition continues to grow as he
continues to explore new boundaries of popular music. Whether
he is performing with his jazz combo at venues across Europe
or playing with his full band to throngs of enthusiastic
fans in such diverse locales as Las Vegas, New Orleans, Indonesia,
and South Africa, Gino Vannelli's reputation as a high quality
performer and brilliant music creator along with his engaging
personality keep his career soaring to greater and greater
heights.