Hadrien Feraud

Hadrien Feraud
Hadrien Feraud, Jazz-Club Minden/Germany 2012
Background information
Birth nameHadrien Feraud
Born (1984-08-16) August 16, 1984 (age 40)
Paris, France

Hadrien Feraud (born August 16, 1984 in Paris) is a French jazz bassist.[1]

Biography

[edit]

Hadrien Feraud was born into a very musical family. His parents, who are also musicians, immersed him at a very young age in various musical environments: rock 'n roll, blues, funk, R&B, new wave, and, of course, jazz. Hadrien began studying guitar at age 8, taking lessons from his father. He also had a deep interest in film scores. By the time he was 10 he started picking up bass lines from Earth, Wind & Fire, music of the Motown era, The Police, Eric Clapton, Stevie Wonder, Michael Jackson, Prince, Chic, Donald Fagen, ZZ Top, Alanis Morissette, Sheryl Crow, Kool and the Gang, Don Blackman and later also Weather Report, Chick Corea, John McLaughlin and Herbie Hancock. But at first he was actually more interested in playing drums until he received a copy of The Birthday Concert by Jaco Pastorius at age 12. After hearing Jaco Pastorius everything changed. Hadrien immersed himself in profound studies of electric bass, analyzing the techniques of Jaco Pastorius, James Jamerson, Bernard Edwards, Nathan East, Christian McBride, Victor Bailey, Anthony Jackson, Skúli Sverrisson, Gary Willis, Matthew Garrison, Richard Bona, Linley Marthe and Jeff Berlin. Hadrien's talent on bass has become widely known throughout the world.

Collaborations

[edit]

Between 2003 and now, he has recorded and performed with many renowned musicians: John McLaughlin, Chick Corea, Lee Ritenour, Hiromi Uehara, Billy Cobham, Gino Vannelli, Jean-Luc Ponty, Bireli Lagrene, Dean Brown, Jada Pinkett Smith, Paco Sery, Matt Garrison, Thundercat, Kamasi Washington, Antonio Farao, Otmaro Ruiz, Scott Kinsey, Marvin Smitty Smith, David Binney, Louis Cole, Walter Smith III, Gerald Clayton, West Coast Get Down, Virgil Donati, Cheick Tidiane Seck, Nguyên Lê, Jean-Pierre Como, Jean-Marie Ecay, Karim Ziad, Dominique Di Piazza, Gary Husband, André Ceccarelli, Dario Chiazzolino, Sylvain Luc, Greg Spero, guitarist James Morgan on A Soul in Time, and many others.

Work

[edit]

Towards the end of 2004 Hadrien started composing works for his first solo project, in parallel to playing at several clubs and jams in the Paris scene.

In 2005 John McLaughlin invited Hadrien to contribute on two tracks ("For Jaco", "Senor CS") on his album Industrial Zen.[2] This was a pivotal encounter for Hadrien.

In 2006 he finished recording his first solo album Hadrien Feraud together with guest musicians such as John McLaughlin, Biréli Lagrène, Flavio Boltro, Jean-Marie Ecay, Jean-Pierre Como, Marc Berthoumieux, Mokhtar Samba, Jim Grancamp, Jon Grancamp, Dominique Di Piazza, Thierry Eliez, Linley Marthe.

In 2007 he took part in Chick Corea's trio project. After that he went on tour in North America and Canada. A European tour followed in 2009, as a member of John McLaughlin and the 4th dimension (with Gary Husband on keyboards and Mark Mondesir on drums).[3]

Hadrien Feraud arranged and produced Biréli Lagrène's album Electric Side.

On Tour

[edit]

2012 and 2013 touring in US and Europe with Dean Brown Band.

2013 touring with Chick Corea & The Vigil: Chick Corea (keys), Hadrien Feraud (bass) together with Marcus Gilmore on drums, saxophones, flute, bass clarinet and innovation from Tim Garland and guitarist Charles Altura.

Hadrien Feraud, Jazz-Club Minden/Germany 2012

2016 World Tour with Lee Ritenour.

2017 World Tour with Hiromi Uehara.

2018 Tour with Lee Ritenour.

Quotes

[edit]

"Of course… Jaco influenced me. It is the reason why I wanted to become a musician!!" - Hadrien Feraud[4]

"When I heard Jaco and Weather Report the first time, I fell in love. What I love in Jaco’s music are the feelings and images it creates in your mind" Hadrien Feraud[5]

"...for me, he’s the new Jaco [Pastorius]" - John McLaughlin [6]

"Usually I do what everybody does; each time I hear something that is attractive to my ears, I pick it up when I can." - Hadrien Feraud [7]

Basses and amps

[edit]

In September 2009, Hadrien and Ken Smith announced the creation of the "Hadrien Feraud Signature Burner", to be made in Japan by Hajime Hirose and SleekElite, under the direction of Ken Smith. Hand built models are scheduled to be released before the end of 2009, with mass-produced simplified models (no exotic tops or woods) to be released in early 2010. Early photographs show the bass with a buckeye burl top, maple neck, ebony fretboard and removable ebony ramp, and it will also featured the Ken Smith 18v preamp, with a Mid Switch for different tones and volume boost.

  • Markbass SPONSORED System AMP[8]
    • Clubs : CMD102P + TRAVELER 102P
    • Bigger than Club : F1 or SD800 on 2 cabinets 104HR Standard ( 8 X 10' )
  • TC Electronic FX

Awards

[edit]
  • Down Beat Critics Poll "Rising Star Electric Bassist of the year" 2008
  • Down Beat Critics Poll 2nd position in "Rising Star Electric Bass" 2009
  • Bass Player Magazine "Readers Choice Award" Most Exciting new Player 2009
  • Bassplayer Magazine cover 2017
  • Bassiste Magazine cover 2018

Discography

[edit]


CD Reviews

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "MARKBASS | Hadrien Feraud". MARKBASS | Bass Amplification. Retrieved 2020-08-13.
  2. ^ "For Jaco it is a fitting tribute; aggressive percussion from Mark Mondesir and Gary Husband supports the skittering and catchy melody as Hadrian Feraud's fretless bass weaves in and out of the interplay by Evans and McLaughlin." see review "Industrial Zen"
  3. ^ "While McLaughlin’s calling Feraud The New Jaco in recent press reports is more about the young bassist’s already remarkable innovations at the age of twenty-three, hearing him play a Pastorius tune confirmed that Feraud’s already done his share of wood-shedding with the late bassist’s work." road diary 4th dimension / allaboutjazz.com Archived 2008-05-21 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Interview 2006
  5. ^ bassplayer magazin Interview 2007
  6. ^ Interview 2007 - all about jazz
  7. ^ "Interview 2008 - UK Bass Guitar Magazin". Archived from the original on 2008-05-21. Retrieved 2008-05-03.
  8. ^ "Endorsement". Archived from the original on 2008-05-21. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
[edit]