John Mock
John Mock | |
---|---|
Genres | Acoustic music, Irish music, Celtic music |
Occupation(s) | Musician |
Instruments | Guitar, concertina, penny whistle, mandolin, bodhrán, harmonium, uilleann pipes, bouzouki, wood flute, recorder |
Years active | 1991–present |
Labels | Green Hill, Spring Hill, SoundArt |
Associated acts | Butch Baldassari, Sylvia Hutton |
Website |
www |
John Mock is a multi-instrumentalist, composer, arranger, and photographer with a particular interest in the topic of maritime history and culture.
Biography
Early Years
Mock is a native of Connecticut’s eastern shore. His father was in the Coast Guard in New London, Connecticut, and Mock grew to love the ocean and shore. Mock began playing guitar at age 15. When he visited Ireland at age 28, he started playing the tin whistle, and he took up the concertina in his 30s.[1]
Composing, arranging, session work
Eventually, Mock left the Atlantic coast for Nashville, where he worked as a composer, arranger and instrumentalist. His orchestral arrangements have been performed by the London Symphony Orchestra and the National Symphony Orchestra, as well as the symphonies of Atlanta and Nashville.[2]
Mock has recorded and performed with a number of prominent artists, including the Dixie Chicks,[3] Dolly Parton,[4] and Nanci Griffith.
Photography
While living in Nashville, Mock traveled frequently to New England, Ireland, and Scotland, where he took photographs of old castles, lighthouses, and ships. He uses projections of these photographs in his music presentations.[5]
From The Shoreline
Mock has toured extensively to stage his concert presentation From the Shoreline, which uses multimedia to celebrate the Atlantic coastline from New England to Ireland. He performs original compositions on guitar, concertina, mandolin, tin whistle and other instruments. His photography is projected onto a screen, and he also provides narration.[6]
Keeper's House Concert Series
In 2013, Mock was recognized by the American Lighthouse Foundation (ALF) as an artist advocate. He launched the Keeper’s House Concert Series to benefit the ALF and to promote the appreciation and preservation of lighthouses.[7]
Collaborations
In 1998, Mock and the late Butch Baldassari released Cantabile: Duets for Mandolin and Guitar, both as a CD and a book of music transcriptions. In 2007, they recorded Music of O'Carolan, a tribute to Irish composer Turlough O'Carolan.[8] Both albums are on Baldassari's SoundArt label.
Starting from 1996 (The Real Story) to 2016 (It's All in the Family), Mock has been producing and arranging country singer Sylvia Hutton's albums. He also writes the music for many of her songs.[9]
Other projects
Mock contributed bodhrán, low whistle, and penny whistle to the soundtrack for Liberty! The American Revolution spearheaded by Mark O'Connor, Yo Yo Ma, and James Taylor.
He also worked with Ma on Heartland: An Appalachian Anthology along with O'Connor, Edgar Meyer, Sam Bush, and others.
Mock has recorded numerous albums of Irish and Colonial American instrumental music for Green Hill Music of Nashville.
Discography
Solo albums
- 2005: The Day at Sea (self-released)
- 2011: Keeper's Companion (self-released)
Spring Hill / Green Hill titles
- 1994: Early American Christmas (Green Hill)
- 1995: Classical Hymns (Green Hill)
- 1995: Classical Strings (Green Hill)
- 1996: Celtic Visions (Spring Hill)
- 1996: Old England Hymns (Spring Hill)
- 1999: Celtic Portraits (Green Hill)
- 2000: New England Portraits (Green Hill)
- 2001: Celtic Highlands (Green Hill)
- 2001: Revolution: Songs of the Revolutionary War (Green Hill)
- 2005: Christmas In New England (Green Hill)
Collaborations
- 1998: Cantabile: Duets for Mandolin and Guitar (SoundArt) with Butch Baldassari
- 1999: Irish Christmas (Cumberland) with Mark Howard, Stuart Duncan, Sam Levine, Hunter Lee, Cindy Wyatt, Joey Miskulin, Kenny Malone, Dennis Crouch, and Jim Ferguson
- 2006: Irish Hymns (Cumberland) with Mark Howard, Stuart Duncan, Alisa Jones, Joey Miskulin, Hunter Lee, Jim Ferguson, Kenny Malone, and David Angell
- 2007: Music of O'Carolan (SoundArt) with Butch Baldassari[8]
As arranger
- 1991: Kathy Mattea - Time Passes By (Polygram) - string arrangements
- 1995: George Ducas - George Ducas (Liberty / Capitol) - mandolin arrangements
- 1995: October Project - Falling Farther In (Epic) - track 8, "One Dream"
- 1996: Lambchop - How I Quit Smoking (Merge) - song arrangements
- 1996: Nashville Mandolin Ensemble - Gifts (Sony Music)
- 1997: Silvain Vanot - Egérie (Labels) - string arrangements
- 1998: Hal Bynum - If I Could Do Anything (Warner Bros.) - guitar
- 1998: Michael W. Smith - Live the Life (Reunion) - woodwind arrangements
- 1999: Nanci Griffith with the London Symphony Orchestra - The Dust Bowl Symphony (Elektra) - song arrangements
- 2002: Dixie Chicks - Home (Monument) - track 12, "Top Of The World"
