Fareed Haque is a modern guitar virtuoso. Steeped in classical and jazz traditions, his unique command of the guitar and different musical styles inspire his musical ventures with tradition and fearless innovation.
Born in 1963 to a Pakistani father and Chilean mother, Fareedâs extensive travels and especially long stays in Spain, France, Iran, Pakistan, and Chile exposed Haque to different kinds of music from a very early age. While this natural eclecticism has become a hallmark of Haqueâs music, it was repeated visits to Von Freemanâs Chicago jam sessions that gave Haque a grounding in the Chicago blues and jazz traditions. The 1981 recipient of North Texas State Universityâs Jazz Guitar Scholarship, Haque spent a year studying with renowned jazz guitarist and pedagogue Jack Peterson. Fareedâs growing interest in the classical guitar led him to transfer to Northwestern University, where he completed his studies in classical guitar under David Buch, John Holmquist, and Anne Waller....
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Fareed Haque is a modern guitar virtuoso. Steeped in classical and jazz traditions, his unique command of the guitar and different musical styles inspire his musical ventures with tradition and fearless innovation.
Born in 1963 to a Pakistani father and Chilean mother, Fareedâs extensive travels and especially long stays in Spain, France, Iran, Pakistan, and Chile exposed Haque to different kinds of music from a very early age. While this natural eclecticism has become a hallmark of Haqueâs music, it was repeated visits to Von Freemanâs Chicago jam sessions that gave Haque a grounding in the Chicago blues and jazz traditions. The 1981 recipient of North Texas State Universityâs Jazz Guitar Scholarship, Haque spent a year studying with renowned jazz guitarist and pedagogue Jack Peterson. Fareedâs growing interest in the classical guitar led him to transfer to Northwestern University, where he completed his studies in classical guitar under David Buch, John Holmquist, and Anne Waller.
Soon after his transfer to NU, Haque came to the attention of multi-instrumentalist Howard Levy and joined his latin-fusion group Chevere. Thru Levy, Haque was introduced to Paquito DâRivera and began a long and fruitful relationship with the Cuban NEA Jazz Master. Numerous world tours and recordings including Manhattan Burn, Celebration, Havana Cafe, Tico Tico, Live at the MCG were to follow. Especially notable is the classic and award winning âReunionâ featuring Haque along with Arturo Sandoval, Danilo Perez, Giovanni Hidalgo, Mark Walker, and David Fink.
Thru DâRivera, Haque was brought to the attention of Sting, who had just begun his record label Pangaea. Sting invited Haque to join the label where he released 2 critically acclaimed recordings, âVoices Risingâ and âManresaâ. Haque toured briefly with Sting, including notable appearances at The Montreux Jazz Festival, as well as NBCâs Michelob Presents Sunday Night with David Sanborn, but his own career demands led Haque in other directions.
After a short stint at Warner Bros. recording âMajestadâ (unreleased and featuring John Patitucci, Michael Landau, Russel Ferrante, Grazinha, Lenny Castro, and Carlos Vega), Bruce Lundvall signed Haque to the legendary Bluenote Records. While at Bluenote, Haque recorded three albums as a leader: âSacred Addictionâ, âOpaqueâ, and âDĂ©jĂ vuâ. Haque toured and recorded extensively with other artists, including tours and 3 CDs with Javon Jackson: âA Look withinâ, âFor One Who Knowsâ, and âGood Peopleâ. In addition, sideman credits include tours and recordings with Joe Henderson, Herbie Mann, Bob James, Richie Cole, Joey Calderazzo, Kahil El Zabar and the Ethnic Heritage Ensemble, and numerous Bluenote recordings for producer/arranger Bob Belden alongside Cassandra Wilson, Dianne Reeves, Joe Lovano, Paul Motian, and many others. Numerous classical recitals, as well as appearances with the Vermeer Quartet and many symphonies across the US and abroad, added to an incredible diversity of performances during this period.
Thru Belden, Haque was invited to join forces with Joe Zawinul as part of his Zawinul Syndicate. The group proved to be one of Joeâs best and most eclectic. Included were percussionist and vocalist Arto Tuncboyacian, drummer Paco Sery, bassist Mathew Garrison, along with Haque on a hybrid acoustic âGuistarâ and Electric Guitar. A year of extensive touring brought Haque closer to his Jazz/Rock roots.
In 2001, Haqueâs interest in jam bands and the jam scene led him to co-found the jam super-group Garaj Mahal featuring Kai Eckhardt, Eric Levy, and Alan Hertz. This began 10 years of extensive touring across the US, performing in excess of 200 shows per year. Haque also joined George Brooksâ group Summit, featuring Zakir Hussain and Steve Smith. Haque was voted âMost Valuable Playerâ at the 2002 High Sierra Music Festival. Haque and Garaj Mahal released 3 Live CDs as well as 5 studio CDs: âMondo Garajâ, âBlueberry Caveâ, âw00tâ, âMore Mr. Nice Guyâ, and âDiscoveryâ, which featured Haqueâs debut of the Moog Guitar.
In 2004, Fareed premiered his âLahara Double Concertoâ for Sitar/Guitar and Tabla with The Chicago Sinfonietta at Symphony Center in Chicago, under the baton of maestro Paul Freeman, featuring tabla virtuoso Ustad Zakir Hussain, to whom the work is dedicated.
In 2006, Fareed was commissioned to compose a classical guitar concerto for the Fulcrum Point Ensemble. His âGamelan Concertoâ was premiered in May of â06 at The Harris theatre in Millenium Park.
In 2007, Garaj Mahal won an Independent Music Award.
In 2009 Haque was voted âBest World Guitaristâ by Guitar Player Magazineâs Readersâ poll. His acclaimed 2009 release Flat Planet was twice #1 on the World Jazz Radio charts.
After 10 years of over 2000 dates with Garaj Mahal, Haqueâs interest in electronic music and the Moog Guitar spurred him to leave Garaj Mahal and form Fareed Haqueâs MathGames, featuring bassist Alex Austin and drummer Greg Fundis.
Notable events during this time include Haque performing and assistant directing the first Jazz Festival in Frutillar, Chile under his mentor and friend Paquito DâRivera, and appearances with his own groups at Java Jazz, The Chicago Jazz Festival, The Twents Guitar Festival, The Indy Jazz Fest, Coleman Hawkins Jazz Fest, Jazz in June, The Lafayette and South Bend Jazz Festivals, Sophia Jazz Fest, Bulgaria and many others around the world. Haque also performed both the Aranjuez and Villa-Lobos guitar concertos with The Chicago Philharmonic, under the baton of Lucia Matos at Pick-Staiger Concert Hall.
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