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==Career== |
==Career== |
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Born in Yorkshire,<ref name=":4">'A Giant On The Bridge: Music project aims to explore attitudes towards punishment and justice', ''Sunday Post'' (3 November 2021).</ref> Scott grew up in rural north-east Scotland |
Born in Yorkshire,<ref name=":4">'A Giant On The Bridge: Music project aims to explore attitudes towards punishment and justice', ''Sunday Post'' (3 November 2021).</ref> Scott grew up in rural north-east Scotland.<ref name=":0" /> As a teenager she became involved in [[Aberdeen]]'s music scene; her first band was called The Mangomen and included her twin brother.<ref>Anna Millar, 'No ordinary Jo: Mango's eclectic efforts bear fruit', ''Scotland on Sunday'' (26 February 2006).</ref><ref name=":0" /> In 1999<ref name=":2" /> or 2000,<ref name=":3">{{Cite news |date=8 April 2007 |title=Jo Mango |work=The Sunday Times |pages=12}}</ref> at the age of eighteen, she moved to [[Glasgow]] to study music, also developing her skills via open mic nights at the Glasgow bar Nice 'n' Sleazy's,<ref name=":3" /> and by playing in the [[National Youth Jazz Orchestra]] and a folk band named The Old Blind Dogs.<ref name=":2" /> |
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2006–7 saw Scott touring internationally as a member of [[Vashti Bunyan]]'s band, and in the UK on the Zero Degrees of Separation tour alongside Bunyan, [[David Byrne]], [[Adem Ilhan|Adem]], [[Juana Molina]], and [[Vetiver (band)|Vetiver]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Earnshaw {{!}} |first=Helen |title=Jo Mango Exclusive Interview |url=https://www.femalefirst.co.uk/music/interviews/Jo+Mango+Interview-264916.html |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=www.femalefirst.co.uk |language=en}}</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=JO MANGO INTERVIEW: "I'M A DR OF MUSICOLOGY" – FM famemagazine.co.uk |url=https://www.famemagazine.co.uk/jo-mango-interview-im-a-dr-of-musicology/ |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=www.famemagazine.co.uk}}</ref><ref name=":1">Nicola Meighan, '[https://nicolameighan.wordpress.com/2012/11/03/interview-jo-mango-2/ Interview: Jo Mango]', ''The Herald'' (2 November 2012).</ref> At this time, Scott named key influences as 'Emiliana Torrini, Stina Nordestam, Bright Eyes, Ben Folds, Bjork, Kate Rusby, quirky indie acoustica'.<ref>'Local Spotlight: Jo Mango', ''Glasgow Evening Times'' (16 March 2006).</ref><ref>See also 'Singer Jo Mango shares her top five musical moments', ''Scotland on Sunday'' (20 May 2007).</ref> Other collaborations in the years around 2010 included work with [[Teenage Fanclub]] and [[Admiral Fallow]].<ref name=":2" /> |
2006–7 saw Scott touring internationally as a member of [[Vashti Bunyan]]'s band, and in the UK on the Zero Degrees of Separation tour alongside Bunyan, [[David Byrne]], [[Adem Ilhan|Adem]], [[Juana Molina]], and [[Vetiver (band)|Vetiver]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Earnshaw {{!}} |first=Helen |title=Jo Mango Exclusive Interview |url=https://www.femalefirst.co.uk/music/interviews/Jo+Mango+Interview-264916.html |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=www.femalefirst.co.uk |language=en}}</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=JO MANGO INTERVIEW: "I'M A DR OF MUSICOLOGY" – FM famemagazine.co.uk |url=https://www.famemagazine.co.uk/jo-mango-interview-im-a-dr-of-musicology/ |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=www.famemagazine.co.uk}}</ref><ref name=":1">Nicola Meighan, '[https://nicolameighan.wordpress.com/2012/11/03/interview-jo-mango-2/ Interview: Jo Mango]', ''The Herald'' (2 November 2012).</ref> At this time, Scott named key influences as 'Emiliana Torrini, Stina Nordestam, Bright Eyes, Ben Folds, Bjork, Kate Rusby, quirky indie acoustica'.<ref>'Local Spotlight: Jo Mango', ''Glasgow Evening Times'' (16 March 2006).</ref><ref>See also 'Singer Jo Mango shares her top five musical moments', ''Scotland on Sunday'' (20 May 2007).</ref> Other collaborations in the years around 2010 included work with [[Teenage Fanclub]] and [[Admiral Fallow]].<ref name=":2" /> |
Revision as of 18:57, 4 February 2024
Jo Mango is the stage name of a British alternative folk and acoustic singer and songwriter from Glasgow, otherwise known as Jo Collinson Scott, a lecturer at the University of the West of Scotland.[1] Jo Mango has also been the name of her band.
