Andrew Brel

Andrew Brel is a UK author whose work includes The Emergency Bouzouki Player and One Day in Paris and a professional musician for over forty years. He has released 11 albums of meditation music since 2001.

Andrew Brel
Background information
Birth nameAndreas Broulidakis
Born (1960-09-28) 28 September 1960
Johannesburg, South Africa
OriginLondon, England
GenresNew-age, meditation, wellness
Occupation(s)Composer, Music producer, Author
InstrumentsGuitar, Bouzouki
Years active1979present
Websitewww.andrewbrel.com

Early life

Brel was born to Greek parents in the South African suburb of Bryanston, one of Johannesburg's affluent whites-only areas in 1960. His father was Manoussos Broulidakis, originally from Sfakia, a Cretan village on the South of the Island notable for its resistance during the Ottoman occupation. With a reputation for resistance against oppression going back 1,000 years, Sfakia was the extraction point for the Allied troops caught up in the surprise invasion of Crete by the Nazis in 1941. After emigrating to South Africa in 1934, Manos volunteered for the South African army in 1939, serving as an infantry captain with the British Commonwealth forces, active in North Africa and Italy. He was a multiple medal winner although he gave his medals away, believing medals to be unworthy, seeing the anti-fascist position as every mans duty and not a choice warranting reward. Manos married Helen Evangelou in 1956. They had three children. Katerina, born 1958, Andreas born 1960 and Christina born 1966. The family lived in Linksfield Ridge in what was the 'House of the Year in 1956. The house on Hannoben street was designed by Frank L. Jarret in 1951 "for Greek timber merchant Manos Broulidakis, who spared no expense in using the richest of timbers for its interiors." Manos sold in 1960 to L.Ron Hubbard, when he relocated his Scientology business to South Africa. The house that Manos built is currently listed as one of Johannesburg's hidden treasures of architecture as a museum called 'The Ron Hubbard House'.[1] Manos Broulidakis' home was the first 1950's house to attain Heritage status in South Africa. In 1960 Manos moved his family to Bryanston, where Andreas grew up a native Greek speaker, attending Bryanston Primary, Bryanston High and Damelin College before completing first year at the University of the Witwatersrand medical school. Manos died in 1971 of a coronary thrombosis, leaving Helen, 36, with three children and four dogs in a three acre property with four servants. Andrew was 10, Katherine 12 and Christina 4. Each child would react differently to this early encounter with profound loss. Kathy became a professional ballerina and embraced Eastern mysticism, Andrew became a professional musician and rejected orthodox religion from an early age, while the youngest, Christine embraced materialism, becoming a successful lawyer.

Conscription into the SADF

In 1979, having just turned 18, Brel was forcibly conscripted into the South African Army for two years during the height of the Border War. Brel was from the outset a refusenik in uniform, unwilling to fire a weapon, leading to a court martial. At 18 he remained firm in his position that "All I can do is play the guitar" refusing to participate in any militant activity. Eventually he became the guitarist in the accomplished Entertainment Corps show band, a seat once occupied by Trevor Rabin. Brel toured the Country, often appearing as the musical entertainment for Government functions. He also toured the SADF camps in the Angolan Border war zone, performing with many of South Africa's biggest musical stars of the era on morale boosting concerts for the troops. Experiencing first hand the traumatized reaction of an average 18-year-old troops personality to firefights. And the barbarism that accompanies all out war. In this guise, with the rank of Bandsman, he met and entertained several of South Africa's significant Apartheid leaders, including Minister of Defence, Magnus Malan and Minister of Police Jimmy Kruger. Kruger had only recently overseen the horrible death of Steve Biko, commenting on his demise, cooking to death while naked with a broken skull in the back of a Police Land Rover, "It leaves me cold". Awareness of the personalities he was entertaining sat heavily on the anti-fascist young Brel.

