Showing posts with label John Sokoloff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Sokoloff. Show all posts

Monday, May 20, 2019

John Sokoloff: A World United Music Interview



Hello everyone, and welcome to World United Music!  

In today’s interview, we’re going to get into who composer, musician and artist John Sokoloff is, his family history, where he grew up, how his story intertwines with his music and what inspires him to write the music he does.

{WUM} - John Sokoloff, hi, and welcome to World United Music. Let me first say that it’s an honor to have you here for an interview. I’m a big fan and have been since I first heard your music on YouTube back in 2007.

You’ve been around much longer than that of course and have even worked on American TV for a while, tell us a little about that, but first tell us a bit about yourself, where you grew up, where you live today?

{JS} - Hi Stewart.  I grew up in Los Angeles – where I also reside today. I grew up in a Russian-American home.

My grandparents left Russia during the 1917 revolution as teenagers. We had an interesting childhood in that we experienced both cultures – American and pre-revolutionary Russian. We were in the anti-communist contingent as we had lost family members and friends to the scourge of communism. And the people I grew up with personally knew the Russia that existed before the Soviet “experiment”…

We cared deeply for America but we also honored our Russian roots. This mix of cultures informs my music. This ambiguity and lack of typical cultural identity sparked a search for who I was.

I would listen to American blues and rock like B.B. King and the Allman Brothers while also listening to the Svetlanov Brothers Balalaika ensemble and singer Ludmila Zykina. I would laugh watching Johnny Carson’s monologue on TV, then listen to Soviet comic Arkady Raikin on passed around cassette tapes. I would listen to The Osipov Balalaika Orchestra or a group like Kino followed by Muddy Waters or Paul Butterfield.

Music has different styles, but the source material is the same regardless of race or country. Humanity. A real connection.
I always would say that the common denominator was soul. 
No one has a monopoly on soul.

{WUM} - I can relate to that. Music truly does connect to the soul. So, with that in mind, “What is your music story, your professional history and early career?”

{JS} - I grew up playing classical piano then moved on to writing my own music in my late teens. My professor was Viacheslav Leonidovich Ordynsky. He was from Dnepropetrovsk, Ukraine. (He died in 2000.) I loved him dearly. My university degree, oddly enough is in Business. But my true passion was always, and is, my music.

I worked in a regular business environment in my 20's running a floor covering distributorship…but was always playing…always writing...then I moved to working in television for Carol Burnett and Bonnie Hunt.

I was a composer for the Bonnie Hunt Show in the 1990's and was special project manager for Carol Burnett after beginning as a production assistant. I enjoyed the work but wanted to concentrate more and more on releasing my own CD's and doing my own music. So that is what I did and I’m doing now.

{WUM} – Such an interesting background! Did anyone in your family play a part in your music path? Was your family musical?

{JS} - Yes, My father, who is retired, was the musical conductor for the choir at the Russian Orthodox Cathedral in Los Angeles for 55 years. My mother sang and played guitar early in life and my sister Natasha is a great writer and singer and has been recording recently

We grew up listening to music all the time at home. We would be put to sleep to Beethoven, Brahms, Tchaikovsky and of course, Rachmaninoff. As a teenager, I would always voraciously listen to the older members of our community and I knew people who were personal friends of Rachmaninoff and Stanislavsky. I picked their brain endlessly to immerse myself in this zeitgeist. I read biographies and grew up in a community of old world Russians who longed for the past. This longing is felt in my music. These older people lived on suitcases…hoping to return to a country that was no longer there…to a time that would never be again. This spirit of loss permeates my music.

{WUM} – You’ve certainly captured a melancholy longing in your music. Who inspired you to play music? And who was your first teacher?

{JS} - We took classical lessons as kids. I began playing piano at 6 years old.  As we would drift off to sleep we would listen to Brahms or Tchaikovsky and I would feel this incredible sense of perspective. As if I was looking down at the entire world. Years would evaporate and the timeless questions…and sometimes answers…would appear. The music revealed to me that we were part of one whole. The paradox of absolute and relative would be reconciled for me while I listened to this. I was transported. Music became a beacon…Music became the source of understanding humanity. 

{WUM} – That’s very interesting and quite profound…on a personal note your explanation helps me understand my own connection to music. Thank you for that. “Do you play other instruments other than piano?”

