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Fortune Magazine Features Peter Morgan Band
The Peter Morgan Band was recently featured in Fortune Magazine in an article about
bands in Fortune 500 companies. Peter, a long-time employee of Intel Corporation was
profiled with friend, saxophonist, and Intel employee Bill Sidney. Below is the photo
taken by Fortune photographer Girl Ray on location in Folsom California as part of a two
day photo shoot for the Fortune photo essay. Below is the intro to the article and the
section about The Peter Morgan Band.
Swing Shift - Fortune Magazine
Sales of men's suits may be
plummeting, but electric guitar sales are way, way up. Saxophones, keyboards, and even tambourines are becoming hot commodities in corporate America.
Meanwhile, the guy who allegedly runs America's economy turns out to be a former
professional clarinetist and bandleader-who just happened into a day gig as chairman of
the Federal Reserve.
American business is alive with the
sound of music, only these days it's not just coming from some dot-commie with a set of
bongos under his desk; now even big corporations are tuning in. When former Disney honcho
Judson Green spoke with GE CEO Jack Welch and Daimler Chrysler CEO Jorgen Schrempp at a
big conference recently, he didn't bring a PowerPoint presentation with him-he brought his
jazz ensemble and spent an hour explaining how jazz is a metaphor for running a
corporation. At Cox Enterprises' management meeting last year, Cox Rocks, a homegrown
band, provided the sound track. The next morning Cox Chairman Jim Kennedy praised the
group from the podium, although, he added, he wasn't sure what to think about seeing his
senior legal counsel wailing away on lead guitar.
All this music in the corporate
world wouldn't have happened five years ago. But the crust is crumbling from office life.
At night, after their last meeting, these modern executives can be found sporting
Santana-style headbands and working out the lead guitar parts to "Smooth" or
shuffling through their jazz charts, absorbing a little more Coltrane. So rollover, Adam
Smith: People are talent, not machines! Let 'em play.
Steamy Jazz
It all began with "Cubicle
Blues"; Former Intel employee John Rant wrote the song, and he and guitarist Peter
Morgan played it at corporate parties-dressed in Intel's "bunny suits." Intel
brass liked the tune so much, they sent the musicians from Folsom down to L.A. to record
it. The Peter Morgan Band has since performed at countless Intel sales meetings and
charity events. Andy Grove is a big fan. "Intel flies us to the gigs, puts us up in
nice hotels, hires massive lighting rigs and sound crews," says Morgan, Intel's
marketing communications manager. "We feel like stars." The band has recorded
two CDs and played alongside smooth jazz stars Philippe Saisse and Michael McDonald, among
others. As Bill Sidney, the band's sax player, who worked his way up from Intel's loading
dock, remarks, "Most professional musicians would die for the opportunities we've
had."
Reprinted with permission from Fortune
Magazine
Peter Morgan Band Voted Favorite Local Musicians
Folsom
El Dorado Hills Style Magazine Vote Peter
Morgan Band
Folsom El Dorado Hills Style Magazine recently announced The Peter
Morgan Band winner of their readers choice award for "favorite local
musicians". This comes as no surprise as Peter and the boys
have been delighting smooth jazz lovers in the foothills for years
with annual appearances at Folsom's Picnic In The Park and the
Serrano Summer Concert Series. "We love playing for our local
fans and friends in Folsom and El Dorado Hills area", says Peter.
"They've been loyal supporters for many years and it's always fun to
perform for an audience that so openly shows their support".
Folsom Style Magazine Profiles Peter Morgan Band
Bring on the Peter
Morgan Band
Peter Morgan describes himself and fellow band members as "a bunch
of middle aged guys who wouldn't let the music go." "I'm just
a career guy who has a passion for music," says Morgan, who works
days at Intel in Folsom. "That's true for everyone in the band.
My music is a form of expression and I just have to let it out."
He does that with
numerous local appearances, playing mostly smooth jazz. It's
not unheard of, though, for the band to slip into some reggae or
trashy rock songs just for fun. He's also got two albums on
the market, Looky Hear" and "Window to Paradise" both available on
his web site
www.petermorgan.com. His third album , he says, has been
80 percent done for "a while" but the remaining 20 percent will
probably take most of the time on the project.
"I work at Intel,
that's what I do, and I have to fit the music in when I can," Morgan
says. "They're great at encouraging work/life balance, but it
still comes down to making compromises. I mean that in a good way,
but sometimes you have to choose between sleeping and doing your
project, and the world is full of underachievers who get plenty of
sleep."
He further describes
his music as "a nonprofit hobby," but that doesn't mean he's
unknown. In addition to local appearances and record sales,
new fans in Tasmania, brazil, England and cities throughout U.S.
have found him through the Internet. He says he has no idea
what leads people to his site, just that they somehow "find the
music."
Finding the music is
a theme that describes more than his record sale, however.
It's the perfect theme for what Peter does through and because of
his art. His work/life balance philosophy fuels the passion
that drives him to create. Often, it helps others around him
find their music.
"I had a friend at
work who was diagnosed with cancer, so I wrote a song for her called
'Beth's Journey,' and dedicated it to her on the album.
I kept encouraging her to take piano lessons, something she'd always
wanted to do. Then one day in remission, she just did it.
She learned to play. sadly she eventually slipped back into
cancer and died, but almost until the end she was learning to play
music on the piano.
Peter has also been
inspired by friends having babies, an wrote a song for his mother,
saying it was important to him that she understood he "did that for
her" while she was alive.
To be able to create
and music that makes people cry, laugh or dance is a real gift," he
says. "It makes me want to pursue my music with a vengeance."
It's worth checking
out his web site to get the latest schedule of appearances.
Though music may only be a part-time gig, this is a band that has
been perfecting its craft for nearly 20 years. "We're as
professional a band as anyone you'd see in any formal concert
venue," he says, "We may not do this full time but we certainly do
it with a full heart."
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