Composer and arranger Mike Holober's new double album Hiding
Out with his all-star Gotham Jazz Orchestra is available August 9,
2019 via ZOHO Music.
The ensemble that breathes life into these stunning works
spans the full history of the Gotham Jazz Orchestra, which made its recorded
debut in 2004 with Thought Trains. Several of the instrumentalists on Hiding
Out have been with the orchestra since that time, including woodwind players
Dave Pietro, Jon Gordon, Charles Pillow and Steve Kenyon; trumpeters Tony
Kadleck and Scott Wendholt; and trombonists Pete McGuinness, Bruce Eidem and
Nathan Durham; while bassist John Hébert and drummer Mark Ferber are also
longtime collaborators. This incarnation also features a number of more recent
additions to the fold, among them names like reedists Ben Kono, Jason Rigby,
Adam Kolker and Carl Maraghi; trumpeters Liesl Whitaker and James de LaGarza;
trombonists Mark Patterson and Alan Ferber; guitarists Steve Cardenas and Jesse
Lewis; drummer Jared Schonig; percussionist Rogerio Boccato; and trumpet master
Marvin Stamm, the featured soloist on two tracks.
Hiding Out is the long-anticipated follow-up to the Gotham
Jazz Orchestra’s acclaimed 2009 album Quake, which JazzTimes praised for
“exquisite textures and evocative arrangements that recall Gil Evans, and an
Ellingtonian balance between ensemble and individual excellence.” In the years
since, Holober has found his talents in demand from a number of high-caliber
ensembles: from 2007-2013 he served as Artistic Director for New York’s
Westchester Jazz Orchestra; he spent five years as Associate Guest Conductor of
the HR Big Band in Frankfurt, Germany; and has also written and conducted a
number of projects for the WDR Big Band in Cologne among other orchestras.
Throughout that time he worked with such notable guest artists as Kurt
Rosenwinkel, Miguel Zenón, Dr. Lonnie Smith, Al Foster, John Scofield, Joe
Lovano, Randy Brecker, Paquito D’Rivera, and many others.
The albums unveil two sweeping new Holober suites, inspired
by the grand vistas of the natural world but invigorated by the pulse of the
urban jungle where the music thrives.
“There’s a double meaning to the title Hiding Out,” Holober
says. “One is that I’ve been hiding out as a composer, arranger and sideman for
other people and as an educator. But it also comes from the places where I
wrote or that inspired these pieces – beautiful settings in the mountains and
along the banks of beautiful rivers.”
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