In 1980 as a 19-year-old troop in military uniform he found himself unexpectedly face to face with South Africa's Leader P. W. Botha during a Government Dinner/Dance function honoring the Argentine Prime Minister. Overwhelmed by intuitively impulsive youthful exuberance in that momentary opportunity to speak directly to the supreme commander of Apartheid he chose three words for the Prime Minister. Your bum stinks. One of many instances of non-violent protest that characterized an unhappy, traumatic period of living under and resenting the rule of the Christian Apartheid regime.[2]

After being discharged from two years of national service in 1980, in order to avoid the camp system in which conscripts were required to return to the border annually for so called 'Camps' lasting up to three months, Brel returned to formal education which provided exemption from Camps. He completed three years of Computer Science whilst performing as a solo musician at many of South Africa's most prestigious musical venues, becoming one of the busiest and highest paid performers in South Africa between 1981 and 1985.

In 1981, at the outset of a career as a professional musician, acting on the advice of his booking agent Edith Goldstein, who explained the commercial difficulties attached to booking Andreas Broulidakis he adopted a shortened version of his name, appearing professionally as Andy Brel for the first time in 1981. His first professional contract, the Quirinale Hotel in Hillbrow was three-month contract, performing solo with foot bass pedals and a drum box, for four hours, five nights weekly.

Between 1981 and 1985, Brel averaged over 300 paid appearances annually whilst a full-time student, earning glowing reviews on numerous occasions in The Star, then the most widely circulated news publication in South Africa. During this time he experienced undiagnosed PTSD, which led to a formal interest in learning about Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and then sharing information about the condition in published articles that have been used in treatment programs by doctors in South Africa. Where an entire generation of white South African born males was required to serve in the military during the thirty three-year Angolan Border war. The majority of conscripts were 18, school leavers, for whom there was no alternative than to fight for the survival of the Apartheid regime. Although thousands died in the conflict, many more carried the psychological scars forward, impacting significantly on the Countries political and social transition away from white minority rule.

Emigration

In 1985, aged 24 and with some skills as a performing and recording musician, Brel left Apartheid South Africa, choosing England as his new home where he arrived with a total of £1,500 and no plan beyond playing music for money. Brel was well received from the outset in the UK where his one-man show led to a stream of bookings on the Pub and club circuit. Soon after arrival he enjoyed a 3-year Saturday night sold-out stint at Bo-Jangles, a wine bar owned by a music Industry personality in Hampton Wick, South West London, opposite Kingston-Upon-Thames. Bo Jangles was at that time a trending in-place for musicians where being the featured attraction every Saturday night led to many musical introductions and album recording opportunities. Providing the social network that formed the start of a new life in the UK.

Within one year of arriving in the UK, aged 25 in 1986, Brel bought his first home on the Thames Riverbank near Hampton Court. Where he quickly adapted to life as a local in the picturesque Surrey village of East Molesey.

From 1986 until 1991 he owned and operated Hampton Court Studios at no 3 Bridge Road, working as a music writer and producer, developing new talent and creating original musical copyrights. This period included producing the original demos of the Dogs D'Amour which led to their record deal with China Records, launching a colorful chapter in British cartoon Rock and Roll. After 8-hour studio sessions on most days, in the evenings Brel continued public performances as a guitarist/singer, increasingly in duo context with musicians including Duncan Mackay (10cc), John Edwards (Status Quo) and Ronnie Johnson (Van Morrison).

Throughout the 1980s, at a time when the UK enjoyed a thriving live music culture in the smoky pubs where people would meet and socialize, Brel averaged six nights a week of live gigs in many of London's most musical pub gigs and five full-price sessions a week in Hampton Court Studios.

Bridge Recordings

In 1989, Brel formed a record label, Bridge Recordings[3] with Charlie Morgan, then drummer with Elton John. Bridge Recordings was a pioneering model of an independent record label producing high quality recordings of accomplished musicians playing their own instruments with the ethos of 'Music by Musicians.' The goal with recordings was to perform 'studio live', all players playing together in the traditional style of the early recording studios. Most of the releases on Bridge represent first or second takes of the band playing live.

For Brel, starting the Production label was the alternative to continuing gigs in smoky pubs after the age of thirty. Having decided the lifestyle of a gigging musician did not favor prospects for longevity. Especially considering that at that time, gigging musicians in the UK, would typically smoke and drink to an extent that what would by today's standards be considered, excessive.

