Home » Jazz Musicians » Jon Muq
Jon Muq
Biography
Jon’s music carries listeners on an artful journey through his remarkable life, which began in a small suburban slum in Kampala, Uganda. He first felt the gravitational pull of the creative life as a small boy. Sitting in his leaky-roofted two-room house in Mutungo with no running water or electricity, he began to dream up stories and songs as he listened to conversations between his parents and sisters late at night, staring at the simple beauty of the moonlight through cracks in the roof. When he started school, he found himself getting in trouble often for returning home late in the evening because he stayed behind to listen to the school band play. He fell in love with the co-mingling of trumpets, drums and trombones. When he was invited by the bandmaster to join, he almost immediately picked up trumpet by ear and quickly became one of the group’s best players without learning to read music.
Though Jon transferred to a boarding school without a band at age 11, he felt inspired by the sweet, mysterious sounds of the church choir and their drum accompanists practicing in a neighboring building each night. After sneaking into one of their rehearsals, he was invited to play an African shaker on some of their songs for a competition, an experience that ignited his passion for voice and eventually led him to join the choir as a singer. He began to discover new music from around the world, and he felt especially moved by pop songs like “We Are The World” because of the way they combined many different voices.
At the same time, Jon moved schools again to finish high school in another town and began to live on his own, picking up odd jobs to support himself and also pay for college, eventually moving in with his uncle and twin sister. As he walked alone on the streets between school and work, he would sing to himself, fine-tuning his sound and making up his own songs. One evening he passed someone playing a guitar, which he had never heard, and he felt instantly drawn to it. He borrowed a guitar and began to teach himself into the night. When he did not have a guitar, Jon made makeshift instruments out of rubber bands and pencils so he could continue to evolve his playing, singing, songwriting and live performance technique.
During these late nights of self-study, Jon committed to becoming a professional musician, and he eventually auditioned for a job singing for guests in an upscale hotel, earning a regular four-hour slot. Without a microphone or an amplifier, he sang at the same hotel two nights per week for a year during dinner service. He moved out on his own for the first time, practicing music in his room, recording tracks in a friend’s studio and making videos of himself singing and playing, which he shared on Facebook. It was through these videos that he was discovered by Norwegian Cruise Line in the US and hired as a featured performer.
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