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[[File:Jo Mango.jpg|thumb|Jo Mango]]
[[File:Jo Mango.jpg|thumb|Jo Mango]]
'''Jo Mango''' is a British [[alternative folk]] and [[acoustic instrument|acoustic]] band from [[Glasgow]]. Jo Mango is also the adopted name of the lead singer and primary songwriter of the group.
'''Jo Mango''' is the stage name of a British [[alternative folk]] and [[acoustic instrument|acoustic]] singer and songwriter from [[Glasgow]], otherwise known as '''Jo Collinson Scott''', a lecturer at the [[University of the West of Scotland]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Jo Scott |url=https://research-portal.uws.ac.uk/en/persons/jo-scott |access-date=2024-02-03 |website=The UWS Academic Portal |language=en-GB}}</ref> ''Jo Mango'' has also been the name of her band.


==Career==
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 and psychology, aiming to become a music therapist.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":3" /><ref>Mickey McConagle, 'Mailmusic: R. E. M. Star Popped in for Music Lessons', ''Sunday Mail'' (17 June 2007), p. 30.</ref> There she also developed 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" />

Scott's first album, ''Paperclips and Sand'', emerged in 2006.<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":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 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 name=":5">'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" />

''[[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".<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.heraldscotland.com/arts_ents/13135346.Jo_Mango__When_We_Lived_In_The_Crook_Of_A_Tree__Olive_Grove_/ | title=Review of Jo Mango: When We Lived In The Crook Of A Tree (Olive Grove) | work=[[The Herald (Glasgow)]] | date=December 8, 2013 | accessdate=August 2, 2017 | author=Morrison, Alan}}</ref><ref>Fiona Shepherd, Ken Walton And Jim Gilchrist, "Album reviews: Siobhan Wilson | Beyoncé | The Pearlfishers | Jo Mango & Friends", ''The Scotsman'' (7 May 2019).</ref>

In 2012, Scott completed a PhD in musicology,<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> with the thesis "Experiments in schizoanalysis: a new approach to analysis of conceptual music".<ref>Jo Collinson Scott, "[https://eleanor.lib.gla.ac.uk/record=b2937277 Experiments in schizoanalysis: a new approach to analysis of conceptual music]" (PhD thesis, University of Glasgow, 2012).</ref> By 2015, she had become a lecturer in commercial music at the University of the West of Scotland.<ref>'Notes on Contributors', in ''Writing Creative Non-Fiction: Determining the Form'', ed. by Laura Tansley and Micaela and Maftei (Canterbury: Gylphi, 2015), {{ISBN|9781780240268}}.</ref> She has also taught at the [[Royal Conservatoire of Scotland]].<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.rcs.ac.uk/staff/jo-mango/ | title=Jo Mango }}</ref>

In the mid-2010s, Scott's work focused on promoting ecological sustainability in music festivals,<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Brennan |first1=Matt |last2=Scott |first2=Jo Collinson |last3=Connelly |first3=Angela |last4=Lawrence |first4=Gemma |date=May 2019 |title=Do music festival communities address environmental sustainability and how? A Scottish case study |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S0261143019000035/type/journal_article |journal=Popular Music |language=en |volume=38 |issue=2 |pages=252–275 |doi=10.1017/S0261143019000035 |s2cid=165248983 |issn=0261-1430}}</ref> leading to her EP ''Wrack Lines'',<ref>{{Citation |title=Combined Output Portfolio: Fields of Green: Jo Mango and Friends |date=2016-01-15 |url=https://research-portal.uws.ac.uk/en/publications/combined-output-portfolio-fields-of-green-jo-mango-and-friends |access-date=2024-02-04 |publisher=Olive Grove Records}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last1=Connelly |first1=Angela |last2=Scott |first2=Jo Collinson |last3=Brennan |first3=Matt |date=2015-08-18 |title='Dead niche' green festivals need to move mainstream |url=http://theconversation.com/dead-niche-green-festivals-need-to-move-mainstream-43872 |access-date=2024-02-04 |website=The Conversation |language=en-US}}</ref> and a project called When Tomorrow Becomes Yesterday.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Connelly |first=Angela |date=2016-06-24 |title=When Tomorrow Becomes Yesterday |url=https://research.manchester.ac.uk/en/publications/when-tomorrow-becomes-yesterday |journal=Planning, Property and Environmental Management |language=English}}</ref>

