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GREG
MAGIRESCU

Canadian-born
to Eastern European immigrants, Greg Magirescu (pronounced
Magic-Rescue with a silent "c" in Magic) learned the
meaning of work ethic, financial struggle, and personal sacrifice
at an early age. His father was a blue-collar postal worker who
attended the Romanian Orthodox church every Sunday, together with
Greg's Roman Catholic mother.
Church was a great mystical experience in the fullness of its
Byzantine traditions. "But even though I was an altar boy and
went to church every Sunday," recalls Greg, "I never
really knew Jesus or God other than as the two-dimensional images
I'd seen depicted in the icons of the church. My early memories of
incense rising and sombre sounding melodies in a minor key,
chanted in a language that I couldn't understand, put me in awe of
heaven. But, I never got to know God as a real Father or Jesus as
my personal Savior. God was distant, rather austere and didn't
speak English very well."
When Greg was 9, he had a burning desire to study the piano, but
because the family couldn't afford one, he had to settle for the
accordion. And, thanking God in hindsight, Greg not only learned
to play the accordion, but he soon had figured out the violin,
guitar, and practically every other musical instrument - including
the piano. By the time he was 14, he was teaching on weekends at a
private music school in Toronto's west end.
At the age of 16, Greg began writing a weekly column for the
Toronto Sun titled The Youth Viewpoint. The newspaper's editor
gave Greg carte blanche to write about issues of the day which
affected young people. "I wrote about things like teenage
pregnancy, alcoholism, drug addiction, promiscuity, in addition to
issues about youth culture, music and the arts," explains
Greg. It was during that time, while covering entertainment and
lifestyle features for the paper that he met Dan Hill (Sometimes
When We Touch). "Dan invited me to the recording studio one
day to watch him lay down vocals for an upcoming album. It was
then that the "bug" bit. I was mesmerized by the
artistry as well as the technical side of the recording process,"
recalls Greg. By the time he was 18, he was writing songs for
established recording artists, as well as singing on jingle
sessions around Toronto. As the years progressed, he soon headed
into acting, dancing, producing and directing. In 1990, he married
Marie Clarke, a singer he'd met while he was directing a vocal
jazz group that she was in. In 1993, they settled in the mountains
of British Columbia to begin a new life and start a family. By
1997, together with his wife and another friend, Greg formed Faith
Trio. Faith Trio's debut album, In Him We Live, and the single
Blessed Are You, went on to sell several thousand copies and a
number of the songs are still being played on Christian
radio stations in Canada, the U.S., Australia, England, Poland,
Germany, Italy and Korea. As for Greg's faith life, it can be
summed up this way: "I have finally come to know God
intimately in my life. if it hadn't been for the intervention of
"angels" along the way, I don't know where I would be
today," says Greg. "All I want to do is sing about God's
grace in my life, about my faith walk with Jesus Christ, and about
the day-to-day struggle of living as He would want me to live, in
the hope that others might take up the call. I really want to walk
the walk even if it means never singing another note or writing
another song".
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