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On
her third album, Shambhala Dance, Barbara Markay offers music to
enhance the journey towards spiritual enlightenment - sounds for the
body, mind and spirit. Shambhala Dance blends world-beat grooves,
sultry flamenco guitar, violin tinged with Middle Eastern influences,
occasional new age vocals, and a wide variety of other sounds including
pop-oriented electric guitar and ethnic percussion from around the
world.
"I try to create music that will help
awaken all of us to the calling of the universal rhythmic pulse,"
explains Barbara. "Shambhala represents the guidance for
humanity. There is this wonderful, flowing, positive, totally-organized
energy from Shambhala that nurtures our whole progression and evolution.
That rhythm of life is like dance to me, and it inspired this
music."
Shambhala Dance went to #3 on the
national New Age Reporter charts. The seven songs - ranging in
length from 7 to 9-1/2 minutes were written, arranged and produced by
Markay, who also plays keyboards and sings on the three vocal tracks.
She is joined by Alberto de Almar (Alicia Keys, Keiko Matsui, Doug
Cameron) on flamenco and electric guitars, Eric Gorfain (Grant Lee
Phillips, Lisa Lynne, Lowen & Navarro) on violin, Tim May (Stan Getz,
Les McCann, Michael Feinstein, Lionel Ritchie, Sarah Brightman) on
electric guitar, Joseph Lecuona (Jon Anderson, Judy Collins) on vocals,
among others.
Markay
brings a wealth of musical experience to the project. She graduated from
prestigious Juillard College, had salsa dance hits in Europe, wrote and
performed a musical comedy revue in Miami Beach and New York City, sang
backup with Bruce Willis and his blues band, wrote arrangements for the
Saturday Night Live Band, did synthesizer programming on a Carly Simon
album and the Michael Jackson "Bad" Video, co-wrote and produced an
album for Joseph Lecuona, and composed music for India's revered
spiritual teacher Sathya Sai Baba.
"I wanted the music on this album to be
entertaining, but I did create it with a higher purpose," explains Markay. "If you simply sway to the rhythms, that can be enough. but I
think of this music as meditation with movement. I tried to create a
musical atmosphere of intense, vital emotions that are sensual and
pulsing, but also meditative at the same time. In addition, I wanted the
music to exude a healing energy."
Barbara created the bulk of the music on
the album to be entertaining, but I did create it with a higher
purpose" explained Markay. "If you simply sway to the rhythms, that can
be enough. But I think of this music as meditation with movement. I
tried to create a musical atmosphere of intense, vital emotions that are
sensual and pulsing, but also meditative at the same time. In addition,
I wanted the music to exude a healing energy."
Barbara created the bulk of the music on
the album on keyboards. "I left improvisational sections open for the
other instruments - the violin, flamenco guitar and electric guitars. I
wanted to use the violin to communicate to the listener in ways that
were different than what they might hear in classical music. I fell in
love with the flamenco guitar sound three years ago when I visited Spain
and heard flamenco guitarists in a club in Seville."
The
CD closes with a 7-minute version of the traditional Sanskrit chant "The
Gayatri." It begins and ends with Sathya Sai Baba chanting. In between,
the four lines of the chant are explored in different ways musically.
"Each line is meaningful to me so I wanted to spotlight each phrase."
Markay first heard the chant in India at Sai Baba's ashram where she was
asked to be the musical director for their annual Christmas play which
included composing music for the event.
Barbara was born and raised on Long
Island, New York, in Rockville Center. She began taking piano lessons
when she was four. When she was ten, she auditioned and was awarded a
scholarship to attend the Julliard School of Music's Preparatory
Division. The following year she also began attending the Manhattan
School of Music to study violin. For three summers as a teenager she won
scholarships to the Chatauqua Institute for the Arts in upstate New
York. At 17, Barbara spent the summer touring southern Italy as a
violinist with the American Festival Orchestra and playing piano with
their chamber music group.
