Lanny Cordola

Lanny Cordola (born 1961) is an American guitarist, songwriter and producer. He has been a member of bands such as Giuffria,[1] House of Lords,[2] and Magdallan (also known as Magdalen after Ken Tamplin's departure).

Before joining Giuffria, Cordola was the main songwriter for his original bands named Lights, American Heroes and Mondo Cane with such songs as "All For One", "Lonely Money", "Blow It All Away", "Nasty Girl", "Gypsy in a Twisted World", "Dream Carnival", "High on a Dream", "Empty Cabaret", "Can't Wait Any Longer", "Uncontrolled Fire", "Prime Time", "(She's So) Photogenic", "Walking on the Edge", "Violent City" and "Riddles in the Night".

Both American Heroes and Mondo Cane gained their greatest success in Hollywood in the early 1980s. Other contributing members of those bands included Bret Alstadt on lead vocals, Joey Leon on drums and Loren Robinson on bass guitar. Shawn Perry became Mondo Cane's manager in 1982 and Mark Lundquist, a keyboard player and backing vocalist, was added to the band in 1984. Robinson left and the band went through three other bass players before folding in 1985.

Cordola attended Cypress High School in Cypress, California and began his career by playing weekend parties in neighborhood garages and then branching out into the entertainment circuit by playing various clubs in Orange and Los Angeles night clubs. While "on tour" in the Southern California club circuit, Paul Shook (guitar technician) Brent Cobleigh (bass guitar technician) and Scotty Gustafski (drum technician) were the road crew for American Heroes/Mondo Cane. They went on to start to form their own band, Charade, rehearsing several of AH/MC's songs.

Cordola has made several solo albums, as well as being featured as guest musician, songwriter and/or producer on albums with artists like Ken Tamplin and Ransom. Besides the guitar, he also masters other instruments. In 2006, Cordola was a contributor of the Bulgarian rock group D_2 and especially their third album, 6.

Cordola has also appeared on the popular American television sitcom Full House, as a member of Jesse Katsopolis's band, Jesse and the Rippers.

In 2014, following the reporting of a 2012 terrorist attack there,[3] Cordola visited Kabul, Afghanistan. He later returned and engaged in youth work, teaching guitar to teenagers of the war-torn country.[4] "The plan is to make this an entity where they can travel the world, play music, tell the story about their lives and the people of Afghanistan," Cordola is quoted as saying.[4]

Discography

Solo

  • Electric Warrior, Acoustic Saint (1991)
  • Of Riffs and Symphonies (1992)
  • Salvation Medicine Show (1998)

with Giuffria

with House of Lords

with Magdallan

with Magdalen

  • Revolution Mind (1993)
  • The Dirt (1994)

with Ken Tamplin

  • In the Witness Box (1995)

with Tamplin and Friends

  • An Axe to Grind (1990)

with DORO

  • DORO (1990)

with Uthanda

  • Believe (1992)

with Jazz Trio

  • The Trinity Sessions (1995)

with Chaos is the Poetry

  • Chaos is the Poetry (1996)
gollark: Yes, you would deny it, wouldn't you.
gollark: Tux1 is my alt.
gollark: Tux1 is also now apiomemetic.
gollark: Anyway, would you say heavserver *itself* is apiomemetic?
gollark: That would require effort.

References

  1. Perry, Shawn. "Giuffria". AllMusic. Retrieved August 5, 2011.
  2. Rainho, Ricardo. "House of Lords". AllMusic. Retrieved August 5, 2011.
  3. Harooni, Mirwais (September 8, 2012). "Teenage bomber kills six near NATO HQ in Kabul". Reuters. Retrieved July 21, 2016.
  4. Khamoosh, By Kawoon (July 21, 2016). "The guitar school for street children in Afghanistan". BBC News. Retrieved July 21, 2016.
  • Stevens, Rich (February 1994). "Lanny Cordola: Breaking Down Barriers". CCM Magazine. 16 (8): 20, 22. ISSN 1524-7848.
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