"No longer can the seemingly eccentric styles of jazz be dismissed as mere caprice, for its practitioners have succeeded in realizing their own unique and magnetic presence...Thom Jayne and the Unusual Suspects, aptly titled, are poster children for [+]"No longer can the seemingly eccentric styles of jazz be dismissed as mere caprice, for its practitioners have succeeded in realizing their own unique and magnetic presence...Thom Jayne and the Unusual Suspects, aptly titled, are poster children for this form of jazz fusion. Not only does this award-winning group employ such unorthodox instruments as the didgeridoo and Native American flute, but with the help of African percussion as well, MSU professor Thom Jayne fashions a fascinating blend of flamenco, Latin Jazz, and Celtic musical traditions" -- Jonas Greenberg, host of the Jazz Spectrum, The Impact 88.9 FM, Lansing, Michigan.
"A fabulous album" -- Dan Bayer, Music for a New Age, WKAR FM, East Lansing.
"Thom Jayne qualifies as a local artist for us but, honestly, I'd play 'The Forgotten Conquest' if it came from Bosnia. Simply, a disc with bite in an often sleepy genre" -- Matt Jerrells, Music Director, WYCE, Grand Rapids
"Very fresh, and fabulous instrumentation" -- Kathleen Monahan, KDM Promotion
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Thom Jayne has recently emerged on the alternative music scene with a hard-to-categorize blend of world music, flamenco, Latin classical, and jazz sounds. His first release, The Forgotten Conquest, has received award-winning recognition in the John Lennon Songwriters Contest, won the 2002 Jammie Award/World Beat category, and was recently featured on Dan Bayer's "Music for a New Age." Jayne, who plays guitar and digeridoo -- sometimes at the same time -- is part of the 'Unusual Suspects' (formerly the 'Free Radicals' until a band in Houston that trademarked the name threatened to sue) featuring:
Rich Illman - trumpet and percussion Linda Abar - vocals David Meeder - guitar and flute Rebeca Garcia Ardis - violin Ryan Bliton - bass Danny Cox - drums Jon Weber - percussion
Their live acts are noted for their upbeat, foot-stomping originals, and their primal renditions of popular tunes like "2001 Space Odyssey" and Miles Davis' "So what".
After performing and recording with the band 'Pariah' on the east coast in the late 1970s, Jayne sold everything, joined the Peace Corps, and moved to the jungles of Ghana in West Africa at 24. Several of the compositions on "The Forgotten Conquest" were conceived during his two
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