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Best known for helming
the Claudia Quintet and
John Hollenbeck Large Ensemble, as well as his sideman contributions to the work of numerous other artists,
John Hollenbeck has shown himself to be an intuitive and far-reaching drummer, percussionist, composer, and group leader. Born in Binghamton, New York and a resident of New York City,
Hollenbeck studied with trombonist/pianist/bandleader
Bob Brookmeyer and was a member of
Brookmeyer's
New Art Orchestra before becoming associated with the downtown Manhattan music scene.
Like other artists who emerged from that community of musicians, his perspective is without boundaries;
Hollenbeck draws from modern creative and avant-garde jazz, but his music also touches on elements of modern composition, including post-minimalism. The long list of people
Hollenbeck played and recorded with in the '90s and into the new millennium underscores his versatility and broad-mindedness; that list ranges from frequent collaborator singer
Theo Bleckmann to performance artist
Meredith Monk, pianist
Fred Hersch, trumpeter
Cuong Vu, trombonist
Curtis Hasselbring, keyboardist
Gary Versace, clarinetist
David Krakauer's
Klezmer Madness!, and a group led by trumpeter
Frank London (a founding member of
the Klezmatics).
After appearing as a sideman on various jazz and avant recordings,
Hollenbeck began to build a catalog of his own in 2001 when he issued three albums on Blueshift/CRI:
No Images,
The Claudia Quintet, and Quartet Lucy. The
Claudia Quintet, initially featuring a lineup of
Hollenbeck joined by
Chris Speed on tenor sax and clarinet,
Matt Moran on vibes,
Ted Reichman on accordion, and
Drew Gress on acoustic bass, would prove to be his most longstanding working band of the new millennium. After the arrival of the group's eponymous Blueshift/CRI debut,
the Claudia Quintet was signed by the
Cuneiform label, which released the band's I, Claudia (2004); Semi-Formal (2005); For (2007); Royal Toast (2010), featuring special guest
Versace on piano;
What Is the Beautiful? (2011), with the quintet supplemented by pianist
Matt Mitchell and featuring poetry of
Kenneth Patchen sung by vocalists
Theo Bleckmann and
Kurt Elling; and September (2013), in which
Red Wierenga replaced
Reichman on accordion and the bass duties were split between
Gress and
Chris Tordini.
The new millennium also saw
Hollenbeck receiving wide recognition for his work with modern creative and experimental big bands, including his own
John Hollenbeck Large Ensemble, which released A Blessing on Omnitone in 2005 and Eternal Interlude on Sunnyside in 2009, both of which received Grammy nominations for Best Large Ensemble Jazz Album. He also worked with a pair of European outfits:
Jazz Bigband Graz, with which he recorded Joys & Desires, released by Intuition in 2005; and
the Frankfurt Radio Bigband, which commissioned his Songs I Like a Lot project, heard on the 2013 Sunnyside album of the same name, followed by 2015's Songs We Like a Lot (also on Sunnyside), which arrived in 2015.
Hollenbeck's Grammy recognition also includes a 2010 nomination (Best Instrumental Composition) for "Falling Men," which appeared on that year's Bee Jazz label release Shut Up and Dance, an album of his compositions recorded by France's
Orchestre National de Jazz under the artistic direction of
Daniel Yvinec, and a 2013 nomination (Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist[s]) for "The Moon's a Harsh Mistress" from Songs I Like a Lot. ~ Alex Henderson & Dave Lynch