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John Scalici is an award winning teaching artist, internationally recognized drum circle facilitator, musician, author, and speaker. John is a respected percussionist/composer for modern dance choreographers including Teri Weksler, Wes Chapman, Augusto Soledade, Germaul Barnes, Jessica Lang , Daniel Lewis and Gaspard Louis. 

He has also been a percussionist for Red Mountain Theater Company’s “Once on this Is- land”, “Mandela”, and he was commissioned by the company to assemble a group of drummers to welcome the Dalai Lama to Birmingham, AL in 2014.
John is the recipient of the 2010 “Making a Difference” award by the Alabama Alliance for Arts Education, The 2009 Pauline Ireland Award granted to individual artists, and the 2007 Alabama State Council on the Arts Fellowship award. He is also the creator and co- author of a new book (published in 2015) with gifted education teacher, Hilary Mckinney, entitled, Learn In Rhythm. 

As a drummer, he co-founded the blues rock trio GRAVY, and toured extensively with Gov’t Mule, Buddy Guy, the Allman Brothers Band, and many others. Mr. Scalici lived and performed in the blues capital of the world, Memphis, TN, where he played with many 1st generation bluesmen such as Pine Top Perkins, James Cotton, Hubert Sumlin, and Mose Vinson. 

His band, junkyardmen, released the highly acclaimed “Scrapheap Full of Blues”, which was nominated for a Grammy in 1999. The band’s second effort, “Keep on Workin'”, was produced by Jim Gaines (Stevie Ray Vahaugn, Santana)
Mr. Scalici’s love of blues prompted him to dig deeper into the origins of Blues, seeking out African music and rhythms in their traditional forms and even combining them with electronic and loop based music. He has studied with grand master djembe player, Mamady Keita and Fomadou Konate’, and continues to compose and perform his original music.