With all his attention shifted into recording and production of musical content, distribution of Bridge albums was enhanced by Brel's association with Music Maker Publications and its chairman Terry Day. A professional friendship that enabled numerous successful promotions for Bridge recordings though the wide circulation of the Music Maker flagship magazine 'Guitarist'.

In 1991 Music Maker leased one of the first T1 Internet connections in the UK and Brel established the Bridge Recordings web store which recorded the first instance of a CD sale via the Internet for Give Them Enough Rope by Ronnie Johnson.[4]

During the 1990s this association with the largest publisher of music related magazines enabled co ventures between Brel and Terry Day that helped the careers of many guitar players and included starting the Guitarist Magazine 'Guitarist of the Year' competition, which gave unknown players the opportunity to perform live with top session musicians in front of an audience for the prize of publicity and a recording opportunity. Several of the participants in these shows have gone on to enjoy successful professional careers.

As a writer, Brel contributed numerous articles for publication in Music Maker titles including lengthy features on Manfred Mann,[5] and songwriter Terry Britten.[6]

From 1992, Brel produced all cover-mount CD's for all Terry Days publications under the Music Maker banner including Guitarist magazine and Guitar Techniques magazine. Containing new content each month by a variety of contributors that would include Martin Taylor and Guthrie Govan along with many of the top level of teachers and players in the UK. This conceptual idea, which began in a coffee meeting between Brel and Terry Day in Cambridge, provided a new and original approach to music tuition that has left a lasting legacy. During this period Brel also mastered every CD release and oversaw overall production in excess of 2 million CD's. Along with negotiating the license payment with the Copyright protection society, the MCPS, for the copyright compositions appearing on every one of the lessons contained on the CD's. The success of the CD cover mounts and the quality of the content assisted with creating the interest leading to the acquisition of the Music Maker brand by Future Publishing.

Black Barn Studios

In 1995, Bridge Recordings expanded its production capability to include ownership of Black Barn Studios in Ripley, Surrey, the early home of Eric Clapton. With this high quality recording facility, Brel produced and released fifteen promoted albums, two with the SAS Band; Queen keyboard player Spike Edney's all star band featuring musicians including; Chris Thompson, Roger Taylor, Peter Green, Ian Anderson, Tony Hadley, Roy Wood and Paul Young. The 1997 release, the eponymously titled SAS Band album, also known as the 'Blue album' and the 2001 release "SAS Band Live". Brel played on and produced the live version of Richard O'Brien's classic 'Time Warp.
In 1998 Brel produced and released Leo Sayer's Live in London[7] and Louis Ribeiro's Under African Skies.[8]

By the late 1990s, several events conspired to end sustainability of the Bridge Recordings business model. The growth of home recording technology meant a decline in demand for high cost professional recording services, which along with the shrinking sales of musical CD's as a new generation followed the 'download for free' model, all but ended the business motivation to pay for recordings for a rapidly declining market increasingly unwilling to pay for content. As a result, the studio was sold to one of its busiest clients, Paul Weller.[9] Soon after Charlie Morgan left Elton John's band and moved to the United States where he resides in Nashville, while Terry Day sold Music Maker Publications.[10]

Personal life

After moving to London, Brel married his girlfriend and fellow émigré from South Africa,'the Bryanston girl next door' Catherine Smith in 1986. They had one child, Manoussos John, born in Kingston-On-Thames in 1989. They divorced in 1992. Brel had a number of relationships subsequently. In 2009 his second son Byron Broulidakis was born in Kingston-On-Thames.

After the death of his Atheist father in 1971, when he was age ten, despite being raised by a devoutly Greek Orthodox mother, Brel became an eloquent anti-theist who believes religion will eventually be as widely condemned as racism and remembered as a child-abusing hate crime. Although he has ongoing friendships with believers in most religions.

