Jean Marc Belkadi Explained

Jean Marc Belkadi
Birth Place:Toulouse, France
Genre:Jazz, jazz fusion, instrumental rock
Occupation:Musician, composer, author
Instrument:Guitar
Years Active:1984–present

Jean Marc Belkadi is a French-born, American jazz fusion guitarist known for his improvisational soloing technique.[1]

Career

Belkadi studied with Frank Gambale, Scott Henderson, Joe Pass, Joe Diorio, Tal Farlow, and Robben Ford at the Musicians Institute in 1985. The Guitar Institute of Technology class of 1985 had notable alumni such as Jeff Buckley and Paul Gilbert. He taught at the school (GIT) from 1998 to 2007 and at the Los Angeles Music Academy College of Music from 1996 to 2000.[2] [3]

In 2017 Belkadi co-wrote (music) "White Linen" (featuring Cyhi The Prynce) with singer-songwriter Mike Posner, Mat Musto (aka Blackbear), Cydel Young and Peter Hortaridis. This song was produced by American hip-hop duo Mike Posner and blackbear is from their studio album Mansionz (2017). He plays electric guitar on "Nobody Knows" (Mansionz) composed by Mike Posner, Musto and Soren Bryce. A year later, Belkadi co-wrote (music) "Wide Open" with Mike Posner, Adam Friedman, James Bowen released January 18, 2019. "Wide Open" is track #2 of Mike Posner's third studio album, A Real Good Kid.

Belkadi has recorded the albums Stopover and Toulouse / Los Angeles and written 11 instructional book/CD sets published by Hal Leonard Corporation / Musicians Institute Press. In 2011, he released his first digital E-book with 60 MP3 audio tracks: The Composite Blues Scale for Electric Guitar.

Personal life

Belkadi is married to graphic designer and painter Marie Christine Belkadi. She edited and designed Belkadi's instructional books and CDs.

Discography

Instructional book/CD sets

External links

Notes and References

  1. Gold, Jude (December 13, 2007). "Extreme Sweeping: Jean-Marc Belkadi's Polytonal Plectrum Pyrotechnics". Guitar Player. Retrieved September 28, 2014. "Sensei to the Stars".
  2. Gold, Jude (December 21, 2005). "Chordal Kung Fu". Guitar Player. Retrieved September 28, 2014. "People light up when I play this stuff," says GIT (Musicians Institute) instructor and author Jean Marc Belkadi.
  3. Gold, Jude (March 1, 2009). "Lessons: Soloing Seminars". Guitar Player. Retrieved September 28, 2014. "Any idea you have, you can take it up the fretboard through the different pentatonic fingerings," says Belkadi.