Articles and Reviews
| The Dude
Abides by Frank
De Blase
on September 24, 2008 |
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There
are a lot more guys out there like Rochester
multi-talented multi-instrumentalist Tommy Gravino than you think. You
know, extremely
talented players that live and love music while its extraneous rewards
elude them. You don't hear about cats like this everyday. They're not
in the tabloids. They're not in Billboard Magazine. It's the rock star
banging the porn star; it's the bling and the cash register cha-ching;
it's the parade of charlatans that typically assail us from all sides.
That's not to say what they play isn't any good, I just have a
better
time believing artists that live closer to the ground.
Gravino lives close
to the
ground - country ground. After a
recent break up with his girlfriend of seven years, and after hearing
his neighbors bitch and moan about loud music coming from his crib at
all hours of the night one too many times, Gravino bid the city adios
and moved to a house on a hill in the woods in Bristol. It's his first
time living alone in 27 years.
Gravino is hard to pin down stylistically. His music changes from
instrument to instrument. And whether he's singing, playing keyboards,
or saxophone, or flute, Gravino's style vacillates within those
confines as well. He stretches their limits. And he proves it on his
new release, "Twenty Years."
"Twenty
Years" is all over
the map. Jazz, rock, world music,
and a sort of mellow contemporary pop seem to dominate, but it's the
ethereal mix and atmosphere that ties it all together. Everything seems
to float to the listener - or maybe it's the other way around. It lilts
and it coaxes. But it's Gravino's voice, the one thing he tries to
downplay, that'll hit you, the way it crackles with genuine blue-eyed
soul. It doesn't boom or try for the clouds, but it's an impressive,
honest tenor. He feels, he sings, you hear, you believe.
While drumming up material
for the album, Gravino was looking
for a weekend getaway. Abilene owner Danny Deutsch had an idea.
"He suggested I go see
Levon Helm down in Woodstock," Gravino
says. "Tickets were $200 each, but it was a very intimate show in his
studio.
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It
was in this old barn with three tiers and a listening area.
Only about 100 to 120 people. They meet you at the driveway and walk
you in. Everyone brings a dish to pass."
Gravino
fell in love with
the studio and the vibe. He tracked
down the manager.
"He said, ‘$100 bucks an hour, and if you've got enough dough,
Levon will come in and drum for you,'" he says. Starmaker machinery and
priorities on Helm's end led to cancellation after cancellation.
Gravino gave up on the session and moved it back home to Saxon Studios,
with mellow fellow producer Dave Anderson at the wheel. The resulting
album is a gentle, jazzy, thoughtful endeavor. It's evocative and still
peaceful, like the man himself. Though he flies solo and conducts
himself in a DIY kind of way, Gravino doesn't fiddle with the knobs
himself.
"They
say, ‘Record at home.
Get a home studio,'" he says.
"I can't get near it. I can't keep up with it. There's too much to do.
I don't care about it. It takes away from the magic. I like to have
another set of ears."
Gravino
still hustles and
is constantly on the prowl for
opportunities. He recently honked some raunchy sax on arena rockers the
New York Vaults' upcoming release. But between session gigs and guest
spots on stage, he's at peace and happy, content to be playing at
various weekly gigs with folks like guitarists Ryan T. Carey and Jack
Edward Smith. He's as pleasant and Zen as he is talented. The dude
abides.
Gravino
is currently
working with his ASCAP rep, pitching
songs for commercial and film work. A radio hit would be cool, too.
"Yeah, Dolly
Parton picking
up a tune and making a hit out of
it," he says. "That'd be nice." Tommy Gravino
www.rochestercitynewspaper.com |
NEW
MUSIC BOX
The Web Magazine from the American Music Center
SoundTracks Party of OneTOMMY
GRAVINO Out of Rochester, NY, comes Tommy Gravino, a
classically trained flutist who has since evolved into a
multi-faceted
musician of which his flute playing is only a small part. He is
also an accomplished keyboardist and vocalist as well as an
award-winning songwriter. Each piece is a carefully constructed,
original blend of smooth jazz, country, pop, and world music.
FREETIME
MAGAZINE
Words &
Music By Michelle Picardo
Tommy
Gravino
has just released his impressive new CD, Party Of One, which
he’ll be celebrating with a party at J.B. Quimby’s on Saturday,
November 9th. Gravino, who also performs with local Top 40 favorites, Holleywood
Al & the Mix, is a colossal one-man band,
taking care of
keyboards, flute, sax, vocals, songwriting and more. Gravino explores
many styles on the release, from pop to jazz, and dabbles in country on
the award-winning “Down In Nashville”, and even Latin on the
instrumental “Modern Gypsies”. Another award-winner (both from
Florida-based, Mild 2 Wild Entertainment, chosen from 3,000 entries),
“Wheel Of Fortune” is a lush beauty, with Tommy’s voice recalling Boz
Scaggs at times. While Gravino can do it all, he knows when to ask for
a little help from some skilled friends, including Matthew D.