{JS} - I only play keyboard instruments, but interestingly enough – I grew up mostly intently listening to blues/rock guitarists in addition to classical pianists. My list would include Roy Buchanan, Neil Young, Robbie Robertson, Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler, Stevie Ray Vaughn, Van Cliburn, Evgeni Kissin, Sviatoslav Richter….

{WUM} - What are your fondest musical memories? In your house? In your neighborhood or town?

{JS} - There are many…Very different...Like going to see Roy Buchanan at McCabes, the Aleksandrov Choir (then known as the Red Army Choir) at the Shrine Auditorium, seeing Bob Dylan or Rick Danko / Gary Busey at the Roxy, meeting and working with Van Cliburn at the Bass Hall in Texas while I was with Carol Burnett. 

From a personal standpoint, when I reach rapture in playing – my spirit goes somewhere else.  At that point one is very vulnerable and if you come up behind me you can scare the hell out of me by just putting your hand on my shoulder.  It is a state of bliss...But to achieve it you have to feel safe.
When you achieve it, you are not there…you go somewhere…It is a place where other artists have been…we do not stay there.

{WUM} - Your music is very emotive that gently builds and builds, does your music reflect your life experiences, neighborhood and community? Can you give us an example?

{JS} - It is all real. I do not bullshit in my music. It is deadly serious. The key to art is not to lie. To be inside out and not outside in. Not to try and please. To tell your truth. We have other’s expectations put on us all the time and it is not to be listened to. Follow your own muse. Tell the story – wherever it may lead.  Not always easy. But if it is honest – it will last.  Because absolutes are just that. Someone will love a girl in 200 years from now and their pain will find refuge in your honesty.

John Sokoloff Music



{WUM} - Being a musician, what inspires you the most to create your music?

{JS} - Women… Women…Did I mention women? Just kidding. But the simple answer is interaction with life. Life will offer you enough stuff to create if you are open to it. The slippery slope for an artist, however, is not to gratuitously create your own drama in order to fulfill your need to create.  This is what I called the masochism of the artist. To grab for the thorns when the rose is readily available. This is not necessarily healthy. 

{WUM} – Sound advice to be sure. So, with all the music that you’ve created, which song do you believe is your biggest fan favorite? Where does it place with you and the other material you write?

{JS} - The most popular song on YouTube for example, is “Valleys”. It’s not my favorite song and it may be one of the more simple songs structure wise, but many around the world have made videos with it and it has over a million views.

There is an interesting story to this song.  I was offered to write music for a big company (will remain nameless) and I wrote 20 minutes of music. They then refused to pay me for it and wanted to have it without paying even my expenses. They said it would “help my career” and promised “future benefits”. We went back and forth for weeks. And finally, I said: If you do not want to pay my expenses, I am keeping the music”. And I kept it. This was in 1994. One of the songs in that 20 minutes of music was the roughly 3 minute song Valleys. I chose to put it on my second album and later it found an audience on this new thing called Youtube. Moral of the story: stick to your principles.

{WUM} – I have to say my favorite song by John Sokoloff is, “Valleys” as well. However, “Vanowen Girl”, “Waltz for Anastasia”, and “PerrisCalifornia” are also up there in my favorites...but you have so many wonderful songs that I like, it's really hard to pick just one... “Do you have any favorite artists?


I have been listening to old Rolling Stones records recently. The spontaneity of those records is something to behold. To capture a moment, it is sometimes best to not plan. The balancing act is to plan, then throw all that away. The best producers are genius’ at this. David Briggs and Daniel Lanois come to mind.

“Performing” can be the death knell to art. Capturing the moment and thus, a timeless human absolute is the beautiful paradox of brilliant recording. 
The recording becomes of a time, and of all time.

{WUM} - If you had the choice, who would you like to co-perform with at a concert venue? And why?


{WUM} - You’ve produced 6 albums to date, what’s next for John Sokoloff? Are you working on new material? Do you have plans to release another album? If so, can you tell us about your new album and what inspired you to write it?

{JS} - Yes…I have a 7th album coming out in July 2019. The new album is called “He has the Sky”. It refers to the Camus quote: “Rich people have things, poor people have the sky”.

