Derek Trucks Band feels 'Free' on the road
When The Derek Trucks Band hit its namesake's home studio to rehearse and write songs, it had no plans to immediately record an album. But all that changed when the vibe felt right. The result is "Already Free," which hit stores Tuesday (1/13).
"It started feeling so good and sounding so good, we had 12 tunes recorded and figured we were well on our way," Trucks said during an interview with LiveDaily. "It started coming together pretty quickly. I think the first day we were in there, I told myself, 'I'm just going to pretend we're making a record.' It sounds good. It feels good and the tunes were strong enough, and that's really all I need."
On "Already Free," Trucks wrote original songs and reinvigorated old ones, including Bob Dylan and The Band's "Down in the Flood." The album boasts an array of sounds including blues, soul, jazz, afro-beat and qawwali.
The Derek Trucks Band --which consists of Trucks on guitar, bassist Todd Smallie, percussionist Count M'Butu, drummer Yonrico Scott, keyboardist Kofi Burbridge and singer Mike Mattison--was joined in the studio by some famous friends; pals like Doyle Bramhall II, Oteil Burbridge and Trucks' wife Susan Tedeschi can all be heard on the album.
Bramhall takes over the vocal duties on the two songs: "Maybe This Time," which cops an Eastern flavor, and "Our Love," which has been dubbed "a companion piece with the piercing guitar riffs signature of Bramhall/Trucks collaborations."
The title track was the first song recorded and written in Trucks' home studio in Jacksonville, FL, during the "Already Free" sessions. Trucks chose to name the album such because it perfectly summed up the process.
"Once the whole process was done in maybe a month, I thought that lyric and that sentiment encapsulated the whole experience, the whole process," said Trucks, the nephew of Allman Brothers Band drummer Butch Trucks, a group with whom he played for 10 years. "There's something about building a studio and doing it yourself and having a band where you really can be free to play any music you choose to, whether it happens to be a three-minute song or a half-hour instrumental. We never really felt forced to change what we do. Something about waking up at home with your kids and family and also being able to perform with your friends and musicians, it's a pretty amazing experience. I think that song title kind of wrapped everything up for us.
"It was so relaxed knowing you're not under the gun and worried about studio time and money," Trucks added. "It was so nice to relax and create. Having the family around, having my kids there every day made it so much more organic and real, being able to drive the kids to school in the morning and then go out and record with the band was a pretty amazing experience. Having your own studio, you start feeling really comfortable with the place and you start getting comfortable with the sounds. I got to produce the whole thing. It felt more honest to me."
Even though there wasn't that extra ear to offer advice, Trucks explained each musician was able to produce him/herself.
"Everybody in the band are strong enough musicians and have good enough ears and can be objective when they need to," said Trucks, who has also performed with Eric Clapton and Santana. "Usually I'm my own worst critic anyway. So it's not hard to tell if something's not quite happening. I've played on enough records and been around enough producers to have a pretty good handle on the way people do things. I think if you have ideas in your head and you know how to convey that to people, the musicians you're playing with, without rubbing people the wrong way, that's kind of the whole producing thing."
For this album cycle, Trucks and Tedeschi will either tour together or take turns hitting the road so they can be with their children, Charles and Sophia, at all times.
"That's what we're doing now that my son is in school," Trucks said. "Before that, they could hit the road with us quite a bit. But now it's changed. We try to really limit the days that we're both on the road. When we're both out, my mom will stay with the kids at our house maybe on the weekends. For the most part, it's one of us home with the kids and the other one out working. It's a juggling act for sure."
January 2009
24-31 - Ft, Lauderdale, FL - Blues Cruise
February 2009
6 - Portland, ME - Port City Music Hall
7 - Carrabassett Valley, ME - King Pine Room
8 - Waterbury, CT - Palace Theater
11 - Cleveland, OH - House of Blues
12 - Cincinnati, OH - Bogart's
13 - Rochester, NY - Water Street Music Hall
14 - Lewisburg, PA - Weis Center for the Performing Arts
15 - Charleston, WV - Mountain Stage @ Cultural Center Theater
21 - Memphis, TN - New Daisy Theater
22 - New Orleans, LA - House of Blues
24 - St. Louis, MO - The Pageant
25 - Columbia, MO - The Blue Note
March 2009
4 - Austin, TX - La Zona Rosa
5 - Houston, TX - House of Blues
6 - Dallas, TX - Granada Theater
April 2009
2 - Boston, MA - House of Blues
4 - Reading, PA - Berks Jazz Fest
8, 9 - Chicago, IL - Park West
10 - N. Kansas City, MO - Harrah's Casino
11 - Englewood, CO - Gothic Theater
15 - San Francisco, CA - Regency Center Grand Ballroom
16 - Los Angeles, CA - The Wiltern
17 - San Diego, CA - House of Blues
Featured Photos: The Allman Brothers Band, Fox Theatre, Oakland, CA - May 12, 2009 [May 2009]
Derek Trucks Band covers Dylan, readies sixth studio album [November 2008]
Derek Trucks Band maps 'Free' shows [January 2009]
Live Review: Gathering of the Vibes in Bridgeport, CT [August 2008]
Derek Trucks, Susan Tedeschi plot another summer run [July 2008]



































