François Vola

François Vola, guitarist and composer, was born in Nice, France, in 1953.[1] He is a double national (France and USA). He is the godson of Louis Vola (bassist with Django Reinhardt's The Hot Club of France).[2][3] He started playing guitar semi-pro at the age of 14. In 1974 at age 20, he moved to the US; studied bluegrass and swing and played in several bands.

Vola played on several albums and recorded three of his own, in 1983 Francois Vola with fiddler Byron Berline (Stephen Stills, Linda Rondstat, Rolling Stones) and banjoist John Hickman. In 1996 an electric jazz album Old World, New World[2][3][4] with mandolinist Emory Lester and in 1997 A Night in Conover, another jazz album this time acoustic with Django’s son Babik Reinhardt and Emory Lester.

In the US Vola played on stage with Tony Rice, Wyatt Rice, Byron Berline, David Grisman, Bill Keith,[3] Emory Lester, Babik Reinhardt, Tony Williamson, Dan Crary, Roland White, and others. He played several times at the prestigious Merle Watson fest as well as other festivals and events. He won two awards from the North Carolina school of the arts for his compositions and was invited to play one of his pieces with the North Carolina's Western Piedmont Symphony.

In 1998 Vola moved back to France where he continues his musical career. Vola plays on a Martin HD28V guitar.

References

  1. "François Vola".
  2. 1 2 Mike Joyce (5 September 1997), "The Francois Vola Group "Old World New World" RDC", The Washington Post, retrieved 21 November 2016
  3. 1 2 3 Jim Ferguson (November 1997), "Francois Vola: Old World, New World", JazzTimes, retrieved 21 November 2016
  4. Hilarie Grey (November 1997), "Francois Vola: Old World, New World", JazzTimes, retrieved 21 November 2016
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.