A TRAIN CONGRATULATES ALL GRAMMY NOMINEES
ALBUM: GUITAR IN THE SPACE AGE!
ALBUM: Get Up!
Congratulations to the lovely Lila Downs for winning Best Folk Album at this year’s Latin GRAMMY Awards! Her latest record “Balas y Chocolate” for the win! For more on the Latin GRAMMY winners, visit http://www.latingrammy.com/en/nominees.
Congratulations to the following A Train artists who landed the Latin Grammy Nominations! Take a look and give ’em a spin:
Best Tropical Fusion Album
Juan Magan
Label: Universal Music Group/AfterCluv Dance Lab
Best Folk Album
Lila Downs
Label: Sony Music Entertainment Mexico, S.A. De C.V.
World renowned Indian musician, Zakir Hussain, wins Downbeat Magazine’s 63rd Annual Critics Poll for best percussionist.
Zakir’s Moment Records is releasing Distant Kin, distributed digitally through A Train.
Congratulations to both Gregg Karukas and Lila Downs for rising to #1!
Gregg Karukas’ “Rio Drive” hits #1 on Billboard’s Smooth Jazz Radio chart.
Lila Downs’ Balas Y Chocolate goes to #1 on August’s World Music Charts Europe.
New signing David Newman saw his first release under his new deal with A Train Entertainment, Love is Awake, go to No. 1 on itunes’ World Music chart. We were delighted to welcome David to A Train and even more happy with his success!
Clippers/A Train composer Juan Magan hosts a new bi weekly, bilingual SiriusXM radio show, “MixDown with Juan Magan”, starting Feb. 6 at 9pm.Magan’s deal with SiriusXM comes at a time when dance music and EDM are increasingly expanding into the Latin realm, in the U.S., Latin America and Spain.
Last December, Universal Music Latin America announced the launch of a new dance label called Aftercluv Dance Lab. Magan is signed to the label, which has offices throughout Latin America as well as the U.S. Juan’s collaborations with Pitbull, Don Omar along with his own hits like Mal de Amores. and Bailando por El Mundo put him at the top of the list of latin dance superstars.
Jeffrey Golub, jazz, blues and rock guitarist, husband and father of two, passed away peacefully on January 1, 2015 at his home in New York City. Born in 1955 in Akron, OH, Jeff was 59.
While Jeff’s career was notable for its great depth and accomplishment, his true legacy extends beyond his musical catalog. Jeff’s profound talent was only exceeded by his passion, his humility and his kindness.
From a very early age, Jeff knew he was a musician. Growing up with an eclectic musical sensibility, Jeff absorbed myriad childhood influences from the Grand Ole Opry to the British Invasion. At age 8, Jeff’s father took him to see the Grand Ole Opry when it came to Akron. After watching Flatts and Scruggs perform, Jeff declared that he would be a guitar player, and he never changed course.
As a young man, Jeff studied at the Berklee College of Music in Boston for one year. He left Berklee to study privately with Mick Goodrick, who focused on individually tailored ear-training techniques. Jeff learned that, without proper ear-training, advanced music making will sound mechanical and soulless. Goodrick taught Jeff to connect his head with his heart and to be “zen” with the guitar.
Jeff later studied with Charlie Banacos, who taught him amazing discipline. Largely as a result of both Goodrick’s and Banacos’ tutelage, Jeff developed the signature soulful style that distinguished his career.
Jeff was playing clubs in Boston when he met drummer Bobby Chouinard. Through Bobby, Jeff landed a gig backing the ’80s arena-rock star Billy Squier, with whom he did three world tours and recorded seven albums. His impressive work with Squier led to gigs with such artists as Tina Turner, Peter Wolf of the J. Geils Band, John Waite, Vanessa Williams, Gato Barbieri and Bill Evans.
Eventually, Jeff returned to NYC to play live shows with his band, Low Profile. In spring of 1988 he was invited to audition for Rod Stewart. Rod asked Jeff to play Maggie May and, just halfway through the song, Rod told him, “You’re hired, let’s go to the pub.” Jeff played with Rod for a decade before deciding to leave the band to focus on his own jazz recordings and touring. Over the years, Jeff would happily return to work with Stewart and his band, yet always kept solo work his priority.
In 1988, the same year that he began playing with Rod Stewart, Jeff released his first album, Unspoken Words. Through his subsequent recording projects, Jeff has collaborated with such noteworthy peers as Gerald Albright, Henry Butler, Rick Braun, Jon Cleary, Marc Cohn, Richard Elliot, Robben Ford, Sonny Landreth, Jeff Lorber, Kirk Whalum and Peter White.
In 2011, Jeff suddenly went blind. He continued to record and tour until the fall of 2013, when he was forced to retire due to undiagnosed neurological complications. Ultimately, Jeff was diagnosed with Progressive Supranuclear Palsy (PSP).
Jeff has said, “There’s only two kinds of music: the kind that’s from the heart and the kind that’s not.” Jeff certainly lived his life “from the heart,” and was always grateful for his friends, family, colleagues and his music. As important as his music was to him, however, nothing made Jeff happier than his family and the life he built with his wife, Audrey, whom he married in 1997, and their two cherished sons, Chris (age 14) and Matthew (age 12).
Jeff is predeceased by his father, Peter. He is survived by his wife, Audrey Stafford Golub, and his sons, Chris and Matthew Golub; his mother, Pearl Golub, and brother, Pete Golub, of Copley, OH; his sister, Patti Hippler, brother-in-law, Bob Hippler, and nephew, Jason Hippler, of Massillon, OH; sisters and brothers-in-law in Atlanta, GA, Joan and Jay Betts, Susan Stafford, Lisa and Steve McCoy and Eleanor Frongillo, and their children, Lauren and David Betts, Shannon Fahey, Kevin and Patrick Duffy, Bobby and Joey Frongillo and Stafford and Audrey McCoy.
Memorial services will be held at the New York Society for Ethical Culture, 2 West 64th Street, New York, NY 10025. Details will be announced as soon as they are available on jeffgolub.com.
A fund is being established to help with educational and other specified expenses for Jeff’s sons. In lieu of flowers, please consider honoring Jeff’s legacy by contributing to this fund click here for details or making a donation to curepsp.org.
We join with Jeff’s family and friends in saying farewell.
A Train is honored to announce and congratulate the following artists who have made the final round of the 57th Grammy Nominations!
Best Pop Vocal Album
Artist: Ed Sheeran
Album: X
Contemporary Instrumental
Artist: Gerald Albright
Album: SLAM DUNK
Best New Age Album
Artist: Silvia Nakkach & David Darling
Album: IN LOVE AND LONGING
Best Latin Pop Album
Artist: Lila Downs, Nina Pastori & Soledad
Album: RAÍZ
Wishing all of our artists success as we countdown to the 57th Grammy Awards airing February 8, 2015.