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Jayme Stone

Banjo-playing composer Jayme Stone follows whimsy rigorously. He picked up a passion for music from an eccentric uncle who listened to records endlessly, placing his ashtray on the speaker so Stone could join him in watching how the cigarette smoke swirled to the music. Stone muses that he started playing banjo because the instruments' quirky physics align with his quick thinking. Soon after his calling to the banjo, he followed the sound of an Indian sarod (like a whisp of smoke) in a small California town to a chance meeting with revered Indian musician Ali Akbar Khan. "I spent the better part of the week soaking up these ancient songs," remembers Stone. "You could say it was my first banjo lesson." Stone's musical path always finds him with one foot sinking deeper into land close to home while the other wanders onto new territory.

An unlikely set of circumstances has lent Stone a broader set of reference points than most banjoists and those early beginnings have influenced his sound, choice of material, and collaborations. It started with the architecture of the banjo, led to a mysterious librarian who stocked his local public library with a vast trove of banjo recordings, and landed him long-lasting lessons with a series of maestros, from Béla Fleck and Tony Trischka, to Dave Douglas and Bill Frisell. Now, after seven weeks in Mali studying with the likes of Djelimady Sissoko, Adama Tounkara and Bassekou Kouyate, he realizes that old-fashioned oral transmission suits him best.

"There's just something special about one-on-one learning," says Stone. "There's more to music than just the notes. Like seeing a photo of Miles Davis in Tony Trischka's banjo case and playing 'Cluck Old Hen' with Bill Frisell stand out more than anything else I learned somehow."

Stone is drawn to musicians who invent their own worlds, musicians who are fluent in the language of music, yet speak in broader brush strokes. With such unlikely influences as Japanese poetry and Brazilian literature, Stone even composed what he calls a tiny symphony that takes place inside an imaginary light bulb. He owns over twenty Caetano Veloso records and has been known to sing Veloso songs phonetically (without knowing a lick of Portuguese). Just as his early influences were diverse, so continues the sources of inspiration.

The Jayme Stone Quartet has the uncanny ability to play a twelve-part composition in eleven, a dirge for Ray Charles, and a medley of Appalachian fiddle tunes all in the same set. They hop scotch from bluegrass hoedowns to jazz festivals leaving small musical twisters in their wake. When people ask what kind of music they play, bassist Mark Diamond replies, "Well, what kind of music do you like?" Or as Stone puts it, "Blending genres is like trying to braid water: you quickly find out it's all one thing anyway." The quartet is rounded out with musically-telepathic fiddler Adam Galblum and gravity-defying guitarist Grant Gordy, and occasional special guests Kevin Turcotte on trumpet, and Matt Flinner on mandolin.

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Interview

Jayme Stone: Symphonies in a Lightbulb

Read "Jayme Stone: Symphonies in a Lightbulb" reviewed by Cathy Colman


Jayme Stone, banjo player and composer from Canada, recently won the 2009 Juno Award for Best Music Album of the Year for Africa to Appalachia (Self Published, 2008), a collaboration with musicians from Africa. Stone travelled to Africa to trace the roots of banjo and the characteristics of early styles, which haven't yet made it to the Americas.

He also runs a quartet of his own formation--the Jayme Stone Quartet--which performs works of diverse ...

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Recording

Jayme Stone: "Room of Wonders"

Jayme Stone: "Room of Wonders"

Source: Chris M. Slawecki

Bach's Lilt, Mystery Melodies, and the Wonders of the World: Banjo Instigator Jayme Stone Whirls and Waltzes on Room of Wonders

As masterful banjo player and musical instigator Jayme Stone was fixing dinner one night, he heard Bach dance. “I was listening to Bach's “French Suites" while cooking. The performance had such a lilt to it that I literally wanted to dance," Stone recalls. “It was an epiphany moment. Bach used European folk dance forms to inform his own music. ...

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Recording

Jayme Stone & Mansa Sissoko's African American Folk

Jayme Stone & Mansa Sissoko's African American Folk

Source: Michael Ricci

American Music is African Music

From blues to R&B to disco to electronica to bluegrass, every strain of American music can trace its DNA back to ideas rooted in the African American and African traditions, from the rhythms and melodies to the instruments themselves. Jayme Stone and Mansa Sissoko's new collaborative album, Africa to Appalachia, brings that shared history to light in deft arrangements of Stone's banjo and Sissoko's kora playing. After Stone's trip to Mali a year ago, they ...

"A fresh contemporary take on musical treasures." — NPR

"A truly inventive spin on some very old tunes." — GEORGIA STRAIGHT

"A musical evangelist, Stone loves using fresh approaches to get people hooked on wider musical traditions." — EDMONTON JOURNAL

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