Vicki Genfan

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Vicki Genfan

Vicki Genfan playing at The Saint in Asbury Park, NJ, on April 28, 2013
Background information
Born (1959-06-15) June 15, 1959
Origin United States
Genres Fingerstyle guitar
Occupations Musician, Songwriter, therapist
Instruments Guitar, piano, banjo, hand percussion, trombone
Years active 1991–present
Labels Acoustic Music Records, Vicki Genfan/NafnegV Publishing, Harmonic Touch Records
Website www.vickigenfan.com
Notable instruments
Muse 12 string by Luna Guitars, Vega 6 string Deering-Banjo

Vicki Genfan (born June 15, 1959) is an American multi-instrumentalist, fingerstyle guitarist, composer and singer.

Biography

Vicki Genfan took up the guitar at the age of five. Her father played 12-string guitar, mandolin and fiddle and had a good voice, her older brother played guitar too.[1] She studied classical music and jazz at Ithaca College in New York.[2] Besides guitar Genfan plays piano, banjo, hand percussion and trombone.[3]

1994 she produced her first album Native on cassette, but didn't sell it in commercially significant numbers. 2001 her equally self - produced CD Outside the Box was published. She won the Just Plain Folks Award the same year for her the title song, "New Grass" on that album. 2003, Vicki Genfan Live was published by the German label Acoustic Music Records, a live-recording at Open Strings Festival in Osnabrück, Germany. 2004 Vicki Genfan placed second at Mountain Stage New Song Festival in West Virginia with her song Eleanor.[2] In 2006 Genfan published the double CD Up Close & Personal. The first CD is titled Up Close and contains only instrumentals, the second CD Personal showcases her singing and songwriting abilities.

Vicki Genfan was on stage with several well-known fellow guitarists, for example Tommy Emmanuel, Laurence Juber, Kaki King and Jennifer Batten.[4] Because of her technique and lyrical way of playing and singing she was compared to Michael Hedges or Pat Metheny.[5] Vicki Genfan featured in several American and international magazines and was labeled "Queen of Open Tunings".[6]

Genfan won Guitar Player magazine's Guitar Superstar '08 contest at San Francisco's Great American Music Hall in September 2008.[7]

While not on tour abroad she gives concerts in the northeastern United States. She is an experienced teacher, lectures at workshops and guitar clinics and teaches private lessons. Recently she works on a guitar video featuring her music and technique and plans to publish a book with her music.[8]

Genfan lives in Fairview, New Jersey.[9]

Technique, instruments and musical influences

Vicki Genfan performing on banjo, June 2007

Genfan labels her music "Folk meets Funk".[1] It's a blend of jazz, funk, pop and world music in a contemporary folk context. She uses various uncommon open tunings, complex harmonies and intricate rhythms, combining them with percussive grooves. Her playing is characterized by "two handed tappings", explosive "tapped" and "slapped harmonics" with one or more fingers of the right hand and slapped basslines. She calls her technique "slap-tap".

Her first musical inspiration was her father.[1] Other influences were James Taylor, Michael Jackson, Pat Metheny, Joni Mitchell, Meshell Ndegeocello, Marvin Gaye, Jonatha Brooke and Leo Kottke.[3]

Until May 2009 Genfan played a Gibson L-140,[10] a Gibson LG and an Alvarez Silver Anniversary. The Alvarez- Guitar uses a TrueTone-pickup-system, where two microphones and a L.R. Baggs LB6-pickup send their signal to two separate outlets.[11]

Currently Genfan is playing a custom Luna Guitar (http://www.lunaguitars.com/vickiusaluna.php) built by master luthier Gray Burchette (www.burchetteguitars.com). It has a mini flex '2 Mic' internal microphone system (www.miniflexmic.com) and an RMC hex pickup under the saddle.

She owns a Guild 12 string Guitar, a Muse 12 string by Luna Guitars[1] and plays a Vega 6 string Deering-Banjo.[12] She uses medium-gauge EXP D'Addario strings.

Her engineer Tay Hoyle takes a main part in producing Genfan's CDs and accompanies her on numerous tours.

Discography

Original work

Collaborations, guest musician

  • 1991 – Mistaken Identity (Donna Summer, Atlantic Records)
  • 2000 – Home Away From Home (Dee Carstensen, Exit NineRecords)
  • 2000 – Fourth Floor (Sonya Heller)

Compilations

  • 2005 – La Guitara: Gender Bending Strings (Vanguard Records)
  • 2006 – Indie Music For Life Compilation (Indie Music For Life)
  • 2007 – Indie Music For Life Pop/Jazz Compilation (Indie Music For Life)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Vicki Genfan’s page at Luna Guitars. Accessed on November 18, 2007.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Tap Tones - Bill Milkowski writes about Vicki Genfan in Acoustic Guitar, issue 109, January 2002. Accessed on November 18, 2007.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Interview with Patty Larkin and Vicki Genfan by Ann Latner. Accessed on November 18, 2007.
  4. Review of Genfan's CD Up Close & Personal at CD Baby. Accessed on November 18, 2007.
  5. Vicki Genfan's website at MySpace. Accessed on November 18, 2007.
  6. PRIVATE LESSON – Vicki Genfan, by Teja Gerken. Accessed on November 18, 2007.
  7. Joel Selvin (September 15, 2008). "Acoustic player wins Guitar Superstar contest". San Francisco Chronicle. 
  8. Review of the CD Vicki Genfan Live at CD Baby. Accessed on November 18, 2007.
  9. Fusilli, Jim. "A Guitar Contest With a Winning Surprise", The Wall Street Journal, September 16, 2008. Accessed June 1, 2012. "'My nerves will be pretty tight,' guitarist Vicki Genfan told me when we spoke before she left for San Francisco from her home in Fairview, N.J."
  10. Gibson presents Vicki Genfan. By Bernd Strohm (german). Accessed on November 18, 2007
  11. Bill Milkowski describes Vicki Genfan's Guitars in Acoustic Guitar Magazine, issue 109, January 2002. Accessed on November 18, 2007
  12. List of artists using a Deering-Banjo. Accessed on November 18, 2007

External links

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