Meditation music

In 2001 Brel's friendship with new age self-help author Diana Cooper led to a commission to write his first album in the genre of new-age meditation music[11] "Angel Inspiration" was released by New World Music in 2001. The rewarding return from this first foray into new age meditation music provided incentive and opportunity to explore a lifelong passion for composing and producing music in this minimalist 'solfeggio' style resulting in 11 further releases by 2020. Although preferring to work alone in the process of composition, performance and production, Brel made three albums in collaboration with the guitarist and composer Hugh Burns, including 2007's Seven Bach Meditations which explores the process of Brel's lifelong inspiration in music composition, J.S Bach, incorporating high production values not available to the composer at that time.

Between 2002 and 2006, Brel recorded and produced a series of 15 spoken word meditation CDs with self-help author Diana Cooper which prominently feature his meditation music. The Diana Cooper meditation CD's remain popular choices in the spoken word meditation field, released by Findhorn Press and later licensed to Inner Traditions.

After the burglary of Riverbank Studios on 16 June 2013, where his previous six meditation music albums were recorded, in what is recorded in his 'million reader' Blog post on this subject as 'Larceny by family court members', Brel moved to California, establishing Treadmill Studios in Laguna Beach as a production facility where his first new project was a collaboration with well known Phd music-educator and Pet Shop Boys producer Richard Niles.[12] In 2017, his eighth album was released, a solo effort called Meditation and Tranquility which produced a streaming media hit, called "Sol Serenit"'.

In 2019, Kumeka Vol II was released, 17 years after the first Music for Kumeka introduced this Chohan of the 8th Ray. In 2019, he released a second album specifically for the 'Sleep Music genre' called Deep Sleep, widely used in Youtube videos providing for insomniacs. In 2020 he released African Meditation.

Brel uses Taylor guitars on all the meditation music albums, primarily a 2005 Taylor NS72.

Songwriting

Outside of the meditation music compositions, Brel has worked on several collaborations with guitarist and composer, Hugh Burns, including The Paradise Key[13] in 2003 which recalled events in the Iran Iraq war surrounding the religiously inspired 'human wave' attacks. A story shared by his friend Kaveh Golestan, the Iranian photojournalist whose coverage of the Iran Iraq war was syndicated to most significant media for the duration of that war. Brel is the co writer of 'Alone' with Spike Edney, originally sung by Patti Russo and later recorded in California by Hugo Fernandes.[14]

Brel is the co writer of 'Suburban House' with Josh Phillips, originally sung by Leo Sayer and later a hit in Ukraine for Ani Lorak.[15]

Twenty-one of his most performed songs appear on the 2017 release Riverbank Songwriting including songs with Alan Tarney, Spike Edney, Hugh Burns and Josh Phillips.

In 2018 Brel wrote and produced What I Love by Hugo Fernandes. A seventeen-song album of acoustic guitar and voice, performed by Hugo Fernandes. Recorded in California and released by Andrew Brel Music on 15 September 2018.

The Emergency Bouzouki Player

Brel's first book, The Emergency Bouzouki Player was published in 2011. ASIN: B00BTX1B9Q. The book reflects a first hand account of conscription in the South African Army during the years of Apartheid and is the best selling book about South Africa's Border War outside of South Africa. The long term social consequences of forced conscription and the PTSD generation that returned from the border war without any medical help are widely explored. South African writer and intellectual John Oakley Smith described it as 'A book that should be compulsory reading in every South African school'. In June 2017 The Emergency Bouzouki Player was banned from sale in all seven Emirates of the UAE where Amazon sells books and remains forbidden to residents of all countries practicing Sharia law.

One Day in Paris

Brel's second book is a novel, One Day in Paris published in 2015. ASIN: B0135OSWGQ. The account of a fictitious attack in Paris masterminded by former British Army officer, Dan Blake, a skillful PTSD affected sociopath with superior intelligence. A prescient story-line examines how the American Military Industrial complex relies on new conflict to sustain growth. Described as "a close up look at the 1% who control the 1%" by ethicist and film-maker Stephen Trombley. In September 2017 One Day in Paris was banned from sale in all seven Emirates of the UAE where Amazon sells books and remains forbidden to residents of all countries practicing Sharia law.