In the years around 2020, Scott was undertaking creative work relating to prisoners' rehabilitation, leading to her EP ''System Hold'',<ref>'Criminologist and songwriter re-imagine an alternative to prison system', ''Herald Scotland'' (24 November 2018).</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=McNeill |first=Fergus |date=July 2023 |title=Miller R, Halfway Home: Race, Punishment and the Afterlife of Mass Incarceration |url=http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/14624745221114157 |journal=Punishment & Society |language=en |volume=25 |issue=3 |pages=791–797 |doi=10.1177/14624745221114157 |issn=1462-4745}}</ref>{{Rp|page=5}}<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=McNeill |first1=Fergus |last2=Urie |first2=Alison |date=May 2020 |title=Collaboration before collaborative research: The development of 'Distant Voices' |url=http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2059799120937270 |journal=Methodological Innovations |language=en |volume=13 |issue=2 |pages=205979912093727 |doi=10.1177/2059799120937270 |issn=2059-7991}}</ref>{{Rp|page=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'.<ref>Fiona Shepherd, Ken Walton And Jim Gilchrist, "Album reviews: Siobhan Wilson | Beyoncé | The Pearlfishers | Jo Mango & Friends", ''The Scotsman'' (7 May 2019).</ref> 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''.<ref name=":4" />

==Jo Mango band members==
At the time of the release of the 2012 album ''Murmuration'', the band named ''Jo Mango'' comprised:<ref name=":2">Rob Lavender, "Sweet as a Songbird", ''Metro'' [Scotland edition] (2 November 2012), p. 55.</ref>
*Jo Mango: lead vocals, [[rhythm guitar]], [[kalimba]], [[toy piano]], [[concertina]]
*Jo Mango: lead vocals, [[rhythm guitar]], [[kalimba]], [[toy piano]], [[concertina]]
*Jim Mango: [[bass player]], backing vocals
*Jim Mango: [[bass player]], backing vocals
*Alan Peacock: backing vocals, [[guitar]]
*Alan Peacock: backing vocals, [[guitar]]
*Katherine Waumsley: flute, piano, kalimba and concertina
*Katherine Waumsllaying: flute, piano, kalimba and concertina. Since April 2006 Mango toured extensively in Bunyan's band, throughout North America, Europe, Australia and Japan. At home in the UK she also featured in the Zero Degrees of Separation tour, becoming an integral part of the band which also features [[Adem Ilhan|Adem]], [[Juana Molina]], [[Vetiver (band)|Vetiver]] and [[Vashti Bunyan]]. This culminated in a [[Carnegie Hall]] show in New York in February, curated by [[David Byrne]].
*Calum Scott: percussion

Jo has also appeared as a solo artist playing shows across the globe in countries such as America, Australia and Japan.{{when|date=March 2017}} Her tour of America began with a session on [[Nic Harcourt]]'s show ''[[Morning Becomes Eclectic]]'' on Santa Monica's [[KCRW]] radio station and a performance at [[South By South West]] (SXSW) in Austin, Texas.{{when|date=March 2017}} ''[[The Scotland Herald]]'' describes Jo Mango's recent 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" (2013).<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.heraldscotland.com/arts_ents/13135346.Jo_Mango__When_We_Lived_In_The_Crook_Of_A_Tree__Olive_Grove_/ | title=Review of Jo Mango: When We Lived In The Crook Of A Tree (Olive Grove) | work=[[The Herald (Glasgow)]] | date=December 8, 2013 | accessdate=August 2, 2017 | author=Morrison, Alan}}</ref>


==Discography==
==Discography==
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===Studio albums ===
===Studio albums ===
#''Paperclips and Sand'' (1999)
#''Paperclips and Sand'' (2006)
#''Murmuration'' (2012)
#''Murmuration'' (2012)
#''Transformuration'' (2014 - Remixes of ''Murmuration'')
#''Transformuration'' (2014 - Remixes of ''Murmuration'')
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==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.jomango.co.uk/ The official Jo Mango website] <!-- Please keep sentence "official Jo Mango website" for Google -->
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20120912135027/http://www.myspace.com/jomango The official Jo Mango website] (archived 2008)
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20060901182612/http://www.kcrw.com/show/mb KCRW.com]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120912135027/http://www.myspace.com/jomango Myspace page] (archived 2009)
*[http://www.nicharcourt.com/ nicharcourt.com]
*[http://www.anotherday.co.uk/ anotherday.co.uk] - [[Vashti Bunyan]] Official Site
*[http://www.anotherday.co.uk/ anotherday.co.uk] - [[Vashti Bunyan]] Official Site


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{{DEFAULTSORT:Mango, Jo}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mango, Jo}}
[[Category:Scottish folk music groups]]
[[Category:Scottish folk music groups]]


{{UK-rock-band-stub}}

Latest revision as of 17:11, 19 February 2024

Jo Mango

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[edit]

