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Gary Husband (Drums and Keys);Allan Holdsworth (Guitar); John
McLaughlin (Guitar); Robin Trower (Guitar); Steve Hackett (Guitar);
Steve Topping (Guitar); Jan Hammer (Keyboards); Jerry Goodman (Violin);
Jimmy Johnson (Bass); Mark King (Bass); Laurence Cottle (Bass);
Livingstone Brown (Bass); Steve Price (Bass)
Over the course of a remarkable, still-unfolding career, Gary
Husband has defined himself as the ultimate musician’s musician: a
fiery, perceptive presence who elevates every scenario – from the
tightly arranged to pure, open-ended improvisation. Whether focusing on
his intricate, propulsive drumming or unleashing his nimble,
harmonically astute keyboard abilities, Husband never fails to make his
presence felt, while always remaining sympathetic to his fellow
musicians and to the composition at hand. His vast range of experience
allows him to balance the technical and the intuitive with rare grace,
earning him the opportunity to perform and record alongside such
maverick, inventive talents as John McLaughlin, Jeff Beck, Allan
Holdsworth, Jack Bruce, Mike Stern, Robin Trower, Billy Cobham, Gary
Moore, Level 42, Andy Summers, and many, many more.
In addition to his prolific career as a sideman, the British-born
Husband has recorded seven of his own albums, featuring his
multi-instrumental, compositional, and bandleading skills in an array of
contexts. He is now poised to release his most ambitious project yet,
the two-volume Dirty & Beautiful, volume one of which is to be made
available by Abstract Logix on November 16, 2010, with volume two to
follow in Spring of 2011. A visionary exercise years in the making,
recorded in studios around the world, Dirty & Beautiful Volume One
is a riveting showcase for the many gleaming facets of Husband’s musical
imagination, featuring an enviable cast of supporting musicians, among
them John McLaughlin, Allan Holdsworth, Robin Trower, Steve Hackett
(Genesis), Jerry Goodman (Mahavishnu Orchestra), Jimmy Herring
(Widespread Panic, the Dead, Allman Brothers Band), Jan Hammer
(Mahavishnu Orchestra and Miami Vice TV series soundtrack), Mark King
(Level 42), and more.
“I feel this album to be rich, full of extremes, and passionate,”
Husband reflects. “It’s not at all my first album, but it feels a
little like a debut album, in that it heralds a return to my jazz/rock
roots.” The album’s title hints at the unique co-existence that defines
his music: for all its sophistication, technique, and facility, there is
an underlying grit and intensity that somehow only enhances the
luminous beauty at the core of these performances. “If I think about
what it actually is to play – what the feeling is in what I chase –
there’s a quest for a profound beauty there, certainly. But it can’t
really be whole, to me, without the grunge, and the dirt. Like picking a
fresh raspberry in the woods and eating it.”
From brief, meditative keyboard soundscapes like “Afterglow” and
“Swell” to intense, full-bore fusion workouts, Dirty & Beautiful
includes newly-written and older Husband compositions alongside material
from Holdsworth, guitarist Steve Topping, and formative classics by Jan
Hammer and Miles Davis. Throughout, Husband performs all the drums and –
save for a guest spot by Hammer on the opening “Leave ‘Em On” – all the
album’s keyboards. “The duality between drums and keyboards is like
second nature to me,” he explains. “I’ve always been involved with the
two instruments to the same degree. It’s never been one over the other,
and what I do with both tools makes up my complete realm of expression.
If I’m playing drums along with a previously recorded track on
keyboards or vice versa there’s an instinctive sort of inner trust I
detect, follow and settle with very quickly. I know it probably sounds
like a pretty crazy method, but it all seems to figure out in the way
that I feel it and approach it in a very natural way.”
Of late, Husband has been most visible as a member (on both keys
and occasional drums) of John McLaughlin’s current performing/recording
ensemble the 4th Dimension and through his longstanding work with
various groups lead by Allan Holdsworth. Both guitarists – each an
iconic figure who have had an immense influence on nearly every element
of contemporary hybrid musics – contribute to Dirty & Beautiful,
marking the first time they have appeared on the same project.
McLaughlin’s extraordinary solo on “Dreams in Blue” is exploratory and
organic, moving from more expansive quiet statements to raging, brisk
passages underpinned by Husband’s furious, skittering drums. Husband
follows McLaughlin’s statement with a hushed acoustic piano solo that
builds to a dizzying peak, allowing brief spotlights for guitar and bass
to lead back into the restatement of the theme. Holdsworth contributes
guitar to his own composition “Leave ‘Em On,” a longtime staple of his
trio’s live sets that has remained unrecorded until now. A subtle,
deceptively gentle performance, Holdsworth is heard at his most
evocative and probing, hanging long sustained notes over Husband’s
active percussion, Jan Hammer’s glimmering keyboards, and the solid
foundation of bassist Jimmy Johnson.
Holdsworth, Johnson, and Husband reconvene as a trio to perform
Husband’s haunting, disorienting “Boulevard Baloneyo,” fittingly, as the
song is based on their misadventures while on tour. “It depicts one of
the journeys we did that I sort of deliberately ‘surrealised,’” says
Husband, laughing, “in tune with this constantly overtired disposition
and frazzled state of mind we were all experiencing, brought about by
jet lag and a rather exhausting tour schedule. Allan and Jimmy were
marvellous on it, and I was really delighted with what we got. None of
it is altered, edited or features any overdubs of any kind. With the
exception of the front synth melody, the opening and closing GPS machine
announcements, it’s all just exactly as it happened on the day, live,
in the studio.”
Despite its kaleidoscopic range of styles, textures, and grooves –
not to mention the various globe-spanning locales in which it was
recorded – this first instalment of Dirty & Beautiful is powerfully
coherent, thanks to both the consistent quality of its contributors and
to Husband’s careful curatorial instinct. “As with any album I make,” he
explains, “I concerned myself directly with the overall curve of the
record – the journey it presents, how it travels from track to track,
and the overall coherency. But, as I strongly hoped for since the
beginning, and in spite of the fact there are a lot of artists from very
different realms here, there is a definite, very particular kind of
coherency going on through the several different lineups just doing what
we do together – everything and everyone towards the same cause. The
whole thing plays as I’d hoped – as one message, with everyone concerned
conveying the same level of commitment, energy and heart from track to
track through their performances. After all, the artists involved here
are all so great, a lot of factors kind of end up taking care of
themselves anyway!”
From Robin Trower’s churning, wailing post-Hendrix guitar on the
brief visit to Miles Davis’s “Yesternow”, to Steve Hackett’s stirring
interpretation of the wistful “Moon Song” through to Mark King’s
slithering bass on the refracted second-line funk of the closing
“Alverstone Jam,” Dirty & Beautiful Volume One is an explosive,
evocative celebration of the of the mutual respect between Husband and
his collaborators, and instantly heightens the anticipation for the
second volume. “It’s predominantly a record just about playing the kind
of material I feel like playing right now with people, friends, and
musical colleagues that I feel like playing with,” Husband concludes.
“In a big way, it also documents my perpetual activity as a touring
musician. This album is what my diary frequently looks like and it
portrays very much the fulfilment I experience playing with all of these
various people on a pretty consistent basis, in the many and various
musical worlds and situations that I do or have done. It’s got my stamp
on it, but we all speak and tune in to basically the same common
language. Friendship binds it. Respect and harmony are also elements
that bind it. There is the fact that I know most of these gentlemen
extremely well and feel a deeply special closeness and bond with them as
individuals and musicians. That binds it in an ultimate way for me.”