Guarnere on drums &
percussion throughout (who also
co-produces), as well as guitarists Frank DeBlase and Jack
Edward Smith, who show up
on a couple of songs. Check out this very
skilled musician…
City
Magazine Music Feature
by Frank De Blase
Here’s a mild-mannered
guy with
super-hero potential: an unassuming individual of shy opulence with a
keen willingness to share nonetheless. No heart on his sleeve; nothing
up his sleeve, for that matter. You might mistake him for a doctor, a
lawyer, an Indian chief: anything but a musician. You probably wouldn’t
expect to read about such a casual cucumber.
Tommy
Gravino
comes on cool. Tommy Gravino waxes nonchalant. Tommy Gravino soars
below radar, where he’s seen a thing or two. It’s the bluesy bebop from
his sax, an ethereal lilt from his flute, the raking of his fingers
across the 88s, either way you’re gonna dig Tommy Gravino.
On a recent
sun-baked Park Ave. afternoon you might’ve been lucky enough to see
Gravino breeze by in a shiny red convertible piloted by a pretty
blonde. With his long mane waving behind him, an easy-going smile
spread across his face, there was a man clearly loving life.
Gravino blows hell
from his saxophone: a syncopated swagger with one breath, and a rusty,
mournful cry the next. A stoic stage presence belies the wealth of
music in his soul. Though gigging steadily for years as a professional
musician, the big break seems one step beyond.
“You always
hope
to break into something, or luck into something,” he said recently.
“It’s just been eluding me.”
OK, so he
hasn’t
sold his soul to record label bigwigs or bumped rails with Bono, but
the cat’s been around. And he’s damned good.
This rather quiet man clearly loves
all music and is essentially a chameleon, floating effortlessly through
jazz, rock, blues, new-age, you name it. Getting him to describe it,
however, is like pulling teeth. It’s not that he thinks it’s
unimportant, it’s just that his passion moves almost exclusively
through his music.
“I love
all types of music,” he says, his eyes widening. “But my
absolute favorite is funky.” His proficiency on a number of
instruments and his ability to write and arrange make him the Rochester
musician’s numero uno go-to guy. Whether jamming with G.E. Smith,
Trini Lopez, or the Coupe de Villes, Gravino takes on each group or
artist’s aesthetic. He cops their attitude. He plays their music,
making it his own.
Gravino grew up in
East Irondequoit and began playing the sax by age eight. At 16, he got
a scholarship to New Mexico State University. “It was culture
shock out there, man, whoa!” he says. “They didn’t
even do blues. It was all acid rock or country at the time. It was
tough to get a gig.” Gravino also studied music at SUNY
Brockport, Empire State College, and the Eastman School of Music.
“Four
schools, no degrees,”
he laughs.The Holiday Inn
circuit was big at the time, and Gravino wound up criss-crossing the
country “doin disco six nights a week” before moving to LA
in 1976.
“I
hooked up
with a cat named Chick Willis, who played guitar and sang,” he
says. Chick’s brother, Chuck, was an r & b sensation from
Atlanta known for penning the classic, “C.C. Rider.”
“We toured
in a
motor home with a trailer,” Gravino says. Willis was ex-military,
so the duo played military bases “anywhere in a big circle
between San Francisco and Oklahoma.” |
In between the G.I. gigs for
Uncle Same, they’d pick up some colorful side work. “We’d park
in these low-income housing areas,” he says. “Welfare homes
that were barely a step up from trailer parks. You’d bring your
own booze and they’d provide set-ups.” A particular bar at
one of these redneck Rivieras remains forever pungent on
Gravino’s mind.
“It was so bad,
it had chicken wire in front of the stage,” he says. “The
bathroom was a sink at knee-level with a hose going out the back. We
didn’t do that for too long.” While still gigging with
various bands around LA in 1979, a Chinese agent hooked Gravino up with
a slick gig playing sax for Morris Bates, a Native-American Elvis
impersonator in Las Vegas.
“I was
taking a
dump just before the (first) show,” Gravino says, “when all
of a sudden I see high heels in the stall next to me standing; facing
the toilet. What a trip, man!”
The
King had only been
dead two years, and the impact and importance of impersonators was yet
to be fully realized, exploited, or played-out. The Elvis impersonator
and a troupe of female impersonators shared dressing rooms and,
apparently, bathrooms. The King and the queens alternated acts every
night at the legendary Silver Slipper on the old sin-city strip. “That gig lasted about
three years,” he says.