Career
Born in Yorkshire,[2] Scott grew up in rural north-east Scotland.[3] As a teenager she became involved in Aberdeen's music scene; her first band was called The Mangomen and included her twin brother.[4][3] In 1999[5] or 2000,[6] at the age of eighteen, she moved to Glasgow to study music, also developing her skills via open mic nights at the Glasgow bar Nice 'n' Sleazy's,[6] and by playing in the National Youth Jazz Orchestra and a folk band named The Old Blind Dogs.[5]
2006–7 saw Scott touring internationally as a member of Vashti Bunyan's band, and in the UK on the Zero Degrees of Separation tour alongside Bunyan, David Byrne, Adem, Juana Molina, and Vetiver.[7][3][8] At this time, Scott named key influences as 'Emiliana Torrini, Stina Nordestam, Bright Eyes, Ben Folds, Bjork, Kate Rusby, quirky indie acoustica'.[9][10] Other collaborations in the years around 2010 included work with Teenage Fanclub and Admiral Fallow.[5]
The Scotland Herald described Scott's 2013 EP When We Lived in The Crook of a Tree as "[a voice] so hushed and precise, that it sounds as if it were recorded inside your own head".[11][12]
In 2012, Scott completed a PhD in musicology,[3][8] with the thesis "Experiments in schizoanalysis: a new approach to analysis of conceptual music".[13] By 2015, she had become a lecturer in commercial music at the University of the West of Scotland.[14] She has also taught at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.[15]
In the mid-2010s, Scott's work focused on promoting ecological sustainability in music festivals,[16] leading to her EP Wrack Lines,[17][18] and a project called When Tomorrow Becomes Yesterday.[19]
In the years around 2020, Scott was undertaking creative work relating to prisoners' rehabilitation, leading to her EP System Hold,[20][21]: 5 [22]: 9 characterised in The Scotsman as 'featherlight piano balladry with subtle electronic beats' providing 'a chill-out meditation on themes of incarceration, monitoring and suspension of liberty'.[23] The work also involved Scott in a music festival called Distant Voices highlighting the music of people who had experienced the criminal justice system, and her composition of a multimedia piece named A Giant on the Bridge.[2]
Jo Mango band members
At the time of the release of the 2012 album Murmuration, the band named Jo Mango comprised:[5]
- Jo Mango: lead vocals, rhythm guitar, kalimba, toy piano, concertina
- Jim Mango: bass player, backing vocals
- Alan Peacock: backing vocals, guitar
- Katherine Waumsley: flute, piano, kalimba and concertina
- Calum Scott: percussion
Discography
EPs
- Antidote (2003)
- Fluffy Brain (2004)
- The Moth and the Moon / Black Sun (2010)
- Wrack Lines (2016 – Jo Mango & Friends)
- System Hold (2019 – Jo Mango & Friends)
Studio albums
- Paperclips and Sand (1999)
- Murmuration (2012)
- Transformuration (2014 - Remixes of Murmuration)
Singles
- "My Lung" (2007 - Download Only)
References
- ^ "Jo Scott". The UWS Academic Portal. Retrieved 3 February 2024.
