With his third record, 2-time GRAMMY winner Derrick Hodge unleashes his freest work yet. Color of Noize available on Blue Note Records — is the band, the
concept, and the album, and if that name evokes more questions than answers for
you, then you’re reading it right. The title is perfectly wide-open and
inquisitive for a composer, bandleader, and bassist (etc.) with Hodge’s history.
Color of Noize reflects a melting pot of influence and experience with jazz
flow, hip-hop groove, soulful depth, spiritual uplift, and creative fire — but
the concept is best described in more abstract terms. As Hodge lays it out:
“It’s the contrast, it’s the beauty, it’s the chaos, it’s the freedom — all of that.”
This album also includes a few firsts. It’s the first Hodge
record to use a live band throughout. It was that band’s first time
playing together, and their first time hearing the songs Hodge wrote for their
session. It was also Hodge’s first time bringing in a co-producer: Blue Note
president Don Was.
“It was powerful to see this group of young, brilliant
improvisers set up in a circle at Hollywood’s historic United Studio A,”
says Was. “It felt like a throwback to what it might have been like on the floor
of a Blue Note session at Rudy Van Gelder’s studio in the mid-sixties. These
were ‘old school’ sessions yielding modern music so forward-looking and visionary that there is no
existing genre within which to categorize it.”
“Don has this selflessness where he really wants to get to
the root of what makes a musician tick and what’s pushing them
in the moment,” says Hodge. “It felt invaluable to have someone like that in my
corner for a project like this, to help see everything through a different
lens.”
That goes to the heart of the Color of Noize concept — an
intentionally broad thing meant to embrace the fluidity of sound and
inspire a sense of collective ownership over that sound’s development and
interpretation. “It's an idea I feel is really relevant to our time,” Hodge
says. “A new artistic heartbeat that's about acceptance. It all relates to the spirit of now, not overly thinking,
and moving forward.”
That’s why Hodge formed a brand-new group, and often just
played them a quick run-through of each song on piano before
letting them rip. Of course, it took a special crew to bring Color of Noize to life: Jahari Stampley and Michael Aaberg on keys, Mike Mitchell and Justin Tyson on drums, and DJ Jahi Sundance on turntables, with Hodge supplying bass,
keys, guitar, and voice.
In addition to his two prior Blue Note albums — 2013’s
guest-packed Live Today to 2016’s almost entirely solo The Second — Hodge been a go-to collaborator for Robert Glasper,
Maxwell, Terence Blanchard, and Common alike — and played on
GRAMMY-winning albums by all four. He’s helped shape striking sounds in
producing albums by Blue Note labelmates Kendrick Scott and James Francies, and
teamed with Quincy Jones to co-produce an album by Justin Kauflin on Jones’ label Qwest. He’s brought subtly
subversive concepts to world-class orchestras in Atlanta, Chicago, and D.C.,
and new ideas to the Monterey Jazz Festival as a 2019 artist-in-residence.
R+R=NOW featuring Hodge, Glasper, Tyson, Christian Scott, Terrace Martin, and Taylor McFerrin is only the most recent supergroup he’s co-founded. If there’s one takeaway to be had from his career, it’s this: you can put Hodge in a
band — any band — but you can’t put him in a box.
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