The Codetalkers
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bobby Lee Rodgers and The CodeTalkers | |
---|---|
@ The Freebird Live June 2007 (by Julia Rodgers)
|
|
Background information | |
Origin | Savannah, Georgia |
Genre(s) | Rock Jazz Blues |
Years active | 1999 – present |
Website | http://www.thecodetalkers.com |
Members | |
Bobby Lee Rodgers Mark Raudabaugh Andrew Altman |
|
Former members | |
Col. Bruce Hampton - vocals, electric guitar, chazoid Tyler Greenwell - drums, punctuation Ted Pecchio - upright bass, bass, d Sean Peterson - Bass Nick "Zeato" Buda - Drums |
The Codetalkers are a jazz rock and roll band from Savannah, Georgia, comprised of Bobby Lee Rodgers, (lead vocals, electric banjo, guitar, "air trombone"), Mark Raudabaugh (drums, vocals) and Andrew Altman (bass, vocals). The band was formed in 1999, upon the meeting of Rodgers and Col. Bruce Hampton at a show at the Variety Playhouse in Atlanta. The group toured for many years as a four piece with the line up of Rodgers, Hampton, Greenwell and Pecchio. In the spring of 2006, the band announced they would be touring without Hampton, who was stepping down for a multitude of reasons. Mainly, the band was ready to move on without him, and were amping up to undertake a heavy touring schedule in support of their recent release, in which Hampton was unwilling and unable to participate. He had lent his name to the project for years in order to help Rodgers gain the recognition Hampton felt he deserved, but as a touring musician for 40 years, the grueling demands that a national tour would place on him didn't seem very alluring. Coincidentally, just as this announcement was to be made, Hampton trumped the press release by citing his own health reasons for leaving the band.
Since then, the group has toured as a "power trio" first with Rodgers, Greenwell and Pecchio, and since June 2007 with the latter two replaced by Raudabaugh and Altman, respectively. Raudabaugh and Altman share Rodgers' college-level musical education in jazz and have helped bring Rodgers' vision for his music back to the place where he feels it is best represented. During a recent show in Savannah, where Rodgers first met Raudabaugh and Altman, the songwriter confidently proclaimed that the sound and vision of his music that he had been searching for had been found.
Their music has been described as a mix of jazz, rock, blues, bluegrass and funk with improvised jams being the main theme in their live performances. Some of their unique sound comes from their use of a rotating Leslie cabinet used for Rodgers' guitar. [1]
The Codetalkers have a reputation among the jam band crowd for entertaining fans not only with their music, but feet. They are also a taper friendly band, who encourages the taping and trading of their live shows, provided that no money exchanges hands. The band is also known for having guest musicians frequently join them for all or part of a show. Some notable on-stage guests of The Codetalkers have been Jimmy Herring, Derek Trucks, Bob Weir, Mike Gordon, Hubert Sumlin, Ron Holloway and Ike Stubblefield (about whom Rodgers has penned a song bearing his moniker).
While primarily playing the bulk of their live performances east of the Mississippi River East Coast of the United States of the U.S., The Codetalkers usually also play several music festivals each year, such as Vegoose in 2005 and Bonnaroo in 2002 and 2006. In May of 2008, the band played two shows in Tokyo, and were invited back for a full-blown tour in early 2009 following the release of their next album.
Bobby Lee Rodgers is the songwriter responsible for the original material played by the band. (A couple songs have been co-written with band members.) Rodgers is reported to be a great-nephew of Richard Rodgers (of Rodgers & Hamerstein fame.) He was one of the youngest professors ever to teach at the Berklee College of Music (the world's largest music college) joining Pat Metheny who is also among those ranks. His background is mostly in the jazz world (he was a professor of jazz studies at Berklee) but played bluegrass as a child (his first instrument was the upright bass, which he picked up at the age of seven.) Rodgers' songwriting and instrumental/vocal skills has led him to great places, most recently as the band-leader for Herring/Rodgers/Sipe, formed with Jimmy Herring (Aquarium Rescue Unit, The Allman Brothers, The Dead, Phil Lesh & Friends) Jeff Sipe (Aquarium Rescue Unit, Phil Lesh & Friends, & Widespread Panic), Mark van Allen (Sugarland, Blueground Undergrass) and Neal Fountain (Fiji Mariners). Herring/Rodgers/Sipe toured in late May and summer of 2006. The majority of the songs played by HRS were written by Rodgers.
[edit] Discography
- 2000 Bootleg Live
- 2004 Deluxe Edition (re-release in 2005, aka "Dee-Lux Uh-dish-un")
- 2006 Now
- 2008 Galaxy Girl (Japanese-only release)
[edit] External links
- The Codetalkers official website
- The Codetalkers collection at the Internet Archive's live music archive
- "The Codetalkers: A Language of Funk and Fun", an interview on NPR's Morning Edition on July 24, 2006, retrieved July 24, 2006
- Codetalkers official myspace page
- [2]