- ^ a b 'A Giant On The Bridge: Music project aims to explore attitudes towards punishment and justice', Sunday Post (3 November 2021).
- ^ a b c d "JO MANGO INTERVIEW: "I'M A DR OF MUSICOLOGY" – FM famemagazine.co.uk". www.famemagazine.co.uk. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
- ^ Anna Millar, 'No ordinary Jo: Mango's eclectic efforts bear fruit', Scotland on Sunday (26 February 2006).
- ^ a b c d Rob Lavender, "Sweet as a Songbird", Metro [Scotland edition] (2 November 2012), p. 55.
- ^ a b "Jo Mango". The Sunday Times. 8 April 2007. p. 12.
- ^ Earnshaw |, Helen. "Jo Mango Exclusive Interview". www.femalefirst.co.uk. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
- ^ a b Nicola Meighan, 'Interview: Jo Mango', The Herald (2 November 2012).
- ^ 'Local Spotlight: Jo Mango', Glasgow Evening Times (16 March 2006).
- ^ See also 'Singer Jo Mango shares her top five musical moments', Scotland on Sunday (20 May 2007).
- ^ Morrison, Alan (8 December 2013). "Review of Jo Mango: When We Lived In The Crook Of A Tree (Olive Grove)". The Herald (Glasgow). Retrieved 2 August 2017.
- ^ Fiona Shepherd, Ken Walton And Jim Gilchrist, "Album reviews: Siobhan Wilson | Beyoncé | The Pearlfishers | Jo Mango & Friends", The Scotsman (7 May 2019).
- ^ Jo Collinson Scott, "Experiments in schizoanalysis: a new approach to analysis of conceptual music" (PhD thesis, University of Glasgow, 2012).
- ^ 'Notes on Contributors', in Writing Creative Non-Fiction: Determining the Form, ed. by Laura Tansley and Micaela and Maftei (Canterbury: Gylphi, 2015), ISBN 9781780240268.
- ^ "Jo Mango".
- ^ Brennan, Matt; Scott, Jo Collinson; Connelly, Angela; Lawrence, Gemma (May 2019). "Do music festival communities address environmental sustainability and how? A Scottish case study". Popular Music. 38 (2): 252–275. doi:10.1017/S0261143019000035. ISSN 0261-1430.
- ^ Combined Output Portfolio: Fields of Green: Jo Mango and Friends, Olive Grove Records, 15 January 2016, retrieved 4 February 2024
- ^ Connelly, Angela; Scott, Jo Collinson; Brennan, Matt (18 August 2015). "'Dead niche' green festivals need to move mainstream". The Conversation. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
- ^ Connelly, Angela (24 June 2016). "When Tomorrow Becomes Yesterday". Planning, Property and Environmental Management.
- ^ 'Criminologist and songwriter re-imagine an alternative to prison system', Herald Scotland (24 November 2018).
- ^ McNeill, Fergus (July 2023). "Miller R, Halfway Home: Race, Punishment and the Afterlife of Mass Incarceration". Punishment & Society. 25 (3): 791–797. doi:10.1177/14624745221114157. ISSN 1462-4745.
- ^ McNeill, Fergus; Urie, Alison (May 2020). "Collaboration before collaborative research: The development of 'Distant Voices'". Methodological Innovations. 13 (2): 205979912093727. doi:10.1177/2059799120937270. ISSN 2059-7991.
- ^ Fiona Shepherd, Ken Walton And Jim Gilchrist, "Album reviews: Siobhan Wilson | Beyoncé | The Pearlfishers | Jo Mango & Friends", The Scotsman (7 May 2019).
External links
- The official Jo Mango website (archived 2008)
- Myspace page (archived 2009)
- anotherday.co.uk - Vashti Bunyan Official Site