Reed Mathis

Reed Mathis is a bass player who is best known as a former member of Tea Leaf Green. The Bay Area rooted player has also notably worked with Grateful Dead members Phil Lesh, Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann. He played with Steve Kimock Band, and was a founding member of Tulsa progressive jazz band Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey.

Reed Mathis
Born (1976-09-27) 27 September 1976
Tulsa, Oklahoma United States
Genresjam band, rock, ambient, jazz
Occupation(s)Musician, Composer, Bandleader, Producer
Instrumentsbass, guitar, cello, piano, sitar, mandolin, banjo
LabelsSurfdog, Hyena Records
Associated actsTea Leaf Green, Marco Benevento, Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey, Steve Kimock, 7 Walkers, Rhythm Devils, Billy & the Kids

Biography

Mathis comes from a prolific musical family and started learning the fundamentals of classical music when he was four years old. Before picking up the bass guitar at eleven, he spent time studying piano, cello, and voice. His early influences included Beethoven, The Beach Boys, Led Zeppelin, Cliff Burton of Metallica, Michael Jackson, and Jimi Hendrix.

When Mathis was fifteen he performed Vivaldi's "Mandolin Concerto in D" on mandolin with members of the Tulsa Philharmonic. At sixteen he attended the Interlochen Center for the Arts near Traverse City, Michigan, where he was the top-ranked bassist in the program. While at the academy he developed a love of jazz music, and began transcribing and memorizing the music of Charlie Parker, John Coltrane, Charles Mingus, Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong and his Hot Five, and bass virtuoso, Jaco Pastorius.

In 1994, Mathis met Brian Haas and a group of like-minded Tulsa musicians, who together created the Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey (JFJO). Originally an octet, the band toured six years before becoming the piano-bass-drums trio for which it became known. Mathis continued to tour and record with JFJO through 2008.

Mathis' unique style and tone has been described as "talking bass." In a feature article in Bass Player in September, 2002, noted music author Bill Milkowski writes:

"No other electric bass player around today has been as successful (as Mathis) at incorporating mind-blowing and mondo-effects into a personal voice on the instrument. The charismatic Mathis is freed up to soar into the high register and wail with impunity on his heavy effected bass guitar because Haas is holding down the basslines on the Rhodes."[1]

In 2005–2006, Mathis toured with the Steve Kimock Band, which featured Steve Kimock on guitar and lap steel guitar, Robert Walter on Hammond B3 organ and Rhodes piano, and Rodney Holmes on drums.

In 2006, Mathis united with pianist Marco Benevento and drummers Matt Chamberlain and Andrew Barr to form the Marco Benevento Trio. He has appeared on three releases with the Marco Benevento Trio and continues to tour with the group. The trio appeared at New York City's famed Carnegie Hall in June, 2009.

In late 2007, Mathis joined the San Francisco rock band Tea Leaf Green (TLG). In 2008, he split time between TLG and JFJO. He appears on the Tea Leaf Green's 2008 release Raise Up The Tent and tours as a member of the band.

In 2008, Mathis produced Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey's "Winterwood" (named for Winterwood Studios in Eureka Springs, Arkansas). Shortly before the album's release in January, 2009, Mathis announced his departure from JFJO, citing a desire to pursue his other musical endeavors. Chris Combs (guitar) and Matt Hayes (upright bass) joined Haas (piano) and Josh Raymer (drums) to form the new JFJO lineup.

In 2009 Mathis became an original member of 7 Walkers, a band led by Grateful Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann. He recorded on their self-titled debut album that was released on November 2, 2010. He left the band in 2010 due to touring commitments with Tea Leaf Green and was replaced by George Porter Jr..

Mathis performed with the Rhythm Devils for their 2011 tour. In 2014 he joined Billy Kreutzmann's new band Billy & the Kids as well as The Golden Gate Wingmen with John Kadlecik. He left Tea Leaf Green in 2016 to focus on his other projects.[2]

Discography

With Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey

  • Live at the Lincoln Continental (1995)
  • Live in Tokyo (1996)
  • Welcome Home (1998)
  • Bloom (1999)
  • Live At Your Mama's House (2000)
  • Self Is Gone (2001)*
  • All is One (2002)*
  • Sean Layton: A Musical Retrospective (2002)*
  • Slow Breath, Silent Mind (2003)*
  • Symbiosis Osmosis (2003)*
  • Walking With Giants (2004)*
  • For The Ghost EP (2005)*
  • Sameness of Difference (2005)
  • Tomorrow We'll Know Today (2006)*
  • Lil' Tae Rides Again (2008)
  • Winterwood (2009)*

(*produced by Mathis)

With Tea Leaf Green

  • Raise Up The Tent (2008)
  • Looking West (2010)
  • Radio Tragedy! (2011)
  • In the Wake (2014)

With Marco Benevento

With other artists

  • Blue Alleluia (2002) Jared Tyler
  • Here With You (2009)
  • El Niño Chickendog (1997) Steve Pryor
  • The Neighbors (1999)
  • Life's Ladder (2006)
  • The Separation DVD (2007) Bobby Previte
  • Sage Flower Arrow (2008)
  • Mysterium Tremendum (2012) Mickey Hart Band
  • Brooklyn Sessions (2012) Everyone Orchestra

In Print

Interview in "Jaco: The Extraordinary and Tragic Life of Jaco Pastorius, Anniversary Edition," by Bill Milkowski.[3]

gollark: I think a bunch of people have not-very-isolated accounts on the secondary server. It runs HBMud and stuff.
gollark: We have guaranteed at least 0.1% uptime.
gollark: I reserve the right to arbitrarily delete or migrate or lose any customer data/files for any purpose or reason whatsoever.
gollark: Technically three of those locations may slightly be in the same location.
gollark: - osmarks.net primary server- osmarks.net secondary server (raspberry pi)- arbitrary unused Android tablet which is mostly plugged in a lot- mostly unoccupied very cheap VPS I got from someone else

References

  1. Milkowski, Bill. "Reed Mathis: Flights of Fancy." Bass Player 13, no. 9 (September, 2002): 12.
  2. http://www.jambase.com/article/tea-leaf-green-announces-first-tour-of-2016-departure-of-reed-mathis
  3. Milkowski, Bill. Jaco: The Extraordinary and Tragic Life of Jaco Pastorius, Anniversary Edition. San Francisco: Backbeat Books, 2005.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.