Cary Hudson

Cary Hudson is an American lead singer, guitarist and main songwriter of the alternative country/Southern rock band Blue Mountain.[1]

Cary Hudson
Cary Hudson & Blue Mountain playing at The Bottleneck in Lawrence, Kansas, April 18, 2008.
Background information
Born1963 (age 5657)
Sumrall, Mississippi, United States
GenresAmericana, Southern rock, blues, blues rock, alt.country, country rock, roots rock
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter, musician, producer, bandleader
InstrumentsElectric guitar, acoustic guitar, slide guitar, harmonica, mandolin, banjo, piano, keyboards, fiddle
Years active1989–present
LabelsGlitterhouse Records, Black Dog Records
Associated actsBlue Mountain, The Hilltops, John Stirratt, Laurie Stirratt
Websitecaryhudson.com

Biography

Hudson was born in the town of Sumrall, Mississippi, located approximately 15 miles from Hattiesburg. Prior to Blue Mountain, Hudson was in a band called The Hilltops, and Blue Mountain formed out of The Hilltops. Blue Mountain featured numerous drummers, most infamously Frank Coutch, and bassist/wife of Hudson, Laurie Stirratt.

After the divorce of Hudson and Stirratt, Blue Mountain split, and Hudson embarked on a solo career that spawned three albums released on his and his cousin Chris Hudson's record label, Black Dog Records. The first album, The Phoenix was released in 2002. Though Hudson shows his country roots often, many of the tracks offer him showing his talent for the electric guitar, such as the track "Mad, Bad, & Dangerous".

His second album, Cool Breeze released in 2004, finds Hudson once again using his guitar to show his talent. This album, however, has a more rustic feel to it. Those who are familiar with the area that Hudson grew up will know many of the places that he mentions in the songs. Cool Breeze is a very diverse album, with there being no way that you can pin any one sound to it.

His 3rd solo album, the appropriately titled Bittersweet Blues, allows Hudson to strip away the electric guitar and record an exclusively acoustic album. Every song displays Hudson's amazing song writing talent and pure bluesy voice. From the opening "Snow in Mississippi", the album is a mature, addictive, rush of pure Mississippi music that engulfs your mind and captures your soul. As a songwriter, Hudson is possibly at the finest of his entire career on this album. The XM Radio hit, "Berlin Blues", is the ninth track on the record.

In 2007, Hudson reunited with Blue Mountain, and he put his solo career on hold. He resides in his hometown of Sumrall, and can often be seen by the locals of nearby towns as he plays solo shows at some of the establishments in Hattiesburg.

In 2008, Cary Hudson named one of the best in the Gibson magazine's list of Top 10 Alt.Country Guitarists of all time.[2]

In 2013, Blue Mountain once again dissolved and Hudson has now refocused on his solo output. He released Town and Country album in the summer of 2014 and continues to tour on his own.

Solo discography

  • The Phoenix (2002)[3]
  • Cary Hudson Electric Trio Live in Wredenhagen (2002) - live
  • Cool Breeze (2004)
  • Bittersweet Blues (2006)
  • Seems to Me (2010)
  • Mississippi Moon (2011)
  • Town and Country (2014)
gollark: I still hold that it is illegitimate anticactoidal discrimination.
gollark: Well, it is scamming and against the rules and typical tjwld.
gollark: That's just normal English grammar shuffled and spaceless.
gollark: A grammarless sentence would probably just be unpunctuated and a mishmash of random concepts.
gollark: In fact, even `this grammar sentence not having?` and `the the the word tjwld correct agree I is.` contain grammar.

References

  1. MacNeil, Jason. "Biography: Cary Hudson". AllMusic. Retrieved 7 July 2010.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-08-23. Retrieved 2010-06-28.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. The Phoenix at AllMusic. Retrieved February 17, 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.