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Flautist for the Moody Blues - Norda Mullen talks life, love & music GORGEOUS LIVES with Sarah Tucker

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Manage episode 230428574 series 1931171
Content provided by Radio Gorgeous and The UK's Longest Running all Female Podcasters. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Radio Gorgeous and The UK's Longest Running all Female Podcasters or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

#GorgeousLives #RadioGorgeous #Music

"You have to do something for you once in your life." Norda Mullen, 58,

year old flautist for the Moody claims, looking ten years younger

than her years, thanks she says to having a Greek mother (the Greeks

have good skin) and a good diet and lifestyle (she tries to go to yoga

every day). “I have spent my life making others look and sound good. Now I want

to do it for myself.” Thus began the process of her making her own solo music.

Now living in Richmond with her husband Kelvin and two dogs (who both

have a mention on her first CD), she chose to live in here because "it's

beautiful, and right next to beautiful urban London. However, the parking

attendants suck!"

"My family are all very musical. I was brought up on ragtime, gospel, the blues, classical music, and rock and roll.

Everything was ragtime, even Happy Birthday was turned into Ragtime,

but I was born in Mississippi so what do you expect? I was brought up within a family where

music was the heart and soul of our life. I love the range of music

here in England as well ... anything from the best in Classical to rock, pop, anything and

everything. And I’m unconventional.”

This unconventional flautist, rather than staying in the background out

of the spotlight, frequently high kicks on stage while managing to play

faultlessly. “No, I’m not a conventional classical musician,” she

admits, also telling me she’s a 4th Degree Black Belt in Tae Kwon Do, which with the yoga

keeps her fit.

A normal day for a musician is not normal. She wakes up late, drinks

coffee, goes to yoga, and may be writes a 'tune' as she calls it. "I

was about eight when I discovered I loved music. How could you not

being brought up in a family of six children?" Inspired by Annie

Lennox (who she would love to play with one day, who is also a trained

classical flautist), Peter Gabriel and Chrissie Hynde, she's a lover of

Tchaikovsky, Debussy and Beethoven. “I would come home at the age of

eight and listen to Tchaikovsky four or five times each evening, over

and over again. I must have driven my parents mad. But we also had so much

pop, blues, and gospel in the house at the same time. I grew up with hippy sisters,

who played Bob Dylan, Dire Straits, the Rolling Stones, the Moody Blues, and my mother

played mandolin, so it was the most mixed cacophony of music you can

imagine."

The tracks on 'Norda' have the clear crisp, emotive voice, think Enya

and Annie Lennox but with a raw, visceral quality of someone equally as happy

in rock as in classical. And of course, she plays the flute. Justin

Hayward discovered her in LA in 1996 when she was doing session work –

movies and commercials. "I don't believe I saved the Moody Blues.

Their music is timeless - that's why they are still going strong," she

says modestly. Justin Hayward, John Lodge and Graeme Edge, the

stalwarts of the band, have all been very supportive of Norda's

initiative.

"They've all been very supportive which is wonderful." she says. All

the tracks on her solo CD are inspired by her own life, including the first, which is

dedicated to her father who died in 2013. Norda teaches out of her home in Richmond. "I love teaching young

flautists and I teach guitar as well. It's very inspiring

listening to the young play. To be good you need to practice and

practice more!"

Norda herself trained at Mississippi State University when she was

only thirteen. Following that, she attended Interochen National Music Camp during the summers in Michigan for four years, studying with Alexander Murray of the London Symphony, and then onto Northwestern University in Chicago, as a flute performance major, studying with Walfrid Kujala, the piccoloist from the Chicago Symphony.

I've played everywhere from Monaco, in front of Princes and Kings, the

Royal Albert Hall, and the good and great venues throughout the United States, including the Hollywood Bowl.

I've toured with the Moody Blues for the past 16 years.

It has been wonderful.

