Album info

Album-Release:
2024

HRA-Release:
26.01.2024

Album including Album cover

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FLAC 96 $ 15.40
  • 1Hudson10:55
  • 2El Swing05:28
  • 3Lay Lady Lay08:16
  • 4Woodstock05:59
  • 5A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall09:13
  • 6Wait Until Tomorrow05:28
  • 7Song for World Forgiveness08:35
  • 8Dirty Ground03:58
  • 9Tony Then Jack05:03
  • 10Up on Cripple Creek05:35
  • 11Great Spirit Peace Chant03:16
  • 12Castles Made of Sand (Bonus Track)06:21
  • 13Lay Lady Lay (Radio Edit)03:46
  • Total Runtime01:21:53

Info for Hudson (Deluxe Edition)



New Jazz meets Rock Supergroup honors The Hudson Valley’s creative spirit, inspiring original music and creative takes on Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Jimi Hendrix and The Band.

New York’s idyllic Hudson River Valley has been a rich source of inspiration for many millennia, from its rich sacred and artistic native American heritage, to the rise of the 19th century Hudson River School (America’s first recognizable non-native school of art) to the folk and rock movement that led to the era-defining Woodstock Festival of 1969, to Pete Seeger’s Clearwater movement and the burgeoning locavore movement with its craft wineries, breweries and wide spread indie arts and craft scene the area is home to more artists per-capita than any other area in the country, including New York City. Now, the next chapter in that remarkable history arrives in the form of Hudson, an awe- inspiring new collective that brings together four of the world’s most influential jazz musicians who are writing a new chapter in the marriage of jazz and rock which began with Miles Davis in the 1970s.

On their own, drummer Jack DeJohnette, bassist Larry Grenadier, keyboardist/organist John Medeski and guitarist John Scofield can each boast careers that are stunning in their diversity and reach, building impressive audiences across a wide range of genres and styles from jazz to rock and beyond. Together they comprise the rare supergroup worthy of the name. What’s brought them together is not just their similarly adventurous and virtuosic music, but a shared love for the scenery and spirit of the Hudson River Valley, which all four call home.

The group’s extraordinary self-titled debut, Hudson (out June 9 via Motéma Music), strikingly captures the atmosphere and beauty of the region while celebrating the extraordinary music that has emerged from it. Mixing original music with thrilling renditions of world-famous songs by the likes of Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, Jimi Hendrix and The Band’s Robbie Robertson, Hudson has created an album as spectacular and breathtaking as the Hudson Valley itself.

The prolific foursome first came together in 2014 at the Woodstock Jazz Festival. The collective immediately recognized their electrifying chemistry and agreed that the project needed to continue. Not that most were strangers to one another: DeJohnette and Scofield first played together nearly four decades ago and have since combined forces in their co-led Trio Beyond as well as in Herbie Hancock’s ground breaking New Standards ensemble. Guitar-master Scofield, equally adept at soulful jazz and R&B has recorded four albums with Medeski Martin & Wood, the trio known for melding the jazz and jam band worlds, while Grenadier has played with all three in different contexts. Adding to the fun, they spend this year celebrating the 75th birthday of NEA Jazz Master and GRAMMY®-winner DeJohnette.

Just a two hour drive but a world away, the Hudson Valley has long provided a retreat for those looking to maintain a lifeline to Manhattan’s vibrant metropolis but a lifestyle apart from its frenetic pace, its combination of scenic splendor and easy access to the city’s cultural hub making it an ideal source of respite and inspiration for artists. “All of us built our careers in the city and then moved out to the Hudson Valley to raise our kids and have a home,” Scofield says, who is coming off consecutive GRAMMY® Award wins in 2016 and 17. “One thing that we all have in common is that although we’re urban musicians, we left the city to live in nature.”

DeJohnette moved to the Valley in the early ‘70s, enticed by members of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, who pulled up stakes not long after while DeJohnette stayed. Relative newcomers Medeski and Grenadier both made the move in the early 2000s. “A lot of creative energy was going on up here at that time,” DeJohnette says of his early days. “I got a chance to get to know all the members of The Band and was a big fan of their music. Their tunes take me back to when I was a kid coming up in Chicago and listening to all kinds of music. There’s a lot of cultural history in that music.”

“This area has been a place for musicians to come to retreat,” Medeski says. “There’s performing, but there’s also writing and practicing and growing and going deeper. Traditionally people have come to this environment to search and grow. To woodshed.” Grenadier concurs with the idea of the valley as a place not to play so much as to recharge and absorb the lessons learned on stages elsewhere. “People seem to come up here to have some quiet and soak up everything that they’ve taken in from living in the city and touring,” he says. “The atmosphere that Jack described in the ‘70s still exists, in that there’s a real cultural awareness and creative energy that exists in all aspects of life around here, so I think it attracts the artistic spirit.” Hudson conjures that spirit in a variety of stirring ways, from the blues-reggae feel of Dylan’s “Lay Lady Lay” to the meditative vibe of Mitchell’s “Woodstock” to the New Orleans swing of The Band’s “Up On Cripple Creek.” Hudson’s originals cover territory including the electric abstract organic funk of their collectively improvised namesake track, the simmering, Latin-accented groove of Sco’s “El Swing,” and the defiant “Dirty Ground,” featuring DeJohnette’s moving, earthy vocals. The closer, “Great Spirit Peace Chant,” pays tribute to the Native American tribes that were the first to settle the area, with the whole band joining in with chants, percussion and wood flutes.