Markay went on to attend the College
Division of Julliard where she graduated with a Bachelor of Music degree
in composition. She entered college as a piano major, but realized she
was more enamored with writing music. As part of her college studies,
she was writing dissonant, atonal music. Eventually, after so many years
of concentrating on classical repertoire, she began listening to pop
music (The Eagles, Sting, Prince, Annie Lennox, Phil Collins) and
started composing in the pop genre.
After graduation Barbara formed The Girl
Scouts, a group of women singers featuring five-part harmony and singing
Markay's songs. At a performance at Rykers Island Women's Prison, tunes
like Vibrator Blues and Women in Jail incited inmates to rush the
stage and guards to draw weapons, although a full-scale riot was
narrowly avoided. Markay continue to write humorously-risqué material
for her next group, Little Lulu and the Humpers. Their show, a rock
musical revue, was sold out for two show each night for two month in
Miami Beach, Florida. The revue relocated to New York City and played at
the famous Half Note Club.
Markay began recording original pop music
with salsa-dance influences. Performing under her own name with her own
band, she toured Europe extensively, which led to a record deal with WEA
International. The label released the single "It's Alright" which went
to #17 on Billboard magazine's European pop chars (the song also was
released in Asia and South America). The next year she had another hit
in France on the Musicdisc label with "I don't Want To Be A Zombie"
which went to #2 on the dance charts in that country.
"After
I returned to New York City, I met my first meditation teacher in 1985
and it completely changed the personal and musical path I was on."
Barbara recorded her first album, Change To Come. The music was
pop oriented, but the lyrics, on songs such as Woman of Light and
Wake Up and Live, were beginning to show the spiritual evolution
she was going through. She also started listening to Ravi Shankar and
gospel groups such as Reverend Milt Brunson and the Mississippi Mass
Choir. In addition, Barbara worked as an assistant to Leon Pendarvis (a
well-known arranger for acts such as Eric Clapton, Whitney Houston and
George Duke) which included programming synthesizers and other studio
work. Pendarvis wrote additional music at the beginning and end of the
Michael Jackson video, Bad, produced by Quincy Jones and directed
by Martin Scorcese, and Markay did synth programming on the project as
well as on Carly Simon's Coming Around Again album.
Markay moved to Los Angeles where she
performed with Bruce Willis, singing backup with his blues group, The
Accelerators. She also wrote, recorded and released her second
album, the world-pop-Latin-jazz Heart Like a Song. "I was
listening to a lot of Buena Vista Social Club, Los Van Van and
Sidestepper at the time." The album continued to explore spiritual
themes with songs such as All in One. In addition, Barbara
co-wrote, co-produced and performed on the recording Canciones
Romanticas by Joseph Lecuona, part of a legendary Cuban musical
family (his mother Margarita Lecuona, whom Joseph performed with, was a
famous singer-songwriter who wrote the Desi Arnaz tune Babalu;
and his great uncle Ernesto Lecuona composed the classic Magaguena).
For two years Markay was invited to sing The Great Invocation at
a gathering at Mount Shasta celebrating the Tibetan Wesak Festival after
she put this new age prayer to music (and may have been the first person
to ever do so) and recorded it as a single.
In the past few years Barbara has been
influenced more and more by world music artists including Jai Uttal,
Sheila Chandra, Chebi Sabbah, Buena Vista Social Club, Coyote Oldman,
Caetano Veloso, Natacha Atlas, Angelique Kidjo, and Irakere.
Regarding her Shambhala Dance
album, Markay says, "My intent was to create music that would give the
listener a boost in the direction of higher consciousness, whether they
know it or not."
To find out more about Barbara
Markay's inspirational music or buy any of her CD's, visit her website:
http://www.mythingmusic.com/mythingmusic/. If you would like to send her an email, her
address is:
barbaramarkay@hotmail.com.
PUBLICITY AGENCY: THE CREATIVE SERVICE
COMPANY (CreatServ9@aol.com)
4360 Emerald Dr.,
Colorado Springs, CO 80918 * 719-548-9872 * fax 719-599-9607
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