Marco
Eneidi
Bio
Born on All Saints Day, 1956 in Portland, Oregon, Marco Eneidi's
life in music began at the age of nine playing the clarinet while
growing up in the San Francisco East Bay area of California. During
high school he started playing the guitar in the finger picking
style of the southern blues legends, played gut bucket bass in
a jug band, and played clarinet in a Dixieland band which performed
at nursing homes and the local pizzeria.
At the age of twenty, Marco decided to get serious about music
and finally began to practice upwards of twelve hours a day. In
1978 he got his first real job in music. He was hired to be part
of a C.E.T.A. sponsored band, playing swing and jazz standards
twice a day at various nursing homes, schools and hospitals throughout
Sonoma County in Northern California. It lasted one year, until
he was accused of trying to sound like Ornette Coleman, then John
Coltrane, and then fired for not wearing socks.
In 1981, Marco decided to move to New York and look up Jimmy Lyons
who he had met several years earlier at San Francisco's Keystone
Corner with the Cecil Taylor Unit. Within several days of moving
into the Lower East Side, Marco met Jemeel Moondoc along with
the members of his band which included Denis Charles, William
Parker and Roy Campbell. He began an everlasting relationship
with some of the most important musicians of the time. Many other
relationships and collaborations soon followed. They include Don
Cherry, Jim Pepper, Bill Dixon, Cecil Taylor, Dewey Redman and
Wilbur Morris.
With the release of his trio LP recording "Vermont Spring" in
1987, Marco formed Botticelli Records which has since seen several
new releases on CD. These releases have included many of the most
important creative jazz musicians in the field: Denis Charles,
William Parker, Wadada Leo Smith, Glenn Spearman, Wilbur Morris,
Karen Borca and Jackson Krall.
After returning to California in 1995, Marco, along with Glenn
Spearman formed the Creative Music Orchestra. It was the
first of many large recent orchestral works that were composed
on an even larger scale, leading to the creation of the American
Jungle Orchestra, which varies in size from fifteen to fourty
over the years.
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Recent work include performances and recordings
with Paul Lovens, Georg Graewe, Ken Vandermark, Damon Smith, Butch Morris, Peter Broetzmann, Han Bennink, Andrew Cyrille, Bertram Turetzky
and drummer Sabu Toyozumi
in exile from the U.S.now living in austria since Nov. 2004
Sept. 2005 - present: Director of "The Neu New York/Vienna Institute of Improvised Music" performance/workshop jam session meeting every Monday night in Celeste Jazz Keller, 1050 Wien
current groups:
Marco Eneidi/George Graewe Quartet
w/ Clayton Thomas and Donald Robinson
"ssnaetch-kraeutl-biep"
"LIPCODIE ENQUKE"
www.myspace.com/marcoeneidi
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