Norda, the CD, and her second CD, Give It Up, are both available on Amazon and cdBaby.com.

  continue reading

879 episodes

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Manage episode 230428574 series 1931171
Content provided by Radio Gorgeous and The UK's Longest Running all Female Podcasters. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Radio Gorgeous and The UK's Longest Running all Female Podcasters or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

#GorgeousLives #RadioGorgeous #Music

"You have to do something for you once in your life." Norda Mullen, 58,

year old flautist for the Moody claims, looking ten years younger

than her years, thanks she says to having a Greek mother (the Greeks

have good skin) and a good diet and lifestyle (she tries to go to yoga

every day). “I have spent my life making others look and sound good. Now I want

to do it for myself.” Thus began the process of her making her own solo music.

Now living in Richmond with her husband Kelvin and two dogs (who both

have a mention on her first CD), she chose to live in here because "it's

beautiful, and right next to beautiful urban London. However, the parking

attendants suck!"

"My family are all very musical. I was brought up on ragtime, gospel, the blues, classical music, and rock and roll.

Everything was ragtime, even Happy Birthday was turned into Ragtime,

but I was born in Mississippi so what do you expect? I was brought up within a family where

music was the heart and soul of our life. I love the range of music

here in England as well ... anything from the best in Classical to rock, pop, anything and

everything. And I’m unconventional.”

This unconventional flautist, rather than staying in the background out

of the spotlight, frequently high kicks on stage while managing to play

faultlessly. “No, I’m not a conventional classical musician,” she

admits, also telling me she’s a 4th Degree Black Belt in Tae Kwon Do, which with the yoga

keeps her fit.

A normal day for a musician is not normal. She wakes up late, drinks

coffee, goes to yoga, and may be writes a 'tune' as she calls it. "I

was about eight when I discovered I loved music. How could you not

being brought up in a family of six children?" Inspired by Annie

Lennox (who she would love to play with one day, who is also a trained

classical flautist), Peter Gabriel and Chrissie Hynde, she's a lover of

Tchaikovsky, Debussy and Beethoven. “I would come home at the age of

eight and listen to Tchaikovsky four or five times each evening, over

and over again. I must have driven my parents mad. But we also had so much

pop, blues, and gospel in the house at the same time. I grew up with hippy sisters,

who played Bob Dylan, Dire Straits, the Rolling Stones, the Moody Blues, and my mother

played mandolin, so it was the most mixed cacophony of music you can

imagine."

The tracks on 'Norda' have the clear crisp, emotive voice, think Enya

and Annie Lennox but with a raw, visceral quality of someone equally as happy

in rock as in classical. And of course, she plays the flute. Justin

Hayward discovered her in LA in 1996 when she was doing session work –

movies and commercials. "I don't believe I saved the Moody Blues.

Their music is timeless - that's why they are still going strong," she

says modestly. Justin Hayward, John Lodge and Graeme Edge, the

stalwarts of the band, have all been very supportive of Norda's

initiative.

"They've all been very supportive which is wonderful." she says. All

the tracks on her solo CD are inspired by her own life, including the first, which is

dedicated to her father who died in 2013. Norda teaches out of her home in Richmond. "I love teaching young

flautists and I teach guitar as well. It's very inspiring

listening to the young play. To be good you need to practice and

practice more!"

Norda herself trained at Mississippi State University when she was

only thirteen. Following that, she attended Interochen National Music Camp during the summers in Michigan for four years, studying with Alexander Murray of the London Symphony, and then onto Northwestern University in Chicago, as a flute performance major, studying with Walfrid Kujala, the piccoloist from the Chicago Symphony.

I've played everywhere from Monaco, in front of Princes and Kings, the

Royal Albert Hall, and the good and great venues throughout the United States, including the Hollywood Bowl.

I've toured with the Moody Blues for the past 16 years.

It has been wonderful.

Norda, the CD, and her second CD, Give It Up, are both available on Amazon and cdBaby.com.

  continue reading

879 episodes

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