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"Martin Speake is not
just a distinctive improviser but a striking composer too".
John Fordham - The Guardian
Martin Speake
was born in Barnet, England, in 1958. There was music in the family
and his grandmother was a pub pianist all her life having started
off playing for silent films. A cousin was a semi professional jazz
pianist who was inspired by Bill Evans, his mother loved Ella Fitzgerald
and his auntie and uncle listened to Frank Sinatra, The Beatles
and Errol Garner. Parties would always have music at them, which
usually meant family and friends would take it in turns to sing
a song.
Initially Martin was attracted by pop and rock music and the first
band he saw live was Led Zeppelin. Throughout his early teens he
attended many concerts and festivals and saw bands such as Pink
Floyd, Roxy Music, The Faces, Hawkwind, Frank Zappa, Faust, Van
Morrison, Can, Stevie Wonder, Spirit, Kevin Ayers, Mahavishnu Orchestra,
Yes and many others.
He left school at 16 with very few qualifications and lasted 8 months
in an office working for a motor insurance company. During this
time he bought an alto saxophone, after hearing Ornette Coleman
on record, and began practising and taking lessons. After studying
some music theory he first went to Southgate Technical College and
then to Trinity College of Music to study classical saxophone from
1977-81. At that time there were no jazz courses in London. He met
some other musicians at the college who were playing jazz, such
as pianist Simon Purcell with whom he formed a group, and saxophonist
Mark Lockheart. Also during this time he met the musicians who were
to form the saxophone quartet Itchy Fingers. Martin toured Europe,
South America, Africa and the USA with this group, appearing at
most major jazz festivals and playing on their first two cds. In
1986 they won the Schlitz Young Jazz Musicians of the Year Award
which was televised by the BBC.
In 1988 he left the group to concentrate on his own projects. His
main band has been the Martin Speake Group featuring guitarist John
Parricelli. He has recorded two albums with this band also featuring
bassist Steve Watts and drummer Steve Arguelles entitled 'In Our
Time' and 'Trust'. Recently, after an extensive British tour in
the Autumn of 1999 a new line up featuring bassist Mick Hutton and
drummer Tom Skinner along with John Parricelli recorded a cd to
be released in 2000. His other projects include two very different
duos with guitarist Phil Lee (exploring the jazz standard) and pianist
Nikki Iles (playing contemporary tunes and free improvisation) and
the 7 piece world music band Fever Pitch featuring 3 percussionists.
He also plays the music of Ornette Coleman with Mind
and Time free improvisation with the Eternal Triangle
and Indian music with Dharambir Singh.
As you can see by the diversity of groups that he leads, Martin
has been (and continues to be) influenced by many musicians and
styles of music. Apart from these projects of his own, Martin has
also performed with Paul Motian, Bobo Stenson, Loose Tubes, Stan
Tracey, Bhavani Shankar, Billy Jenkins, Django Bates, Bob Wilber,
Conrad Herwig, Don Weller, Ronan Guilfoyle, Alison Bentley, The
Style Council, Ann Pigalle, Kadam, John Williams, Airto Moreira
and Flora Purim, Jim Mullen, Dave Cliff, Julian Arguelles, Ephie
Resnick and the Royal Shakespeare Company among others. He is very
involved in jazz education and is saxophone professor and contemporary
music co-ordinator on the Royal Academy of Music Jazz Course and
saxophone teacher at Middlesex University. Martin has also taught
in schools, adult education classes, weekend courses and summer
schools throughout the country. He has also composed music for the
Associated Board jazz piano syllabus and a solo saxophone piece
for Faber Music.
Keith Jarrett - Facing You, Ornette Coleman- Science Fiction,
Bill Evans-Explorations, Charlie Parker-With Strings, John Coltrane
- Crescent, Steve Coleman- The Tao of Mad Phat, Rabih Abou-Khalil-
Tarab, Sonny Rollins-The Bridge, Paul Motian- It Should've Happened
A Long Time Ago, Ravel-String Quartet, Vaughan Williams-The Lark
Ascending, L. Subramaniam-Le Violon De L'Inde Du Sud, Stevie Wonder-
Fulfillingness' First Finale, Joao Gilberto - Aquas de Marco are
some of his favourite albums.
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