Sundays @ Four
OCTOBER 20, 2024
Mads Tolling Trio
Who
Mads Tolling, violin
John R. Burr, piano
Dan Feiszli, double bassWhat
Grammy-winning violinist Mads Tolling brings his fellow musicians, including pianist John R. Burr, to Sundays @ Four at Crowden this fall. In “Playing the 60s: Music of the Mad Men Era,” Tolling will give nostalgic tunes from TV, radio, and film a contemporary spin. He’ll also demonstrate his versatility as he joins Burr in selections from their recently released album Ramblin', highlighting jazz standards and Americana classics. The set list includes songs all the way from Hoagy Carmichael and Ennio Morricone to Lennon/McCartney and John McLaughlin. Join Tolling and Burr along with Dan Feiszli on bass, as the trio brings its unique sound to our stage in Berkeley.
When
October 20, 2024 @ 4pm
Program
- TBA
Free Meet-the-Artists reception following the concert.
Ticket Info
$35 general admission, $25 seniors/students 18+, and free for children 8 to 18. (Concerts are about two hours in length, with a brief intermission, and are intended for audience members ages 8 and up.) Reserve tickets here.
MADS TOLLING is an internationally renowned violinist and composer originally from Copenhagen, Denmark, now living in San Francisco. As a former nine-year member of both bassist Stanley Clarke’s band and the celebrated Turtle Island Quartet, Mads won two Grammy Awards, and he was nominated for a third Grammy in 2015. He was the 2016 winner of the DownBeat Critics Poll Rising Star Violin Award. Mads has performed with Chick Corea, Ramsey Lewis, Kenny Barron, Paquito D’Rivera, Leo Kottke and Sergio & Odair Assad. Mads is a current member of Bob Weir & Wolf Bros/Wolfpack Band.
After graduating Berklee College of Music in 2003, he was recommended by Jean-Luc Ponty to join Stanley Clarke’s band. He has since been featured on NPR’s Morning Edition, and his recordings have received rave reviews in Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, Strings Magazine and DownBeat Magazine. Mads has performed for Danish royalty – Prince Frederik & Princess Mary – at the celebration of The Danish Embassy’s 50-year Anniversary. Since 2020, Mads has been a member of Bob Weir & Wolf Bros/Wolfpack with tours across the US, including at Red Rocks, The Greek Theatre and Radio City Music Hall. He is featured on Weir’s two albums Live in Colorado Vol 1 & 2 and Ace 50th Anniversary. Mads has contributed several arrangements of Grateful Dead tunes for the band, some of which he integrates in his own projects.
Mads has twice been commissioned to write violin concertos – for Oakland Symphony and Pacific Chamber Orchestra. He has performed his symphonic works and soloed with orchestras around the US and Japan.
Mads now leads his own groups – Mads Tolling Quartet and Mads Tolling & The Mads Men. His release, Playing the 60s, is a reimagination of classic songs from 1960s film, TV and radio, such as “A Taste of Honey,” “Hawaii 5-0” and “Mission: Impossible.” The album features vocalists Kenny Washington, Kalil Wilson and Spencer Day, and it spent two months on US jazz radio’s top 30.
With his groups, Mads has performed over a thousand concerts around the world, including at The Hollywood Bowl, Library of Congress and at the Bay Area’s Paramount and Herbst Theatres. As a featured Yamaha Artist, Mads leads clinics and masterclasses in the US and internationally.
John R. Burr is that rare pianist who combines jazz technique with a genuine love for folk music. The Philadelphia Weekly said, “Pianist extraordinaire John R. Burr has the most sparkling style since former Allman Brother-turned-Rolling Stone hired hand Chuck Leavell.” Discology wrote, “John R. Burr ranks with the best of the elegant jazzers.”
Years of touring and recording sessions with such artists as Maria Muldaur, The Alison Brown Quartet, Paul McCandless, Michael Manring, and Kathy Kallick, and recognition including a feature spot on Windham Hill’s Piano Sampler II are a testament of his talent.
Living in the San Francisco area, John R found himself at OTR Studios often recording on other people’s albums. There he met Cookie Marenco, the engineer on those sessions. When Cookie founded Blue Coast Records, she knew it was a matter of time before John R had a recording under his own name. The first solo piano album of many to come is called Quarter Tones and displays John R’ intimate relationship with the piano.
His playing is as likely to be inspired by James Taylor or Doctor John as by Oscar Peterson or the Yellowjackets although he says it is his love of folk music that has influenced him most.
Dan is a bassist and recording engineer / producer living in the San Francisco Bay Area. A versatile performer on both upright and electric basses, Dan has performed on concert stages, festivals and clubs nationally and internationally with a diverse group of artists, ranging from jazz pianist Geoffrey Keezer, singer Kenny Washington, and guitarist Ray Obiedo, to the San Francisco and Puerto Rico performances of the musical Hamilton, and as a guest jazz bassist with the San Francisco Symphony. In addition to his career as a performer, Dan has been featured on hundreds of recordings as both bassist and recording engineer/producer, and currently can be found working at his own studio in El Cerrito as well as freelancing at studios around the Bay Area.