|
Shows |
Bio
| MySpace
| YouTube |
Music home
NEW CD! HUMMING MY WAY BACK HOME
 
Open the player in a new window.
GET THE MUSIC
ABOUT THE CD
"Folk music with a serrated edge...a
magical blend of storytelling and driving flattop guitar."
--Andy Ellis, music journalist (Guitar Player, Frets)
"Songs that fill the senses."
--Mark Bialczak, The Post-Standard
"Dangerously close to genius without the bad aftertaste... Amazing set of
songs."
--Dusty Pas'cal
"Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers balances solemnity with an almost-hidden playfulness
in this music. The melodies are spare and direct, and three strings are
seldom used when only one is called for. Give him a listen."
--Peter Mulvey
Click here for printable lyrics.
For nearly 20 years, Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers has used his deep sense of music to
deliver revelatory interviews with artists such as Joni Mitchell and Jerry
Garcia, groundbreaking reports for NPR’s All Things Considered, and
three books on songwriting and guitar. And as founding editor of Acoustic
Guitar, Rodgers turned his lifelong passion for guitar into a thriving
international monthly magazine.
All along the way Rodgers has been writing and playing
his own songs, and growing creatively from his interactions with some of the
greatest musicians of our time. And now all these experiences come together
on a remarkable CD, Humming My Way Back Home.
“I’ve been writing and playing my own songs since I was
a teenager, but in so many ways this CD feels like my debut,” says Rodgers.
“I’m a firm believer that musicians should only put out records when they
really have something to say, and in the last few years these songs have
been whacking me on the shoulder to say: Hey—put us out there. We’re raring
to go.”
Humming My Way Back Home is a testament to what
Rodgers calls a “magic moment” in the technology of music, which he has
explored as a musician and journalist from the digital recording revolution
to the early days of MP3.com through the new frontier of online recording.
Humming was recorded in various basements and living rooms on a
laptop, then mixed and mastered in a professional studio. This combo, says
Rodgers, gives a musician the ultimate freedom to capture intimate,
in-the-moment performances with a clarity that rivals any pro studio.
On Humming, Rodgers uses that freedom to create
a highly unconventional acoustic band with cajón (wooden box drum), hand
percussion, acoustic guitar, and electric bass. On the CD Rodgers’ songs
travel widely from their singer-songwriter roots, from the searing rock of
“Wasting Time No More” to an adaptation of Brahms in “One More Waltz,” from
the hoedown beat of “Fly” to the sly acoustic funk of “Only the Soul” with
dueling sax and guitar. At turns wryly funny and piercingly personal,
Rodgers uses his writer’s eye for detail to tell emotionally moving tales of
modern life.
Singer, songwriter, guitarist, drummer, author, editor,
journalist: no matter which hat Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers is wearing, it’s all
about the words and music.
CREDITS
JPR: vocals, acoustic guitars, bass, cajón, Strumstick,
tenor banjo, frame drum, snare, and the percussion bag o’ tricks
Andy Rodgers:
tenor ukulele, eight-string baritone ukulele, backing vocals
Hanna Richardson: backing vocals
Jesse Collins:
saxophone
Lisa Gentile:
duet and backing vocals
Joe Cleveland: five-string banjo
Linda Stout: backing vocals
Lila Rodgers: violin
David Hamburger:
slide guitar
Phil Robertson: drums Mixed and mastered by Jocko at More Sound, Syracuse, NY,
www.moresound315.comABOUT THE SONGS
This CD is the sound of a songwriter at play—singing,
strumming, picking, shaking, and thwacking various resonant objects, and
inviting friends over to join the party. Any resemblance to glossy corporate
productions is purely coincidental.
Complete, printable lyrics are available
here.
Humming My Way Back Home
For the gift of this song I am forever grateful to the Strumstick,
the biggest (and oddest looking) little instrument I know.
Only
the Soul
As a kid I was as smitten with Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition” as I
was with JT’s “Fire and Rain.” So this acoustic funk jam, driven by cajón
and bass, fulfills a lifelong fantasy. Jesse Collins’ stunning sax lines put
it over the top.
My
Life Doesn’t Rhyme
After so many years of asking other songwriters why/how they write
their songs, it only seemed fair that I should answer the question myself.
American Dream
If you’ve ever loitered at a truck stop in the middle of the night on
the outskirts of god-knows-where, you know what I mean.
Leap
of Faith
Pondering the imminent arrival of parenthood.
Fly
This duet with country-pop singer Lisa Gentile is adapted from the
fiddle tune “Sally Goodin,” which is heard between verses (on five-string
banjo) in its traditional form.
One
More Waltz
This gorgeous music by Brahms, originally written for piano
and transcribed for guitar by Segovia, seemed to tell a sweet and sad
story. So I did my best to listen and sing it.
Dog
for a Day
Anyone who lives with a dog asks, sooner or later, who’s really the
master here? The track features my brother, Andy Rodgers, sometimes known as
the Duke of Uke and my lifelong musical collaborator.
Wasting Time No More
In the spring of 2007, I did a report for NPR’s All Things
Considered on the new world of online recording, and I used a demo of
this song to experience it firsthand: over the Internet, I collaborated with
a drummer in Vancouver and a guitarist in southern California to craft a
full rock-band arrangement. So it’s fitting that this CD track should
feature the same drummer, Phil Robertson, and a scorching slide track by my
friend David Hamburger—both of whom live thousands of miles away and traded
files with me over the Web.
Sister
In memory of Charlotte, and dedicated to mothers and fathers (and
children) everywhere who’ve had to face the unthinkable.
Free download
Traveling Song
Simplicity rules.
Bones
This little ditty about fate, mortality, and the skeletal system grew
out of a guitar groove that just wouldn’t quit, played with a lot of thumb
slaps in an open tuning (D G D G B E).
Prayer
The exotic sound on this track is my brother’s eight-string baritone
ukulele—not exactly an instrument you find at Guitars R Us.
Here
In the last stage of recording these songs, I was driving to
Philadelphia to meet Issa (formerly known as Jane Siberry) for an NPR
interview and listening to Siberry’s extraordinary music en route. This
melody came to me, and I sat in a rest area in the pouring rain singing it
into my minidisk recorder. Jazz vocalist Hanna Richardson—whose incredibly
sensitive harmonies are heard on four tracks—brought to life the vocal blend
I was imagining.


  
|