Jeff Martin (Canadian musician)

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Jeff Martin
Birth name Jeffrey Scott Brill
Born October 2, 1969 (1969-10-02) (age 38)
Origin Windsor, Ontario, Canada
Genre(s) Rock, Hard Rock, World Music, Blues, Pop, Folk
Occupation(s) Musician, songwriter, record producer
Instrument(s) Vocals, guitar, bass guitar, sitar, sarod, oud, banjo, mandolin, synthesizer, piano, dumbek
Years active 1990–present
Label(s) Koch, Shock
Associated acts The Tea Party
Roy Harper
Website www.jeff-martin.net
Notable instrument(s)
Gibson harp guitar, Fender Telecaster B-bender guitar, Ellis 7 string resonator guitar

Jeffrey Scott Martin (born October 2, 1969 in Windsor, Ontario) is a Canadian guitarist and singer-songwriter best known for fronting the rock band The Tea Party. Martin began his career as a solo artist in October 2005, when The Tea Party disbanded.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early years

Martin began playing guitar as a child and in his adolescence played in bands The Shadows, Modern Movement and The Stickmen. In 1988, Jeff graduated from Sandwich Secondary School (before being adopted by his stepfather and changing his surname from Brill) along with future Tea Party bandmates Jeff Burrows and Stuart Chatwood. He went on to study music at the University of Windsor before leaving his studies prematurely due to philosophical differences with his music professor.

Martin has perfect pitch, as highlighted on "The Science of Rock 'n' Roll", an episode of Daily Planet on Discovery Channel Canada.[citation needed]

[edit] Professional career

[edit] The Tea Party (1990–2005)

Forming The Tea Party in 1990 after a marathon jam session at the Cherry Beach Rehearsal Studios in Toronto, Martin (a self-confessed "control freak"[1]) produced all of The Tea Party's albums, including their eponymous debut album in 1991, distributing it through the band's own label Eternal Discs. In 1993 The Tea Party signed to EMI Music Canada and released their first major label recording entitled Splendor Solis. Martin employed open tuning to imitate Indian instruments such as the sitar, something he has continued to employ throughout his career. Further developing The Tea Party's sound in 1995 The Edges of Twilight was recorded with an array of Indian and Middle-eastern instrumentation while Martin drew lyrical inspiration from occult themes and pagan influenced literature.

Upon returning from successful tours in Canada, Europe and Australia in 1996, The Tea Party went onto record Alhambra an Enhanced CD which features acoustic re-recordings of songs from The Edges of Twilight, followed by a brief tour around Canada known as "Alhambra acoustic and eclectic". Transmission released in 1997 saw Martin's first foray into electronica with Martin conceding that Transmission was "an honest attempt at going somewhere poetically where most people would be unnerved to go. It was very dark, extremely angry and you could only listen to it in a certain mindset. I mean for me, going to where I went with Transmission, almost destroyed me." Triptych followed in 1999, the first single "Heaven Coming down" rose to #1 on Canadian radio. Lyrically Martin was less enigmatic than he was on previous albums, on Triptych he wrote about the experiences of his years in the band. After releasing Tangents a singles compilation in 2000 and Illuminations a DVD compilation of music videos which Martin remixed in Surround sound, The Tea Party released The Interzone Mantras in 2001 and Seven Circles in 2004.[2] In October 2005 The Tea Party disbanded due to creative differences.

[edit] Solo career (2005–present)

Martin's debut solo album titled Exile and the Kingdom was released in Canada and Australia in 2006. Among those who worked with Martin were Michael Lee and Ritesh Das (Toronto Tabla Ensemble). The first single, titled "The World is Calling", is an open letter to the Bush administration.[3] During this time Martin was supposed to collaborate with Scott Stapp but it did not ensue. In November 2006, Martin released a live album recorded that September, titled Live in Brisbane 2006. The two-disc album features Ritesh Das and the Toronto Tabla Ensemble, and consists of both solo and Tea Party songs. The album is a complete recording of a live performance full of Jeff's banter with bandmates and the audience, including his thoughts on the disbanding of The Tea Party and where he sees himself in life. In May 2007, Martin released his second live album Live in Dublin recorded with drummer Wayne P. Sheehy, while Martin's first solo music DVD Live at the Enmore Theatre was released through Shock DVD in July 2007. Martin is currently in the studio recording the follow-up to Exile and the Kingdom, with the current album working title, The Line in the Sand. The album is reported as halfway finished as of February 2008[4].

[edit] As a record producer

Martin has also produced albums for other artists including Hundred Mile House's eponymous EP, The Jay Murphy Band's Propaganda and Tenth Planet's The Prophet Curse EP. He also helped produce Roy Harper's The Green Man.

[edit] Personal life

Martin's wife Nicole gave birth to their first child in December 2004 in Subiaco Hospital, Perth, Western Australia, named "Django James Patrick" after Jeff's heroes Django Reinhardt and Jimmy Page. The song "Daystar" from Exile and the Kingdom was written for him.

Martin currently resides in County Cork, Ireland[citation needed]

[edit] Equipment

[edit] Guitars

[edit] Effects

[edit] Amps

  • Two Fender 100 watt combo
  • Four Matchless Superchief 120 watt
  • No Name 1960's Tube 25 watt
  • Urei 1176 leveling amp
  • Teleronix La-2A[5]

[edit] Discography

[edit] The Tea Party

[edit] Solo releases

[edit] References

  1. ^ Martin, J 2007, The Party has just begun, Lords of Metal E-zine. Lords of Metal E-zine Accessed 6 May 2007.
  2. ^ Band biography: Illuminations The Tea Party Collection 2001, DVD, EMI Music Canada, Mississauga.
  3. ^ Bliss, K 2006, Jeff Martin in-studio session, Jam! Music. Jam! Music Accessed 5 April 2006.
  4. ^ 2008 - A preview.... Jeff Martin Accessed 11 February 2008.
  5. ^ Jeff Martin's equipment Australian Tea Party site Accessed 2 December 2005

[edit] External links