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Entries in az samad (31)

Thursday
May092013

Elixir Strings Endorsement

I'm happy to announce that I'm joining the epic roster of artists such as Alex De Grassi, Mike Dawes, Kaki King and Chris Thile who use Elixir Strings!

Thank you Elixir Strings & Guitar Collection Sdn Bhd for the creative support. Am proud to endorse the strings!

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Friday
Mar152013

Az Samad & Irena Taib

Az & Irena - The Wonderful World of Disney

 
Guitarist-educator Az Samad and Irena Taib of ‘The Impatient Sisters’ join forces for a melodic adventure through Disney favourites. With music from Snow White to Peter Pan, revisit your childhood through the  joy and wonder of well-loved Disney songs. Az Samad has recorded with Grammy Winners Flaco Jiménez & Max Baca; graduated & taught at the prestigious Berklee College of Music; performed in the United States, Europe & Asia; and appeared on 16 CDs ranging in styles from Tex-Mex, Contemporary Jazz to solo acoustic guitar.

Irena Taib took up the guitar when she was 10 years old and currently doing her diploma in music in ASWARA. Her major is in modern guitar and studying sitar as her 2nd instrument. Being in ASWARA has opened up a whole new world of music and has led her to all kinds of music such as Keroncong (a traditional Malay music style). Recently, The Impatient Sisters made their first international performance at The MOSAIC Music Festival in Singapore.

Az & Irena will be performing at the Kakiseni Festival 2013 on Tuesday, April 23rd at 4pm & 5pm as part of the Moonshine music program curated by Reza Salleh.

For more info, click here: http://festival.kakiseni.com/music/moonshine/

Tues, April 23: Kakiseni Fest @ Pavilion KL | Az & Irena - The Wonderful World of Disney | 4 PM & 6 PM 

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Tuesday
Feb192013

4 Lessons for Musicians from Seth Godin

I just finished reading “The Icarus Deception” by Seth Godin. It’s a book about him explaining how in this era, it’s not enough to simply be compliant and do things we’re told to do. It’s important for everyone to create art (even if you’re not a musician, writer etc.).

Here are some of the key points I got from reading the book. There’s many more of course & this is my take on it. It’s definitely a book I recommend reading.

1. Make art

It’s essential for us to make art.

What he means is that, as artists including musicians, we must create works that continue to challenge us. These works should not be defined by the expectations set by others and they should always enable us to grow. We should learn from every work we create and use those lessons to create even better work. We should make art every day.

For musicians, I translate this to recording and releasing singles, EPs, albums, YouTube videos, performing, teaching, writing books, articles, educational material and anything that challenges and stretches our creativity.

2. Do not follow the stories, myths & limit set by others

The old model of the music industry was:

  • Practice and be great
  • Get signed by a record label
  • Be famous and create & release works to a mass audience

This isn’t the only model anymore. Artists achieve success by YouTube, social media outlets, indie promotion and new methods chosen by ourselves. There is no longer a blueprint, there is no one path.

3. Pick Yourself

Don’t wait to be signed. Make art and release it on your own. Create art everyday. Reach out and find your audience everyday. Believe in yourself and your art.

4. Make art, and then make more

Make art everyday. Learn. Repeat.

Through this process, we learn what works and what doesn’t. We figure out what defines us and what doesn’t. We learn more about our art and what inspires us. I relate to this a lot as I believe in longevity being the key to a career in the arts. It’s possible to create a hit song or album or recognized work, but to make a lifestyle choice around it. To make it, our calling to continue creating art everyday of our lives is harder.

This is exactly why we should. Because it makes a difference. Because it is essential. 

If you like this post, you might like these related posts: 

The Indie Secret to Making Music
A blog post on how to keep making music throughout a long independent music career

How to be Creative in 7 Steps
7 simple tips to igniting creativity in your music and daily life

The B.O.P of Learning
A 3-step approach for learning music if you have very limited time

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Monday
Feb042013

The 7 Most Important Lessons I Learned at Berklee

Inspired by two Derek Sivers blog posts, (here and here), this blog post was born.

If you’re going to Berklee or in fact even other music colleges, I hope this helps your musical journey!

1. Know What You Want

Berklee is huge. There are so many classes and almost anything you want. I tell people it’s like going to a buffet. Lots of food and everything looks good. You can take different approaches like what people do at buffets.

             a) Try a little bit of everything
             b) Focus on the stuff you love the most
             c) Take too much of everything

For me, I knew there were a few things that I really wanted to learn. I wanted to study Jazz Composition. I wanted to learn more about Brazilian Jazz. I wanted to learn solo guitar concepts. I wanted to take Harmony geek classes. And I wanted to learn how to improvise. This led me in a certain direction that has helped me after I graduated from Berklee.

