Who
Is |
Vernon Reid was born
in England but spent most of his childhood in Brooklyn,
New York, where he grew up listening to an electric
variety of pop music ranging from Dionne Warwick's
hits to the Temptations "Psychedelic
Shack". At the age 15, inspired by the example
of Carlos Santana, Vernon's career as a
guitarist began. "He was a guitarist who brought his ethnic background to rock and roll," Vernon says of Santana, "He made music that was a distinct hybrid but was accepted as rock music." Vernon, who attended Brooklyn Tech, had the opportunity to study guitar privately with jazz masters Rodney Jones and Ted Dunbar. In the early 1980's while working with jazz drummer Ronald Shannon Jackson's Decoding Society, Vernon's reputation began to grow. When Vernon was not busy mastering the harmolodic theories of Ornette Coleman as a guitarist of the Decoding Society, he spent his time gigging with a wide array of artists ranging from pop producer Kashif to the jazz- punk-dance band Defunkt. Living Colour
began as a trio in 1984. Around the same time, Reid
and journalist Greg Tate formed the Black Rock
Coalition. Since the formation of Living Colour, Vernon has appeared as a guest guitarist on the records of a many diverse artists: Jack DeJohnette, Public Enemy, B.B. King, The Ramones, Mariah Carey, Mick Jagger, Tracy Chapman, Eye & I, Family Stand, Carlos Santana, and others. Vernon has also composed music for the Marlies
Yearby Dance Co., and choreographer Ralph Lemon.
In January 1995, Vernon disbanded Living
Colour in order to pursue several new projects. He
has been working with some of the most exciting musicians
in New York in a band he calls Masque, which Vernon
describes as "the place where rock, jazz, hip-hop
and technology meet". In December 1995, Vernon completed work on his first post-Living Colour record, tentatively titled "Mistaken Identity," which he co-produced with the renowned jazz producer Teo Macero, long associated with Miles Davis among many others, and Prince Paul Houston, one of the premier producers of hip-hop and rap music, who has worked with De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, and The GraveDigga's. In January 1996, Vernon received a Grammy nomination for Best Rock Instrumental for his composition 'Every Now & Then,' which appeared on the Santana retrospective box-set 'Dance of the Rainbow Serpent' in 1995. |