- 2003: Dixie Chicks - Top of the World Tour: Live (Monument) - cello arrangements, string arrangements
As producer
- 1996: Sylvia - The Real Story (Red Pony)
- 2002: Sylvia - Where In The World (Red Pony)
- 2002: Sylvia - A Cradle In Bethlehem (Red Pony)
- 2014: Craig Bickhardt - The More I Wonder (Stone Barn)
- 2016: Sylvia - It's All in the Family (Red Pony)[9]
Also appears on
- 1991: Kathy Mattea - Time Passes By (Polygram) - guitar
- 1995: Nashville Mandolin Ensemble - Plectrasonics (CMH) - mandolin
- 1995: Maura O'Connell - Stories (Hannibal) - whistle
- 1996: Carol Tornquist - Angel Music (Chordant) - tin whistle, recorder
- 1997: Mark O'Connor - Liberty! The American Revolution: Original Television Soundtrack (Sony Classical) - pennywhistle, bodhrán, low whistle, recorder
- 1998: Nanci Griffith: Other Voices, Too (A Trip Back to Bountiful) (Elektra) - pennywhistle
- 1998: Michael W. Smith - Live the Life (Reunion) - whistle on track 12, "Hello, Goodbye"
- 1998: Twila Paris - Perennial (Songs For The Seasons Of Life) (Sparrow) - pennywhistle
- 1999: Dixie Chicks - Fly (Monument) - tin whistle, bodhrán, concertina
- 1999: Tanya Savory - Town to Town (Philo) - tin whistle, concertina
- 1999: Martina McBride - Emotion (RCA) - pennywhistle, low whistle
- 1999: Tim O'Brien - The Crossing (Alula) - percussion, low whistle
- 1999: Nanci Griffith with the London Symphony Orchestra - The Dust Bowl Symphony (Elektra) - acoustic guitar, whistle
- 2000: David Davidson - Celtic Fantasy (Green Hill) - concertina, bodhrán, guitar, whistle
- 2001: Dolly Parton - Little Sparrow (Sugar Hill) - whistle, harmonium
- 2001: Joshua Bell, Sam Bush, Béla Fleck, Yo-Yo Ma, Mike Marshall, Edgar Meyer, Mark O'Connor, James Taylor, and Alison Krauss - Heartland: An Appalachian Anthology (Sony Classical) - pennywhistle, low whistle
- 2002: Dixie Chicks - Home (Monument) - percussion, bodhrán, uilleann pipes, tin whistle
- 2003: Martina McBride - Martina (RCA) - tin whistle on track 1, "So Magical"
- 2003: Sara Evans - Restless (RCA Nashville) - pennywhistle, concertina
- 2003: Dixie Chicks - Top of the World Tour: Live (Monument) - acoustic guitar, Irish whistle, concertina, percussion, papoose guitar
- 2004: Selah - Hiding Place (Curb) - whistle on track 12, "Before The Throne Of God Above"
- 2005: various artists - Happy Land: Musical Tributes to Laura Ingalls Wilder (Pa's Fiddle) - track 10, "Oft in the Stilly Night" (with Deborah Packard)
- 2007: Butch Baldassari - The Vespa Love Festival Sessions (CD Baby)
- 2007: Donna Ulisse - When I Look Back (Hadley) - pennywhistle, concertina, harmonium
- 2007: Gretchen Peters - Burnt Toast & Offerings (Scarlet Letter) - concertina, pennywhistle on track 10, "This Town"
- 2008: Peter Corry - Sounds of the Soul (self-released) - concertina
- 2008: Janet McLaughlin - Shine In The Moon (Muddy Paw) - acoustic guitar, wood flute, pennywhistle, concertina
- 2008: Dolly Parton - Backwoods Barbie (Dolly) - tin whistle, bodhrán, harmonium on track 6, "Only Dreamin'"
- 2008: The Waybacks - Loaded (Compass) - pennywhistle
- 2009: John Cowan - Comfort and Joy (eOne) - guitar, pennywhistle
- 2011: Craig Duncan - Irish Country Christmas (Green Hill) - tin whistle, bodhrán, guitar
- 2011: Kathy Troccoli - Christmas Songs (Green Hill) - bouzouki, guitar, low whistle
- 2012: Anna Ternheim - The Night Visitor (V2 Records) - pennywhistle on track 8, "God Don't Know"
- 2013: Dawn McCarthy and Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - What the Brothers Sang (Drag City) - mandolin, harmonium
- 2013: Craig Campbell - Never Regret (Bigger Picture) - harmonium
- 2014: Jim Hendricks and Jeff Lisenby - Celtic Heritage: Favorite Irish, Scottish and Old English Melodies (Green Hill) - guitar, mandolin
- 2015: Tom Paxton - Redemption Road (Pax) - whistle
- 2017: The Westies - Six On the Out (Audio & Video Labs) - pennywhistle
References
- ↑ Lovett, Katie (July 28, 2011). "A shore thing: Mock combines his two passions". Newbury Port Daily News. Retrieved July 9, 2017.
- ↑ Nunez, Taylor (July 25, 2013). "Sights and sounds of the Shores". Worcester Magazine. Retrieved July 9, 2017.
- ↑ Mirkin, Steven (July 20, 2003). "Review: ‘Dixie Chicks’". Variety. Retrieved July 9, 2017.
- ↑ Cardwell, Nancy (Jul 22, 2011). The Words and Music of Dolly Parton (1 ed.). Retrieved July 10, 2017.
- ↑ Feinberg, Robbie (March 27, 2016). "Multi-Instrumentalist John Mock Uses Music to Help Preserve Lighthouses". WMUK. Retrieved July 10, 2017.
- ↑ Pritchard, Mike (August 10, 2010). "Artist John Mock Returns to Absecon Lighthouse". Atlantic City Weekly. Retrieved July 5, 2017.
- ↑ ""ALF Artist Advocate" Partnership with Musician John Mock". American Lighthouse Foundation. Retrieved July 9, 2017.
- 1 2 "Butch Baldassari & John Mock, Music of O'Carolan: Ireland's Bard". Rambles.net. Retrieved July 10, 2017.
- 1 2 Yap, Timothy (September 14, 2016). "Sylvia Announces Upcoming Album 'It's All in the Family'". Hallels. Retrieved July 10, 2017.