Do I regret focusing on a few things? Sometimes. But, the stuff I did learn really got into my system. Things I wish I took: some Bluegrass classes, more slide guitar classes with David Tronzo & Dan Bowden  and microtonal guitar classes with David Fiucynski. But oh well, can’t get everything in 6 semesters! =p

2. Make Friends, Not Network  


There’s a big thing about networking in Berklee. Everyone raves about networking. I agree to some extent but would rather say just make friends. You might not get to know everyone that well, but the ones that you really gel with can become friends that you connect with years later.

When my friend violinist Helen Sherrah-Davies visited me in California, I booked a gig for us to perform together. Another friend, Michael Borgida recommended me for gigs in San Francisco all the way from Boston. When I was in London, I stayed at guitarist Dylan Kay’s home in Surbiton. Prior to relocating back to Malaysia, I referred my friend Eli Harrison to some of my teaching gigs in the San Francisco Bay Area. Friends help each other and the connection is more than just a practical networking relationship. 


3. Find The Best Classes

Ask your friends. Check websites online for information. Ask your favorite teachers. Find the best classes. Berklee is a major investment so make sure you get the best of the best.

4. Design Your Courses

This relates to #1. What I did by knowing what I wanted to study was the opportunity to design semesters that focused on certain larger topics. For example, I had a Brazilian Music semester. I took guitar lessons and labs with Ben Sher, Brazilian Ensemble with Fernando Brandao. For several semesters, I focused on taking all the harmony classes that Steve Rochinski taught and guitar harmony classes by Bret Willmott.

5. Absorb and Be Inspired

I met so many amazing musicians in and outside of Berklee. It was crazy. My favorite saying was one week in Berklee was different than how time moved in the outside world. Because of the sheer intensity of each of the classes, you absorb a lot of new information. Now, multiply that by the number of classes you take and you only start to have an idea of how much you’re learning.

6. Experiment

Be brave and try out stuff that is outside of your comfort zone. If it scares you musically, go for it. School is the best environment for you to learn. Carry this spirit with you after graduation and you will be on the way to a lifetime of creative musical exploration.

For example, some of my most fulfilling musical experiences started by taking new opportunities that were definitely out of my comfort zone. I accepted a gypsy jazz gig when I just relocated to California with group Jazz Mine. From that gig, I got my first Tex-Mex/Indie Rock gig with Tara Linda. Eventually, that led me to my first European tour in her band in 2012, performing in Spain and Germany.

7. Remember What Works

The best private lessons I got continue to form the practice routine I do daily. Remember what worked for you and keep that close to your heart. Not everything will work for you but the ones that do will stay with you for a lifetime.

In the end, realize that this is amazing opportunity. 
Make the best of it and enjoy the ride. Be in the moment and savor it.

Good luck!

[RELATED BLOG POSTS]

The Indie Secret to Making Music
A blog post on how to keep making music throughout a long independent music career

How to be Creative in 7 Steps
7 simple tips to igniting creativity in your music and daily life

The B.O.P of Learning
A 3-step approach for learning music if you have very limited time

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Friday
Feb012013

Performing & Teaching at Mosaic Music Festival 2013

I'm delighted to be a part of this year's Mosaic Music Festival 2013! It's a real honor to be in a festival alongside so many of my musical inspirations including Esperanza Spalding, Gretchen Parlato, Kaki King and My Brightest Diamond.

It's also cool that The Impatient Sisters are also performing as I'll get to see my scholarship guitar student Irena Taib, the guitarist/vocalist in the trio!

[PHOTOS] (Updated March 10 2013)

[FB Photo Album] MOSAIC: In The House (photos by Yin)
[FB Photo Album] MOSAIC: In The House (photos by library@esplanade)

Mosaic Music Makers: In A Chord – Guitar workshop for Absolute Beginners
by Az Samad (Malaysia) 
10 Mar, Sun, 1pm & 3.30pm
Esplanade Rehearsal Studio
$20

Update: Both workshop sessions are now officially SOLD OUT! 

[FB Photo Album] MOSAIC Music Makers: In a Chord - Guitar Workshop (photos by Yin)

At Mosaic Music Festival 2013, you can learn absolute beginner guitar from me via a 90-minute workshop. There are 2 sessions that you can choose from. Here's a promo video explaining what you'll learn:  

To sign-up for the workshop, click here:
http://www.mosaicmusicfestival.com/2013/workshops.html#samad [SOLD OUT]

What's pretty awesome is that they will be providing guitars for the workshop so you can just come to learn! 

[PRESS]
The Straits Times - Learn the guitar in 1.5 hours by Melissa Kok 

Mosaic Living Room | Guitar Hero | Az Samad (Malaysia)
11 Mar, Mon | 6.15 - 7pm & 8.15 - 9pm

[FB Photo Album] Mosaic Music Festival 2013: Mosaic Living Room Concert 

I'm performing as part of the Guitar Hero series at Mosaic Music Festival. Check out the page here:http://www.mosaicmusicfestival.com/2013/mosaic-living-room.html#Az_Samad

Looking forward to share the stage, alternating sets with jazz guitarist Johnny Alegre from Manila.

Hope to see you there! =)

 

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