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 and psychology, aiming to become a music therapist.[5][6][7] There she also developed 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]

Scott's first album, Paperclips and Sand, emerged in 2006.[6][8] 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.[9][3][10] At this time, Scott named key influences as 'Emiliana Torrini, Stina Nordestam, Bright Eyes, Ben Folds, Bjork, Kate Rusby, quirky indie acoustica'.[8][11] 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".[12][13]

In 2012, Scott completed a PhD in musicology,[3][10] with the thesis "Experiments in schizoanalysis: a new approach to analysis of conceptual music".[14] By 2015, she had become a lecturer in commercial music at the University of the West of Scotland.[15] She has also taught at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.[16]

In the mid-2010s, Scott's work focused on promoting ecological sustainability in music festivals,[17] leading to her EP Wrack Lines,[18][19] and a project called When Tomorrow Becomes Yesterday.[20]

In the years around 2020, Scott was undertaking creative work relating to prisoners' rehabilitation, leading to her EP System Hold,[21][22]: 5 [23]: 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'.[24] 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[edit]

At the time of the release of the 2012 album Murmuration, the band named Jo Mango comprised:[5]

Discography[edit]

EPs[edit]

  1. Antidote (2003)
  2. Fluffy Brain (2004)
  3. The Moth and the Moon / Black Sun (2010)
  4. Wrack Lines (2016 – Jo Mango & Friends)
  5. System Hold (2019 – Jo Mango & Friends)

Studio albums[edit]

  1. Paperclips and Sand (2006)
  2. Murmuration (2012)
  3. Transformuration (2014 - Remixes of Murmuration)

Singles[edit]

  1. "My Lung" (2007 - Download Only)

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Jo Scott". The UWS Academic Portal. Retrieved 3 February 2024.
  2. ^ a b 'A Giant On The Bridge: Music project aims to explore attitudes towards punishment and justice', Sunday Post (3 November 2021).
  3. ^ 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.
  4. ^ Anna Millar, 'No ordinary Jo: Mango's eclectic efforts bear fruit', Scotland on Sunday (26 February 2006).
  5. ^ a b c d e Rob Lavender, "Sweet as a Songbird", Metro [Scotland edition] (2 November 2012), p. 55.
  6. ^ a b c d "Jo Mango". The Sunday Times. 8 April 2007. p. 12.
  7. ^ Mickey McConagle, 'Mailmusic: R. E. M. Star Popped in for Music Lessons', Sunday Mail (17 June 2007), p. 30.
  8. ^ a b 'Local Spotlight: Jo Mango', Glasgow Evening Times (16 March 2006).
  9. ^ Earnshaw |, Helen. "Jo Mango Exclusive Interview". www.femalefirst.co.uk. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
  10. ^ a b Nicola Meighan, 'Interview: Jo Mango', The Herald (2 November 2012).
  11. ^ See also 'Singer Jo Mango shares her top five musical moments', Scotland on Sunday (20 May 2007).
  12. ^ 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.
  13. ^ Fiona Shepherd, Ken Walton And Jim Gilchrist, "Album reviews: Siobhan Wilson | Beyoncé | The Pearlfishers | Jo Mango & Friends", The Scotsman (7 May 2019).
  14. ^ Jo Collinson Scott, "Experiments in schizoanalysis: a new approach to analysis of conceptual music" (PhD thesis, University of Glasgow, 2012).
  15. ^ 'Notes on Contributors', in Writing Creative Non-Fiction: Determining the Form, ed. by Laura Tansley and Micaela and Maftei (Canterbury: Gylphi, 2015), ISBN 9781780240268.
  16. ^ "Jo Mango".
  17. ^ 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. S2CID 165248983.
  18. ^ Combined Output Portfolio: Fields of Green: Jo Mango and Friends, Olive Grove Records, 15 January 2016, retrieved 4 February 2024
  19. ^ Connelly, Angela; Scott, Jo Collinson; Brennan, Matt (18 August 2015). "'Dead niche' green festivals need to move mainstream". The Conversation. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
  20. ^ Connelly, Angela (24 June 2016). "When Tomorrow Becomes Yesterday". Planning, Property and Environmental Management.
  21. ^ 'Criminologist and songwriter re-imagine an alternative to prison system', Herald Scotland (24 November 2018).
  22. ^ 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.
  23. ^ 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.
  24. ^ Fiona Shepherd, Ken Walton And Jim Gilchrist, "Album reviews: Siobhan Wilson | Beyoncé | The Pearlfishers | Jo Mango & Friends", The Scotsman (7 May 2019).

External links[edit]