The way I see it is that we should strip away all that is gratuitous when we write. We go directly to the essence. And that is what the title symbolizes.
I am joined by some great players on this album…Tony Mandracchia on guitar, Denny Croy on bass, Craig Fundyga on vibraphone, guitarist Rich Estes, soprano Mariana Popzlateva, drummers Ellington Peet and Todd Tatum. Some of the music is very much unlike my previous stuff.

Wayne Peet of Newzone Studio co-produced and engineered the album.
Some piano tracks were recorded by Bob Wayne of Sunburst Recording.

{WUM} – Well it all sounds very interesting and so I for one am looking forward to your new album when it’s released in July 2019.

How do you find this new age of online interaction? Do you believe social media platforms such as YouTube and Facebook have helped spread the word of your music to a wider audience?

{JS} - Yes...Double edged sword. Great for distribution. Not so great for music sales. Not for a long time now, but it forces you to be creative in marketing. Creating non-duplicative experiences for your fans. But streaming is picking up some of the slack and the “rising tide lifts all ships” theory still holds interest to me…It definitely allows for the growth of audience. But the big companies have clued in to this and are limiting the ability to find new audiences for free. More and more they intentionally isolate us in order to charge for access to new markets. Understandable. But we were lucky to get in under the wire. Your site and others are so instrumental in creating the egalitarian spirit needed for artists. Thank you.

{WUM} – well World United Music is all about the artist and their music, so thank you for sharing yours. If I had not found your music and music by others on YouTube, World United Music would never have been born.

“Is there anything you would like to change in today’s music industry?”

{JS} - Pay more artists more. I guess that is a naïve statement at ANY time in the history of the music industry. But it is true. At any time, this inevitable tension will exist. The idealists/artists will run up against the wall of cynics, pragmatists and legitimate business people. The best I can offer: Go into any situation INFORMED. It will give you your best chance, even if the deck is stacked against you. Because being an artist – it will be.

{WUM} – Good advice! Do you have any additional advice for new musicians just starting out?

{JS} - If you truly love your art. Then follow it. But do not go into it for other reasons. The art will sustain your spirit (if not your bank account) in down times – of which there will be many. If you go in for some other reasons – you are doomed.

{WUM} - What is your message for fans around the world?

{JS} - I get letters and e-mails expressing kindness towards my music from people all over the world. From Taiwan to Syria, from Brazil to Poland, from the USA to Russia. Different countries, different religions, different races…
They all appear as one to me. Souls know not Faces.

{WUM} - John Sokoloff, thank you for being here today on World United Music, it’s been an honor and a pleasure. I’m looking forward to your new album, He has the Sky” in July 2019.



John Sokoloff LINKS:



Wednesday, December 26, 2018

The Minstral Show – (Episode 062)




Welcome back to the only show that covers the best music being made today…and of course as always, we have Three great sets of music coming your way featuring, Dave Kerzner’s In Continuum with special guest Steve Hackett, followed by Marqui Adora, Rick Miller, Stephan Thelen, Agnes Obel, John Sokoloff, Amos Lee, Julian Lennon and John Fogerty.

Music that tells a story, opens the mind, and takes us to a better place…you’re in a room at the edge of the galaxy, so sit back, relax and cast off your burden for the real music of the 21st century…

Let my play for you, the songs of tomorrow,
while we dream of better days, in a World United by Music…

The Minstral Show Episode 62
SONGS:

SET: 01
In Continuum – Crash Landing – Featuring Steve Hackett
Marqui Adora – White Buildings
Rick Miller – Heaven in Your Eyes

SET: 02
Stephan Thelen – Road Movie
Agnes Obel – Red Virgin Soil
John Sokoloff – Waltz for Anastasia

SET: 03
Amos Lee – What’s Going On
Julian Lennon – Someday – Featuring Steven Tyler
John Fogerty – Don’t You Wish it Was True


 ALSO:

Be sure to support the artists by going to their official websites, buying their music and joining their email platforms. (See Artist Links below.)

ARTIST LINKS:


Special thanks toSouthbound Snake Charmers & John Palmer for their music contribution to this program.

