In
2003, after finishing a successful, steady jazz gig in China
with singer Dee Dee McNeil, pianist Jack Holland, and bassist
Donald Jackson, American guitarist Greg Chako moved to Japan
with his Japanese wife (of 3 years) to start a new life. However,
shortly after arriving in Japan, he discovered his beloved
wife had terminal cancer. The shocking, all-consuming experience
that followed caused a 2-3 year playing and recording hiatus.
However, after the death of his wife in 2004 at age 37, he
began slowly to get back into his music.
In 2005/2006 he released 2 new CDs, the first double CD containing
all-original compositions called “Where
We Find Ourselves”, dedicated to his late wife. Played
by a tight, swinging horn ensemble, the fresh, varied arrangements
are mostly mainstream, with splashes of Latin and World music,
and even a couple vocal tracks showing off Chakos` own lyrics,
which are as thoughtful and supremely lyrical as his improvising.
Shortly thereafter, he released his 7th CD, “Two`s
Company, Three`s a Crowd”, a series of swinging duets
of guitar/piano and guitar/vocal covers, some live. Seeming
content to stay and develop his performance contacts in and
around the Tokyo area, Chako is now focused on promoting and
extending his prolific composing and recording career, with
two new CD releases planned for 2007/2008.
From
1994 up till his China gig in 2001, Greg Chako resided in
the sunny, tropical island of Singapore, where he recorded
4 CDs (“Sudden
Impact” in 1996, “Live
at Raffles” in 1998, “Integration”
in 2000, and “Integration
II” in 2001), released 6 videos, a documentary movie,
and appeared on TV and at major Jazz Festivals in the area.
His first steady gig there began in March of 1994 with The
Greg Chako Trio, featuring drummer Redd Holt and bassist Belinda
Moody. Then he worked with NY singer Jean DuShon and bassist
Vistor Gaskin, and finally in 1995, landed his dream gig which
was to last for almost 7 years, leading his own trio at the
famous Raffles Hotel.
While
there, he also founded and ran as Managing Director, an entertainment
company that organized jazz and other kinds of performances
for public and private business entities, including Ministry
of the Arts, World
Gourmet Food Summit, American Association, Singapore Airlines,
Ritz-Carlton, Four Seasons, Westin, The Oriental, US Navy,
and many, many others. Chakos` Singapore stint culminated
in a three month engagement with his quintet, co-led by soul-jazz
singer Coco
York and pianist Michael Stanton, and then finished in
late 2002 with his 7-piece “Integration”
bands` performance in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia for the Heineken
Jazz Festival.
Born
in Cincinnati Ohio in 1958, Greg took his first music lessons
at the age of 9 on the accordion. However, guitar soon became
the instrument of choice with Hendrix being an admired hero.
After just one year of guitar lessons, Greg won 2nd place
in the American Guild of Music contest, involving more than
1,000 contestants. The following year he also placed first
in a local contest. Greg then attended Berklee College of
Music for three years in 1976 on a partial scholarship. During
the next few years he played with top artists like Junior
Cook,
Bill Hardman, Othello Molineaux, Johnny Lytle, Bobby Watson,
Herb Ellis, Jimmy Raney & others. He also gained “hands-on”
experience as a promoter and organizer, founding a non-profit
Jazz Society and launching its inception with an outdoor jazz
festival featuring Slide Hampton. His efforts to promote jazz
won him a grant from the Massachusetts State Council of the
Arts.
Although Greg Chako has always been a music and jazz lover,
his performing career had been sporadic until he moved to
Asia in 1992. At one point in the 1980`s, Greg even quit playing
guitar for several years and became an industrial real estate
broker in New York City. However, the lure of the guitar and
the lack of artistic expression in a corporate world eventually
led to Greg playing as a hobby again, which led to several
hours of serious practice, and finally the move to writing
very complex solo arrangements. The results were impressive!
Unfortunately, this upward trend had to stop, in 1990 when
Greg was diagnosed with carpal tunnel syndrome, a
repetitive motion disease affecting the wrist. The little
bit of playing he did while fighting the disease, he did without
a pick, using only his thumb to pluck the strings. He liked
the warmer, percussive sound he got with his thumb, and from
then on Greg adopted this style of playing, perfecting it
over a long period of time.
In 1992, Greg moved to Hong Kong, and having controlled
his carpal tunnel syndrome, resumed performing as a professional
musician. Chako’s career blossomed, playing in Broadway
musicals including West Side Story, a concert with the Hong
Kong Philharmonic Orchestra, performing in clubs with Jazz
greats Curtis Fuller and Richie Cole, and recording his
first CD "Everything
I Love" in 1994, just before moving to Singapore.
Gregs`
rocky life history has enhanced and matured his music, and
except for his first couple years in Japan fighting cancer,
he has not stopped playing since 1992. Now, with his most
recent CD releases, future CD plans and growing reputation,
he seems keen to stay on the scene for good, growing, teaching,
producing, promoting, recording and playing Jazz!