Who Lies Wins

Brel's story of family court in Britain is the subject of Andrea Lee's book Who Lies Wins. A non-fiction whistle-blower novel about British family-law published in 2019. ASIN: B07X3Y9KGR. Who Lies Wins was the No. 1 best seller on Amazon in Family-Law in September 2019.

Short stories by Brel

During the long delay before completing a planned compendium of short stories, Brel released four short stories chosen by popular reaction to his andrewbrel.com blog. The first four are;

  • Nolan Cash, Bowling Green. ASIN B0784QW6BH
  • Krishna Vardu Ghan and the Keys for Conduct ASIN B07LD23LBQ
  • Diane Sutton and the hanging judge. ISBN 1077105932
  • Blake Sherman's AR-15. An American love story. ASIN B07VNBYQ2Y

Discography

As producer.

  • 1989 * Give them Enough Rope by Ronnie Johnson
  • 1991 * Very Much Alive by Willy Finlayson and the Hurters. Featuring Mickey Moody
  • 1993 * Blues Britannia by Various Artists including Peter Green, Mickey Moody, Cliff Aungier and Geoff Bradford
  • 1995 * FleshDevils by Dino Archon, Jojo Alves and Charlie Morgan
  • 1997 * Under African Skies by Louis Ribeiro and Jive Nation
  • 1999 * SAS Band by Spike Edneys All stars feat Chris Thompson, Tony Hadley, Roger Taylor, Ian Anderson and Peter Green
  • 2000 * Live in London by Leo Sayer
  • 2001 * The Show by SAS Band. Featuring Chris Thompson, Roger Taylor, Roy Wood, Leo Sayer and Richard O'Brien
  • 2018 * Riverbank Songwriting by Various artists
  • 2018 * What I love by Hugo Fernandes

As composer/performer in meditation music.

  • 2001 * Angel Inspiration
  • 2002 * Music for Kumeka
  • 2003 * Golden Atlantis
  • 2004 * Angels and Unicorns (With Hugh Burns.)
  • 2005 * Celtic Inspiration (With Hugh Burns.)
  • 2007 * Seven Bach Meditations (With Hugh Burns.)
  • 2014 * Laguna. Krishna Vardu Ghan meditations. (With Richard Niles.)
  • 2016 * Relaxation and Tranquility
  • 2019 * Kumeka II
  • 2019 * Deep Sleep
  • 2019 * African Meditation
gollark: I think it needs blockchain too.
gollark: So it has cloud and AI. That's two buzzwords. Hmm.
gollark: AI seems kind of buzzwordy, but if you can make it work...
gollark: But the actual power output... is the actual power output.
gollark: It affects the brightness you see it with.

References

  1. "Ron Hubbard House". lronhubbard.org.za. Retrieved 28 October 2018.
  2. Andrew Brel (2011). The Emergency Bouzouki Player: My two years at war with the South African Army. Andrew Brel. ISBN 978-0-9568364-1-0.
  3. "Bridge Recordings". Andrewbrel.com. Archived from the original on 12 October 2013. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  4. "Ronnie Johnson – Give Them Enough Rope CD Album". Cduniverse.com. 14 November 2006. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  5. "Manfred Mann interview". Andrewbrel.com. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  6. "Terry Britten interview". Andrewbrel.com. 25 June 1993. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  7. "Leo Sayer – Live in London CD Album". Cduniverse.com. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  8. "Jive Nation | Under African Skies | CD Baby Music Store". Cdbaby.com. 23 October 2007. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  9. "Black Barn Studios : History". Blackbarnstudio.com. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  10. "History : Recording Magazine". Recordingmag.com. 17 January 1994. Archived from the original on 12 October 2013. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  11. Andrew Brel. "Andrew Brel | Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  12. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 22 August 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  13. "Paradise Key". Andrewbrel.com. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
  14. "Alone". andrewbrel.com. Retrieved 28 October 2018.
  15. "Suburban House". andrewbrel.com. Retrieved 28 October 2018.
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