John Carlini | |
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Born | John Carlini |
Citizenship | American |
Education | Berklee |
Occupation | Jazz guitarist |
Notable works | Big Mang |
Influenced | Tony Rice |
Home town | Berkeley Heights, NJ |
John Carlini is an American Grammy nominated[1] jazz guitarist and arranger based in New Jersey[2] notable for blending bluegrass and jazz. He has performed with David Grisman,[3] mandolin player Don Stiernberg,[4] singer Bill Robinson,[5] Bucky Pizzarelli,[5] Rio Clemente,[5] flatpicking guitarist Tony Rice,[6] and many others. He is an orchestrator, conductor, and five-string banjo player, and composes using the piano. He formed the John Carlini Trio in 2000.[1]
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Mr. Carlini's father was a violinist for the New York Philharmonic and his mother was a concert pianist. Mr. Carlini served in the United States Navy and later enrolled in the Berklee College of Music[1] in Boston. He formed a friendship with David Grisman and was the musical director for Mr. Grisman's Quartet.[1] He appeared in the movie King of the Gypsies as a guitarist with violinist Stephane Grappelli. He toured eight seasons as musical director for the Ice Capades.[1] He orchestrated an off-Broadway musical entitled Song of Singapore. He's worked with mandolinist and guitarist Todd Collins to create a jazz-bluegrass hybrid sound in their group called Over the Edge. In addition, Mr. Carlini has played with the Nashville Mandolin Ensemble,[1] and was nominated in two categories for the 1997 Nashville Music Awards. At present, he plays with the John Carlini Quartet.[1] He has been a resident of Berkeley Heights, New Jersey.[7]
All About Jazz music reviewer C. Michael Bailey wrote that he had "considerable guitar skills"[8] and music critic Ronnie Lankford in All Music Guide wrote that his River Suite for Two Guitars, in which Mr. Carlini performed with flatpicking star Tony Rice, was "amazing how much lead work these two guitarists can fit into a two-minute song like Banister River".[9] Critic Roman St. James in JazzReview.com wrote that Carlini and his band combine "the best elements of both jazz and bluegrass music" and that the "unlikely pairing" works well.[10]