Program Intro Song:
3rd set Intro


The World United Music Podcast was carried on 11 different platforms including Anchor FM, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Pocket Casts, Radio Public, Castbox, Breaker, Google Podcasts, Overcast, PodBean and of course on our World United Music Blog. You can still find the show on Breaker & PodBean linked below. Hey, “Catch the Wave!”



Catch the Wave!

Tuesday, November 14, 2017

John Sokoloff - Album Review - Hartland Street Echoes


Review by: Stewart Brennan ~ World United Music

My passion for good music compels me to write especially when good music moves me, and “Hartland Street Echoes” by John Sokoloff has certainly moved me in ways that I never expected, as I now, better understand, empathically, a small part of a displaced community after the 1917 Russian Revolution. One hundred years later, the spirit, culture and art of that community continue to grace our world in the most passionate of ways, expressed so profoundly in the music of Russian American composer and artist, John Sokoloff.

In many ways, the emotional expression present in John Sokoloff’s music mirrors that of my own Irish Community. There is a similarity in the depth of pain experienced by both communities through their tragedies as well as the euphoria of joy in their triumphs expressed through art, which, to me, is the soul of the people in all communities.

The strength of heart and character of the Russian people is as ever present today as it was yesterday and carries on from generation to generation through its preservation of culture, its artforms and its people.

“Hartland Street Echoes” is an empathic window to the life and experiences of not just one man, but of an entire community and perhaps a nation. History is said to be written by the victors, but it is also written by the vanquished through the empathy and artistic passion of its people.

“Hartland Street Echoes” by John Sokoloff contains the pulse of the Russian heart expressed brilliantly by John Sokoloff and band through a music that is thoroughly engaging, empathic and meaningful.

Be sure to subscribe to John Sokoloff’s Official website and / or his Facebook and YouTube channels here and here to keep up to date with music tours and everything else.

First, a little about John Sokoloff and what he’s been up to:

John Sokoloff's music comes from his Russian-American heritage. Melodic and soulful, John's piano-based songs are unique in their lyricism and passionate honesty. Combining a variety of instruments and styles seamlessly, The John Sokoloff Band has released five compact discs of compelling, instrumental music.

John served as composer for the critically acclaimed CBS Primetime "The Bonnie Hunt Show" for David Letterman's Worldwide Pants Productions. He composed and played on the theme and all incidental music for the show.

A song from his debut cd Vacation Beach, was the featured theme for Moscow’s 850th Birthday official documentary, produced by award winning director Tofik Shefardeev. Commissioned by Mayor Lushkov and sanctioned by the Moscow government,
DVD copies of the documentary were distributed to the gathered mayors of the world’s major cities.

Additionally, The John Sokoloff Band has been heard on radio and television in the United States and Russia.
The piano-based band also allows for eclectic instrument combinations and a variety of influences - from Blues and Classical to Russian Folk.
From congas to violin, electric guitar to balalaika - the common denominator is soul…

John’s influences include Rachmaninoff, Van Morrison, Tchaikovsky, Sting, JJ Cale, Neil Young, Roy Buchanan, The Band and Bulat Okoudzhave, among others.

Discography:

1993 - Vacation Beach
1996 - Valleys
1998 - Eastern Shadows
2000 - Bliss Misplaced
2004 - The Melancholy Way
2017 - Hartland Street Echoes

Hartland Street Echoes Album Review:

Band Members:

John Sokoloff – Piano / Synths
Tony Mandracchia – Electric, Acoustic and Slide Guitars
Denny Croy – Fender Base
Craig Fundyga – Congas, Vibes and Percussion
Willie McNeil – Drums

Guests on “Hartland Street Echoes”

Alexander “Lulu” Podresov – Acoustic Guitar and Balalaika on “Hartland Street Echoes”
Gee Rabe – Accordion on “Vanowen Girl”
Nikolai Kurganov – Violin on “Dom Veteranov”

SONGS:


Song # 01 - She Lives at 4 View Road

“She Lives at 4 View Road” begins the musical journey with youthful carefree ambiance, a delightful presence that moves into a natural build up with layers of comforting musical impressions as if thoughts and memories joined-in to greet a friend from youth. A pleasantly engaging song from beginning to end.