The album was recorded, at Scott Petito’s NRS Recording Studios, nestled between the Catskill Mountains and the Hudson River and sharing the welcoming feel of the valley’s homes. “Being up here in the mountains where you have some peace and tranquility, in a small, intimate room, the spiritual bond was definitely there,” DeJohnette says. “We didn’t feel stressed about recording. It was relaxed, so the music comes out that way. It has spirit and intensity and presence, but it also has a calm as well.”

Pastoral yet exhilarating, gorgeous yet thrilling, historic yet intimate, serene yet inspiring: these are the elements that make the Hudson Valley an ideal destination and Hudson a landmark recording. (motema.com)

Jack DeJohnette, drums, Tom Tom, flute, vocals
Larry Grenadier, acoustic bass, vocals
John Medeski, piano, organ, flute, vocals
John Scofield, guitar, flute



Jack DeJohnette
is one of the most consistently inventive jazz percussionists extant. DeJohnette’s style is wide-ranging, yet while capable of playing convincingly in any modern idiom, he always maintains a well-defined voice. DeJohnette has a remarkably fluid relationship to pulse. His time is excellent; even as he pushes, pulls, and generally obscures the beat beyond recognition, a powerful sense of swing is ever-present. His tonal palette is huge as well; no drummer pays closer attention to the sounds that come out of his kit than DeJohnette. He possesses a comprehensive musicality rare among jazz drummers.

That’s perhaps explained by the fact that, before he played the drums, DeJohnette was a pianist. From the age of four, he studied classical piano. As a teenager he became interested in blues, popular music, and jazz; Ahmad Jamal was an early influence. In his late teens, DeJohnette began playing drums, which soon became his primary instrument. In the early ’60s occurred the most significant event of his young professional life — an opportunity to play with John Coltrane. In the mid-’60s, DeJohnette became involved with the Chicago-based Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians. He moved to New York in 1966, where he played again with Coltrane, and also with Jackie McLean. His big break came as a member of the very popular Charles Lloyd Quartet from 1966-1968. The drummer’s first record as a leader was 1968’s The DeJohnette Complex. In 1969, DeJohnette replaced Tony Williams in Miles Davis’ band; later that year, he played on the trumpeter’s seminal jazz-rock recording Bitches Brew. DeJohnette left Davis in 1972 and began working more frequently as a leader. In the ’70s and ’80s, DeJohnette became something like a house drummer for ECM, recording both as leader and sideman with such label mainstays as Jan Garbarek, Kenny Wheeler, and Pat Metheny.

DeJohnette’s first band was Compost; his later, more successful bands were Directions and Special Edition. The eclectic, avant-fusion Directions was originally comprised of the bassist Mike Richmond, guitarist John Abercrombie, and saxophonist Alex Foster. In a subsequent incarnation — called, appropriately, New Directions — bassist Eddie Gomez replaced Richmond and trumpeter Lester Bowie replaced Foster. From the mid-’70s, Directions recorded several albums in its twin guises for ECM. Beginning in 1979, DeJohnette also led Special Edition, a more straightforwardly swinging unit that featured saxophonists David Murray and Arthur Blythe. For a time, both groups existed simultaneously; Special Edition would eventually become the drummer’s performance medium of choice. The band began life as an acoustic free jazz ensemble, featuring the drummer’s esoteric takes on the mainstream. It evolved into something quite different, as DeJohnette’s conception changed into something considerably more commercial; with the addition of electric guitars and keyboards, DeJohnette began playing what is essentially a very loud, backbeat-oriented — though sophisticated — instrumental pop music.

To be fair, DeJohnette’s fusion efforts are miles ahead of most others’. His abilities as a groove-centered drummer are considerable, but one misses the subtle colorations of his acoustic work. That side of DeJohnette is shown to good effect in his work with Keith Jarrett’s Standards trio, and in his occasional meetings with Abercrombie and Dave Holland in the Gateway trio. DeJohnette remains a vital artist and continues to release albums such as Peace Time on Kindred Rhythm in 2007. He returned in 2009 with the trio album Music We Are featuring pianist Danilo Perez and bassist John Patitucci. In 2012, DeJohnette delivered the musically eclectic Sound Travels, showcasing a bevy of collaborations with such artists as Bruce Hornsby, Esperanza Spalding, and Ambrose Akinmusire, among others. (Chris Kelsey, AMG)

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