* En anglais uniquement
A musician of abundant prowess, former
Focus guitarist
Jan Akkerman once eclipsed
Eric Clapton,
Jimmy Page, and
Jeff Beck in England's reader polls as the world's best rock guitarist. Akkerman is fluent in most guitar languages and plays several instruments. He is adept at rock, jazz, funk, blues and classical music. He keeps up with technology and isn't afraid to appear on stage with dance music DJs in the 21st century. Much of his body of work -- outside his membership in Focus -- is somewhat obscure given its nearly impossible-to-reconcile range. After the international charting success of
Focus's smash "Hocus Pocus,"
Akkermann issued the solo
Profile that showcased jazz fusion and his dazzling lute playing, while the following year's
Tabernakel, performed completely solo in most spots, took on everything from the lute songs of composers
John Dowland, Thomas Morley, and Francis Pilkington. On the brief "House Of The King" he enlisted the talents of
Tim Bogert and
Carmine Appice as a rhythm section. Over the next two decades,
Akkerman recorded a slew of mercurial solo albums, worked with
Focus until they split, and recorded with jazzmen like
Joachim Kuhn and
Tony Scott. Later albums, such as 1986's The Complete Guitarist, 1994's
Puccini's Cafe and 2011's
Minor Details, took his seamless approach to musical genres to create a body of work that 's incomparable in its musical diversity. 2019's Close Beauty offered a return to jazzy prog and garnered postive reviews not only for its amalgam of styles, but its often ambient and brooding atmospheres.
Akkerman was born in Amsterdam, Holland, in 1946, into a musical family -- his father played the clarinet and the trumpet, and
Akkerman reportedly took up the piano-accordion at age three, which he soon followed with formal lessons. He studied at the Amsterdam Conservatory until he was in his teens and the family moved to Vienna, Austria, by which time the guitar had become his primary instrument. The list of influences on his musical sensibilities ranged from
Julian Bream in classical to
Elvin Jones in blues. His taste and interests were extraordinarily wide-ranging, from pop/rock to classical, with room for blues, Latin, and other influences. He joined his first band,
Johnny & the Cellar Rockers, in 1958, at age 11, which included his boyhood friend
Pierre van der Linden on drums. Later on, the two were members of the Hunters, an instrumental group whose sound was heavily influenced by that of
the Shadows. He acquired a special interest in the lute while on a visit to England during the mid-'60s, during which he saw a performance by legendary classical guitarist
Julian Bream, whose repertory of medieval works also fascinated
Akkerman. This interest, which broadened to embrace a fixation on medieval England and its countryside, later manifested itself in such works as "Elspeth of Nottingham" from
Focus III.
During the late '60s,
Akkerman,
van der Linden, bassist
Bert Ruiter, and singer
Kaz Lux formed Brainbox, who were good enough to get a recording contract with Parlophone Records. He was involved with an early incarnation of the group
Focus, founded by conservatory-trained flutist
Thijs van Leer, but left after they'd cut an unsuccessful debut album -- then began the personnel shuffle that revived the group in its more successful form. He took
van der Linden with him from Brainbox, and also took
van Leer and bassist Cyril Havermans (later succeeded by
Ruiter) from the original
Focus, forming a new group of that name. With
Akkerman's virtuoso guitar work and arrangements coupled to
van Leer's classical influence (and his yodeling on their breakthrough hit, "Hocus Pocus"), the new group found a large international audience beginning in 1972, which transformed
Akkerman into a superstar guitarist.
His solo career actually dated from 1968, though his attempt at a solo album, later titled Guitar for Sale -- containing his covers of numbers such as "What'd I Say," "Ode to Billy Joe," and "Green Onions" -- was so primitive by the standards of the time, it was deemed unreleasable until
Akkerman started topping reader surveys in the mid-'70s.
Profile, released in 1972 after he'd begun making some headway with his reputation, also dated from 1969 and his days with Brainbox.
Akkerman's first real solo album reflecting his music and interests at the time appeared in 1974, in the form of
Tabernakel, which was recorded during the summer of that year at Atlantic Recording Studios in New York -- having finally acquired a medieval lute of his own, he taught himself to play it and the results comprise more than half of this LP, made up of authentic medieval music and originals composed in a medieval mode. It was certainly the most unusual record ever to feature the playing of
Tim Bogart (bass) and
Carmine Appice (drums), as well as soul drummer
Ray Lucas.
After leaving
Focus in 1976,
Akkerman began releasing a stream of solo albums, beginning with the concept offering
Eli (that took home the Dutch Edison Award for best album that year). It was the first of several outings co-billed to singer
Kaz Lux. These albums frequently embraced classical, jazz, and blues,
Akkerman started leading his own bands too. Much of his work during the 1980s wasn't released officially outside of Holland, and some of it -- most notably 1986's The Complete Guitarist -- wasn't much more ambitious than home recordings, but his prowess was undeniable and all of it served to build up his fandom. In 1990, he issued the album
The Noise of Art stateside for
Miles Copeland's I.R.S label. Throughout the 1990s,
Akkerman was revitalized, in terms of releases, he was prolific more active than he had been in over a decade. Later albums, such as 1993's
Puccini's Cafe and 1994's
Blues Hearts focused on different aspects of jazz-fusion. 1996's Focus In Time was a contemporary jazz-funk rock record. 1998's Blues Root was a collaborative blues rock date with former Jimi Hendrix collaborator, singer
Curtis Knight, while 1999's Passion wove together classical, jazz, funk and blues tunes.
Those recordings, coupled with periodic recordings with
van Leer and efforts to revive
Focus with its two major stars, kept his name circulating in international music circles.
Akkerman's first two albums of the new century Jazzah! (2000) and I'm In The Mood (2002) were acclaimed and self-released. 2003's
C.U. on Coast To Coast in 2003, wove a tapestry of contemporary jazz and instrumental R&B to massive critical acclaim and placed on the Dutch charts. In 2008,
Akkerman and keyboardist Damir Imeri were billed featured guests on the
Vlatko Stefanovski Trio's Thunder From The Blue Sky. 2009 saw the issues of both Unplugged and Live In Tokyo.
Akkerman returned to the studio for the contemporary jazz exercise
Minor Details in 2011. backed by a studio band of longtime collaborators, he wrote all 14 songs on the date and produced it as well. Two years later, he released North Sea Jazz Legendary Concerts, that featured guest spots from
van Leer,
Benjamin Herman, and
Eric Vloeimans. The set also included a surprise cover of "You Do Something To Me" by
Paul Weller. Five years later in 2018, Red Bullet issued the 26-disc box set, the Complete Jann Akkerman to positivce acclaim internationally, instigating a an international reappraisal of the artist. He returned to the studio after a six year break and released the quartet offering Close Beauty for the Mascot Label Group. His band,mates on the date included his live sidemen, keyboardist
Coen Molenaar, bassist David De Marez Oyens, and drummer Marijn van den Berg. Reviews were universally positive, and precipitated European and Asian tours.
Though his name recognition has receded somewhat from the heady days when "Hocus Pocus" was soaring up the American charts and national television audiences watched in awe at
Akkerman's excursions on the fret board, he remains a legendary figure among guitar afficianados. The only problem
Akkerman faces derives from the sheer and dazzling eclecticism of his work, which makes him very difficult to categorize, but then, he's fine with that.~ Bruce Eder