Bates
took the group to
South Africa, where they were unable to bring a black singer from the
group.
“Apartheid
was
still happening, even though the black-white ratio was something like
six to one,” he says. “In fact, Mandela was still in
jail.” Gravino was there for a month playing to large auditoriums
of whites and witnessing local flavor—including a knife fight in
Soweto—with an Indian tour guide.
The early ‘80s
found Gravino back east, living and playing in Binghamton before moving
back to Rochester. He joined TCB (the Elvis irony continued) with
Ronnie Alberts (Wilmer & The Dukes) and Kate Silverman. Gravino
worked with countless touring and local acts. Happy as a sideman, he
continued to write, despite the difficulty in finding willing sidemen
of his own. He self-released A Flute’s Dream, an album of
eastern-type new age music. Gravino says the album proved to be popular
as relaxing background music for massage therapists.
Today,
Gravino keeps
busy adding his fingerprints and soul to bands through writing,
arranging, and playing. He is willing to sit in with
just about anybody
in need of a little soulful honk ‘n’ wail from his
saxamaphone. He regularly plays with the incomparable flamenco
guitarist, Jack Edward Smith, and plays as a one-man act throughout the
city, performing covers and originals, playing all the instruments with
confident ease.
Gravino was recently
awarded honorable mention in the “Mild 2 Wild Best Song, Best
Lyrics” contest in Ft. Myers, for his song, “Down In
Nashville.” His new album, the aptly titled Party Of One,
will be out in November, featuring eight of his new compositions.
Gravino can be caught all over town. He keeps on keepin’ on.
“I
don’t
know, man” he shrugs, smiling, “I love getting out and
having a good time. I still love to play live.” |
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FREETIME
MAGAZINE 
Words &
Music By Michelle Picardo
And speaking
of the Honeoye Pub, don’t miss their inimitable Wednesday night Open
Jams, where February 20th will feature Tom Gravino and his
“solo act with flair.” See how Gravino (also a member of Holleywood
Al & the Mix) brings his one-man, multi-instrumental
performance to the stage, in what promises to be a real treat for
all.
PROFILES
Tom Gravino
Long-time
Rochester player, Tom Gravino describes his new one-man project, “A
Solo Act With Flair.” The solo act consists of a variety of music,
including classical, pop, easy listening, classics, crowd favorites and
Motown. The flair of the solo act is the use of a diversity of
instruments. Tom combines some of his own pre-recorded keyboard and
percussion tracks along with live performances on the saxophone and
flute for a complete multi-instrumental presentation. Live solo piano
or keyboard with vocals rounds out a complete package.
Tom began
playing music at age 8, and by 16, he received a music scholarship to
New Mexico State University. He has also studied at the Eastman School
of Music and majored in flute at SUNY Brockport. Tom has toured
throughout forty states, Canada, Mexico, England and South Africa. He
spent three years in Las Vegas playing at the Silver Slipper, The
Landmark Hotel & Casino, Vegas World, and more. Internationally,
Tom has performed with G.E. Smith from the Saturday Night Live Band;
Sandler & Young, a comedy troupe from England; Trini Lopez; Chris
Duarte and more, and has played in warm-up bands for Kansas, Brian
Setzer, Mountain, Stan Getz and Journey.
Locally,
Tomas has performed with Chet Catallo, Mark Manetta, Dan Schmitt, The
Dukes, The Convertibles, The Nightstalkers, The Coupe de Villes and on
a regular basis with popular party band, Holleywood Al & the Mix,
and duo partner, Jack Edward Smith. Experience Gravino’s “flair” as he
performs at the Honeoye Pub, 125 E. Lake Rd., Honeoye Lake (229-4535)
on Wednesday, February 20th and at the California Brew Haus, 402 Ridge
Rd. W. (621-1480) on Friday, February 22nd in a happy hour show.
On “Monroe Avenue,” Tom
Gravino sings about cruising his neighborhood bars in hopes of catching
a glimpse of his long-lost dream girl in cut-off jeans and a halter
top; fat chance finding her at Woody’s these days, since according to
the song she’s just won a Grammy. So it’ll be just Gravino solo when he
debuts his new CD, Party of One, 9 p.m. Saturday at J.B.
Quimby’s Public House, 3259 S. Winton Road, Henrietta, NY.
Gravino, a
familiar sight
around Rochester with his saxophone and flowing Kenny G hair, mixes an
easy-listening jazz style with an easy-listening pop style that will
bring to mind late-‘70s chart studs like Jay Ferguson. His one-man live
show features Gravino playing reeds or keyboards to pre-recorded drum
and keyboard tracks. It’s all pretty restrained; even when Gravino
sings about lying naked on the bow of a boat with a woman. Party of
One sounds like it was recorded with a daiquiri in one hand.
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