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GUITARIST/COMPOSER PETER WHITE ENERGIZES HIS ACOUSTIC SOUND ONSMILE, OUT 
OCTOBER 7, 2014 (international release dates may vary)

New Heads Up recording completes trilogy of original material

Special guests include Mindi Abair, Rick Braun, Euge Groove, Philippe Saisse, 
Nate Phillips, Charlotte White, Ramon Yslas and Stevo Theard

(http://smarturl.it/PWSmileCD)In the era ruled by the electric guitar, 
British-born, LA-based Peter White reigns supreme as one the world’s greatest 
masters of the nylon-string acoustic guitar. From the time he burst on the 
scene with rock legend Al Stewart in the seventies and singer Basia in the 
eighties to his session work with Richard Elliot, Jeff Golub, Lee Ritenour, 
Kirk Whalum and Boney James, White’s fabulous fingers continue to showcase the 
timeless tones and timbres that come from wood, skin and an expansive musical 
imagination.

Smile, set for release October 7, 2014 on Heads Up, a division of Concord Music 
Group, is White’s fourteenth recording as a leader, and his scintillating, 
contemporary jazz sound is buttressed by his equally-impressive command of 
several instruments and augmented by an impressive array of special guests, 
including vocalist Mindi Abair, trumpeter Rick Braun, soprano saxophonist Euge 
Groove, keyboardist Philippe Saisse, bassist Nate Phillips, violinist (and 
daughter) Charlotte White, Ramon Yslas on bongos and vocalist Stevo Theard.

“This CD is my third recording for Concord of all original songs,” White says. 
“It started with Good Day (2009) and continued with Here We Go (2012). What I 
try to do on every single album is produce a story that has adventures; that 
has different styles that take you to different places.”

The ten tracks on Smile reflect the wide reach of White’s musical horizons, 
which emanate from contemporary jazz and branch out into R&B, classical and 
world music vistas. White’s nuanced and nimble fingers take the listener on an 
aural movie, set in a multitude of musical places and spaces.

The title track kicks off with some spirited vocals from Abair. “I’ve done 
hundreds of shows with Mindi – she’s a great friend,” White says. “So I asked 
her to sing the lead part. And she did a great job.” Abair also sings on “Hold 
Me Close,” which features Stevo Theard’s jazzy vocals. “On that song, Stevo and 
Mindi were singing in unison,” says White. “Then Stevo started scatting and 
improvising, and I thought – this is great, something new for me that I haven't 
recorded before.”

Smile’s other tracks, “Head Over Heels,” “In Rainbows,” “Floating In Air,” 
“Coming Home,” “Nightfall” and “Awakening (Jordan’s Song),” written to mark the 
twenty-first birthday of a friend’s daughter, all have equal and evocative 
doses of quiet storm, anthemic, atmospheric, Latin, Motown  and uptempo musical 
tableaus, showcasing White’s poetic and piercing plectral prowess.

Two selections stand for their special subject matter. “‘Beautiful Love’ is my 
tribute to Barry White,” the guitarist fondly recalls. “I was sixteen or 
seventeen when I heard him back home in England. He did those long intros...So 
this was my attempt to do something like that – to have the intro just build. I 
wrote ‘Don Quixote’s Final Quest’ (co-written with keyboardist Freddie Ravel) a 
long time ago, but I almost didn’t put it on the album, because it was so 
different. It took us three days to mix the song – there are so many elements 
in it. It’s my tribute to ‘Classical Gas’ by Mason Williams, which influenced 
me to take up the Spanish guitar when I was a kid. I was heavily into rock and 
roll. But this guitar being played finger-style had so much power, I said, 
‘Wow! I want to play guitar like this.’”

Born in 1954 in Luton, and raised in Letchworth – both suburbs of London, White 
played the clarinet, trombone, violin and piano before settling on the electric 
guitar, and, like most kids of his era, he fell under the electric spell of 
Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton and Jimmy Page, before he crossed over into the 
acoustic realm, which was also encouraged when his brother, pianist Danny 
White, accidently destroyed his electric axe.

White started his professional career at the age of nineteen. The next year he 
joined Al Stewart and stayed with him for two decades. Originally hired as a 
pianist, White’s first big break was on Stewart’s 1976 hit “The Year of the 
Cat,” and he also co-wrote many songs on Stewart’s 1978 LP, Time Passages. 
White later moved to Los Angeles and formed the band Shot in the Dark. His 
brother Danny was one of the founding members of the British pop group Matt 
Bianco, which included singer Basia. When she went solo, the guitarist and his 
brother recorded several albums with her, including her 1987 debut, Time and 
Tide, and the 1990 follow-up, London Warsaw New York. 

“I learned a whole lot from Al Stewart,” White says. “How to write a song; how 
to record a song, how to perform onstage and talk to the audience...It’s 
impossible for that not to rub off after being with him for twenty years. He 
was very big on songs having an instrumental motif that runs through the music, 
and I have that same concept in my music now. With Basia, there was a lot of 
jazz in the music; a lot more saxophone, a lot more jazzy chords and playing in 
flat keys. I realized that there’s a lot more to music than just 1-2-3-4 rock 
‘n’ roll.”

After years of session work with some of the best contemporary jazz stars, 
including Richard Elliot, Warren Hill, Marc Antoine and Boney James, White 
struck out on his own in 1990 and recorded his debut album, Reveillez-Vous, 
that same year. His previous recordings as a leader include Glow (2001), 
Confidential (2004), Playin’ Favorites (2006), Good Day (2009) and Here We Go 
(2012), featuring Kirk Whalum and David Sanborn, all of which ranked at the top 
of the Billboard Jazz charts. He also participates in the critically acclaimed 
Guitars and Saxes tours, and he created his annual Peter White Christmas Tour, 
which grew out of the success of his two holiday albums, Songs of the Season 
(1997) and A Peter White Christmas (2007).

On his latest CD Smile, Peter White proves yet again that he doesn’t have to 
plug in to electrify audiences. “People have told me that when I play electric 
guitar, it sounds good,” he says. “But as soon as I play acoustic guitar, it 
sounds distinctive. And that’s because I put what I learned from playing the 
electric guitar and apply it to the acoustic guitar. It’s very easy for me to 
go that route. My musical voice speaks on the nylon-string guitar.”

 

(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FLpTQl8Vpuo)

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