Song # 02 - Her Voice

“Her Voice” is a short departure from John Sokoloff’s traditional musical style but no less emotionally impacting through a combination of music and spoken word poetry of a young man talking over the phone with an old girlfriend in hopes of reuniting, only to find that her heart belongs to another. A song and poem about a true-life experience of sinking heartbreak.


POEM: HER VOICE

Her voice, it sounded happy
I listened selfishly
Three years I haven’t seen her
But she is still in me.

Our talk was small, by standards
I didn’t really care
Since on this night of empty words –
It’s feelings I would share

She told me of her college days
While work wore out the nights
Why she “hasn’t done a social thing”
Her time has been so tight.

I closed my eyes
And thanked the clock
for playing kindly thief
No mention of another -
I blew the sigh relief

Euphoria begins
with quivers in the soul -
And how do you stop a rock
that’s begun it’s downhill roll
Aching was my heart –
At hearing that voice again
Take this letter now –
to heaven my feelings send..

It came without much warning
A shower in summertime
She mentioned it in passing –
The truth so hard to find.

“My boyfriend can’t communicate
but treats me really nice.
Our future is together..
John...can you lend me some advice..”

Sometimes we expect
the blue sky to turn green
Sometimes we can’t face,
what we have always seen..

But tell me how to stop,
what has begun to roll
This rock has stopped its tumble –
It’s resting on my soul…

Song # 03 - Vanowen Girl

The more I listen to “Vanowen Girl”, the more blown away I am. Not only is it infectious, it's truly a modern day classic that I'm sure, would have been loved and envied by all the great classical composers. The music is so delightfully simple yet also very complicated in its structure, its essence and its emotional reflection...

”Vanowen Girl” is a modern day classical masterpiece… a waltze made by a master that will grace all of our communities to the end of time…this is simply a brilliant piece! Here is a musical composition that needs to be heard by the world as much as an André Rieu Orchestral Dance and performance is viewed by millions throughout Europe.


Song # 04 - Chasing Hara

I view an album as a life journey or story told through music and so “Chasing Hara” continues the story of a youthful composer, lost in the emotions of love, chasing yet never capturing the elusive dream.


Song # 05 - Covello

“Covello” is a cheery upbeat composition that is seemingly filled with the hustle and bustle of life that builds and builds with infectious instrumental hooks telling of youthful experiences; a piano instrumental piece that lifts the spirits and energy level.


Song # 06 - Coronado Terrace

“Coronado Terrace” is a very reflective piece as if looking back through time at the experiences and roots to what life was like in the Russian American community with all the stories that drift to mind in old silent black and white news reels complete with a hint of melancholy and longing. A wonderfully engaging and artistically inspiring composition.


Song # 07 - Waltz for Anastasia

“Waltz for Anastasia” is another brilliant composition and expression brimming with emotional reflection that tells through its melancholy ambience, the catastrophic loss of innocence and the tragedy that befell the Romonov family, and indeed the entire Russian nation during the 1917 Russian Revolution.

Anastasia was one of the Romanov children and so this composition brings emotional reality to the loss of innocence and the tragic death of a child through an empathic expression of music by John Sokoloff.


Song # 08 - Hartland Street Echoes

The title track of the CD, “Hartland Street Echoes”, encompasses a period of time in the composers life where he lived in a small house isolated from the hustle of the world but was intimate with nature which influenced the artists creativity. The composition profoundly resonates the comfortable feelings and memories of home and could easily be a soundtrack to an academy award winning movie.

Song # 09 - Solo Ari

Solo Ari is the deepest and most complex song on the album as it seemingly plays out the emotional thoughts of one waiting with a candlelit dinner for someone that does not show up. A very engaging song that builds musically and emotionally to a climactic finally and then peacefully closes a chapter.


Song # 10 - Dom Veteranov

Song Background: “Dom Veteranov” “Dom” meaning house in Russian, was a society started in 1926 by Veterans who fought against the Bolsheviks. They had lost their country and lived their entire lives in suitcases and died without being able to return home... The house where they met for decades was filled with their memorabilia .....and their Spirit. The composition, “Dom Veteranov” was composed within those walls.

“Dom Veteranov” is an emotionally empathic and moving tribute to the lives and spirits of the many veterans who passed through the halls of “Dom Veteranov” in the tiny California Russian community.

