Known for his work as the leader of
the Claudia Quintet and his contributions to veteran trombonist
Bob Brookmeyer's
New Art Orchestra,
John Hollenbeck has shown himself to a very intuitive and far-reaching drummer, percussionist and composer who can handle a variety of jazz situations -- some of them avant-garde and left-of-center, some of them more mainstream (by jazz standards).
Hollenbeck, who is a native and resident of New York City and is associated with the experimental Downtown Manhattan music scene, brings an inside/outside perspective to the table.
Hollenbeck is comfortable with outside expression and has been influenced by free jazz, but he has also been affected by ECM Records' catalog and is equally comfortable playing more accessible post-bop. The long list of people
Hollenbeck has played with in the '90s or 2000s underscores his versatility and broad-mindedness; that list ranges from pianist
Fred Hersch (who has a strong
Bill Evans influence) to Vietnamese trumpeter
Cuong Vu and singer/pianist
Theo Bleckmann. And even though jazz is
Hollenbeck's primary focus, the drummer has played with some non-jazz groups as well (including New York clarinetist
David Krakauer's risk-taking
Klezmer Madness! and a group led by trumpeter
Frank London, who was a founding member of
the Klezmatics).
Hollenbeck is jazz-oriented without being a jazz snob; he also appreciates everything from the European classical tradition to a variety of Latin music.
After recording with a lot of musicians as a sideman in the '90s,
Hollenbeck began to build a catalog of his own in the early 2000s when recorded some albums for Blueshift/CRI:
No Images and
Quartet Lucy. The early 2000s were also when
Hollenbeck recorded some albums with his
Claudia Quintet, which has employed
Chris Speed on tenor sax and clarinet,
Matt Moran on vibes,
Ted Reichman on accordion and
Drew Gress on acoustic bass. That group's albums have included 2002's
The Claudia Quintet on Blueshift/CRI and 2004's
I, Claudia on Cuneiform.
–
Alex Henderson, Rovi