"Far Away from Everyday,"
3rd CD by Harp Guitarist/Pianist/Composer
Brad Hoyt,
To Be Released by Harp Guitar Music
December 3
3rd CD by Harp Guitarist/Pianist/Composer
Brad Hoyt,
To Be Released by Harp Guitar Music
December 3
Guest Artists from the Jazz & Fingerstyle Worlds
Include
Jeff Coffin, Howard Levy, Evan Cobb, Joscho Stephan,
Phil Keaggy, Antoine Dufour, Stephen Bennett,
& Many Others
Include
Jeff Coffin, Howard Levy, Evan Cobb, Joscho Stephan,
Phil Keaggy, Antoine Dufour, Stephen Bennett,
& Many Others
510-234-8781
hudba@sbcglobal.net
www.terrihinte.com
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Brad Hoyt originally conceived of his ambitious new album, Far Away from Everyday, as a logical expansion of his 2009 Together Alone debut for the Harp Guitar Music label. He wanted to explore the harp guitar's role in various ensemble settings and planned to build on the earlier album's piano/harp guitar duet format by adding new instruments, inviting players he'd admired, been inspired by, and occasionally performed with over the years.
The result is "most
often a sort of 'chamber jazz' -- a unique blend of meticulously written
arrangements and wild improvisation," says co-producer (and Harp Guitar
Music label head) Gregg Miner. Harp Guitar Music will release the new CD on December 3.
Three years in the making, Far Away from Everyday boasts 14 original tunes and 30 musicians from around the world, including such notables as Nashville-based harp guitarist Muriel Anderson, the first woman to win the National Fingerstyle Guitar Championship; recent ASCAP Golden Note Award honoree Phil Keaggy, guitar; bassist Michael Manring; and Czech violinist Tomás Mach.
Hoyt himself plays a variety of instruments including various
incarnations of the piano and his one-of-a-kind 30-string harp guitar.
Chicagoan Howard Levy,
who has written and performed harmonica concertos and was a founding
member of Béla Fleck and the Flecktones, was one of the first musicians
Hoyt asked to appear on the new CD. Levy agreed to listen to Hoyt's
music, liked what he heard, and a few months later contributed to five
tracks.
Jeff Coffin in turn was eager to record with Levy. They play together on two songs: "The Relative Sea," featuring Coffin on soprano saxophone and Antoine Dufour on harp guitar, and "Alternate Timeline," with Coffin on flute and Mike Doolin on his own "Doolin" harp guitar.
The album, Hoyt's third following Histories, a collection of music he recorded between 1990 and 2002, and the aforementioned Together Alone,
lives up to its title with a unique blend of gypsy jazz, atmospheric
soundscapes, Viennese-flavored reflections, and "funked-up acoustic
music" (as Gregg Miner describes it). All of the music is carried by
strong melodies that in many cases once had lyrics attached to them.
They take on new life here.
Brad Hoyt,
42, was born and raised in Muncie, Indiana. As a Ball State University
undergrad, he took lessons in both classical guitar and jazz piano and
performed there in big bands and small groups, with his own blues band,
and as a solo. When he began experimenting with plucked piano strings,
he was so taken with the sound that he started envisioning a fingerstyle
string instrument on which he could imitate that sound. A 12-string
guitar or mandolin came close, but he preferred an instrument meant to
be played with the fingers instead of a pick.
After college, Hoyt moved to New York and freelanced. He had some of his music placed in TV and film, including NBC's Today Show. He also performed at such venues as the legendary CBGB's with the rock fusion group NightPeople.
Three years later, he
got married and relocated to Colorado, where he continued to write and
record his compositions. In 1999, he and his wife Andrea moved to her
hometown of Prague, where they had their first child. While in Europe,
he recorded and performed with the group Art House, which he founded with bassist Alexander Jurman.
In 2002, massive
flooding in the Czech capital led to Hoyt moving back to Indiana with
his family. (They currently reside in the Denver area.) He took with him
a renewed fascination in stringed instruments, and finding the
"portable plucked piano" he had in his head.
Having become taken
with the harp guitar, a guitar-like instrument with a second tier of
open, non-fretted strings, he attended the 2004 International Harp
Guitar Gathering in Williamsburg, Va., hoping to find a luthier who
could make the model he envisioned. That man proved to be British harp
guitar specialist Stephen Sedgwick, who, through a gradual and
painstaking process, worked with Hoyt in introducing bold new features
to the 10-string Brazilian folk guitar that served as their starting
point.
Dubbed by Sedgwick the arpa viola caipira
-- Portuguese for harp country guitar -- Hoyt's dream instrument
featured 15 bass, fretted, and super-treble double-courses totaling 30
strings.
The more Hoyt has
defined himself as an artist, having immersed himself in the harp guitar
world, combined his fingerstyle and jazz influences, and designed his
own custom instrument, the more surprised he is at how little known the
string virtuosi he associates with are known by jazz's top players --
and vice versa. With Far Away from Everyday, he continues his personal mission to break down those walls.
Web Site: www.bradhoyt.com
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