In my mind, “Dom Veteranov” represents the sorrows of the entire Russian community, many of whom were the families and descendants of those veterans and while I write this album review just after “Remembrance Day” November 11th, 2017, one hundred years after the 1917 Russian revolution, I find a common understanding of sorrow, loss and respect for those that gave their lives for the greater good.


Song # 11 - Balloons of Matilija

John Sokoloff ends his “Heartland Street Echoes” album with “The Balloons of Matilija”, a spoken word poem and music holding deep reflection of a once vibrant Russian community long since gone but still thriving in the hopes, dreams and artforms of its descendants. A wonderful creation and fitting end to a wonderful reflective album.


Poem: The Balloons of Matilija

The balloons have
long since drifted,
The tinsel swept away...
The din of voices...silenced,
It's just another day.

Where laughter once had reigned
And cheer had once resided
Where music once was heard
And utopia - sighted.

But vertical, the hands of time became
And icy gusts blew candles dry
The mighty steed had turned up lame:
Truth transformed into a lie.

Where once you passed
you now must fail
Life's lesson early learned -
Time is not for sale.

The balloon does drift
through clouds and haze
It drifts, serenely
thru the days

It drifts the nights
o'er plain and hill
and thru
the early morning chill

Drifting to a place beyond
where rainbows smile
and sunsets yawn.
Where misty shrouds
of yesteryear -
elude the desperate
grasp of fear

It floats the fields
and grassy knolls
where fawn-like creatures
bare their souls.
Where perfumed flowers
reach the sky
and hands are held
in manner shy

It sees it all
from up above:
the common branch
of hawk and dove,
A bison sipping
lion's tea,
a cats embrace
of canary..
the boisterous bull
and matador:
sharing vintage, Spanish lore...

Wafting by the balloon foresees:
an end
to all life's agony

The scene shifts
to a dark abyss
A cruel, forbidding
precipice -
from which
a gust escapes
the void,
Motivation - to destroy...

It thrusts balloon
on jagged edge -
a pointed branch
or rocky ledge

A hiss is heard,
then a cry -
The lone balloon
begins to die

It sinks past clouds
and through
the trees
clutching, grasping
for a breeze...
while down below
the rocks await -
harsh practitioners
of Fate...

The balloon quivers,
begins to toss
It's life air
all but lost.
And with what proves
it's final gasp
from balloon -
a wish is cast..

And with that
he fights no more
and succumbs
to canyon floor..

Rainclouds gather
and skies do bleed
drenching ground -
devoid of seed.
The distance darkens
while winds moan dry
up above
the barren sky

But somewhere, somewhere
way beyond -
Rainbows smile
and sunsets yawn,
and misty shrouds
of Yesteryear
elude
the desperate grasp of fear.

The balloons have long since drifted
The tinsel, swept away...
The din of voices....silenced,

It's just another day.
--------------------------
Last Word:

If I had the vocabulary to describe my inner feelings, my poems would rain in music. If I possessed the musical ability of expression, my music would be filled with empathy for life and that is what I get from John Sokoloff’s 2017 CD “Hartland Street Echoes” an album I treasure, which is now a part of me.

John Sokoloff LINKS:


BUY MUSIC



The Best Music of 2021

World United Music Promotions

Progressive Rock – (2015 to 2019)

Progressive Rock – (2020 to 2021)

Rhythm and Blues – (2000 to 2019)

Psychedelic, Alternative, New Wave, Dark Wave – (2000 to 2019)

Psychedelic, Alternative, New Wave, Dark Wave – (2020 to 2029)

Rock, Alternative - (2010 to 2019)

Rock, Alternative – (2020 to 2021)

Soft Rock, Lite Rock, Alternative – (2010 to 2019)

Soft Rock, Lite Rock, Alternative – (2020 to 2021)

Pop Rock – (2000 to 2019)

Pop Rock - (2020 to 2021)

Folk Rock, Acoustic – (2010 to 2019)

Folk Rock, Acoustic – (2020 to 2021)

Hard Rock, Heavy Metal – (2000 to 2019)

Punk Rock, High Energy Rock n Roll – (2000 to 2019)

Southern Rock, Alt Country – (2000 to 2019)

Classic, New Age Classic

New Age Alternative

Ambient, Electronic, Relaxation

Music for the Revolutionary Mind