Beyond The Band: Garth Hudson’s river of sound comes to Port Townsend

PORT TOWNSEND — Several weeks ago Upstage Restaurant and Bistro owner Mark Cole found a used copy of “Cahoots,” The Band’s 1971 album on a courtyard table and set it behind the bar for the owner to claim.

No one took responsibility, but early last week Cole received a call from guitarist Eric Fridrich, executive director of Savor the Sound, asking whether he could carve out a date for The Band’s Garth Hudson to perform as part of a benefit meant to subsidize musical education in schools.

It was, according to Cole, “uncanny.”

Hudson is scheduled to perform at 8 p.m. on Wednesday at the Upstage, 923 Washington St.

Tickets are $25 and are available by phoning 360-385-2216.

Multi-instrumentalist Hudson, 74, was a co-founder of The Band and was a principal architect of its unique sound, playing the organ, saxophone, accordion and other instruments that were the antithesis of the guitar-based psychedelia that ruled the airwaves when The Band released its first album.

Once they stopped touring eight years later, the five member group had changed the course of popular music, eventually creating the popular style now known as “Americana.”

For this week’s appearance, Hudson’s vast store of instruments will be accompanied by Fridrich and his wife, Maud Hudson, on vocals.

“Maud and I will play what is probably not anywhere near the standard Band repertoire, although we do tributes to [deceased Band members] Richard [Manuel] and Rick [Danko],” Hudson said from his home in Woodstock, N.Y., just before getting on the plane to Seattle earlier this week.

“We are taking part in a program which encourages children to care, and hopefully can do it in a manner that can encourage young people to follow music a little more closely.”

Savor the Sound raises money to pay for instruments and musical instruction in public schools to replace programs that have been cut back because of decreasing education budgets, Fridrich said.

The money raised by Hudson’s performance most likely will support programs in other counties, but the appearance is being used to introduce the program to Jefferson County residents with the hope of establishing it locally, he said.

Aside from its own eight-year career at the top of the charts and a second chapter (without guitarist/composer Robbie Robertson) between 1983 and 1999, The Band is most known for its accompaniment of Bob Dylan, both live and in the studio.

Hudson acknowledges what he calls Dylan’s “mythopoetic power.”

“He was a mystery, he was a singer, he was here, he was gone, and I don’t know anyone else who kept that mystery as consistently as he did,” Hudson said.

“As The Band, we were fortunate to work with a top-notch player and one of the greatest popular songwriters of that era.”

Many musicians from that era continue to play their songs in a revival format, but Hudson is different and is unique, according to Fridrich, who calls Hudson “an inspiration.

“He’s in his 70s, but he’s still developing and playing new stuff,” Fridrich said.

Hudson said it doesn’t come easy.

“Some artists show their talents at age 4 or 5, but some of us have to work at this, and it becomes a lifelong pursuit,” he said.

“There is a competitive aspect to what we are doing as musicians. We are always recognizing and appropriating little snippets from here and there.

“We are all composers and we are all songwriters.”

To understand a musician, understand what influences him, Hudson said.

“If you want to understand Dylan, you shouldn’t just listen to him. You need to find out who he was listening to, what he was reading at the time and what people were singing from the balconies when he was young,” he said.

“Right now I am talking with people about jazz metal, and its incredible reiterative patterns,” he continued.

Black Sabbath’s Tony Iommi “has some masterful guitar fills and great sequences where his grip on the guitar does not cease until the very last note.”

Hudson often answers questions about the 1960s and 1970s with comments about the 1940s and the swing era before guitars took over, a time he finds more interesting.

And the “showbiz” story that most interests Hudson happened more than 300 years ago.

“Bach was so fascinated with [composer Dieterich] Buxtehude that he walked 200 miles from Germany to Denmark just to see how he played his music,” Hudson said.

“That was amazing, walking all that way, especially when you think about what they wore on their feet in those days.”

At the end of the interview with Hudson, the radio coincidentally blared the Band’s last big hit single, “Ophelia.”

It was, to use Cole’s description, “uncanny.”

________

Jefferson County Reporter Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360-385-2335 or charlie.bermant@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Mark Gregson.
Interim hospital CEO praises partnership, legacy

Gregson says goal is to solidify pact with UW Medicine in coming months

Jefferson County Auditor Brenda Huntingford, right, watches as clerk Ronnie Swafford loads a stack of ballots that were delivered from the post office on Tuesday into a machine that checks for signatures. The special election has measures affecting the Port Townsend and Brinnon school districts as well as East Jefferson Fire Rescue. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Jefferson County voters supporting school district measures, fire lid lifts

Port Townsend approving 20-year, $99.25 million construction bond

Port of Port Townsend Harbormaster Kristian Ferrero, right, watches as a crew from Seattle Global Diving and Salvage work to remove a derelict catamaran that was stuck in the sand for weeks on a beach at the Water Front Inn on Washington Street in Port Townsend. The boat had been sunk off of Indian Point for weeks before a series of storms pushed it to this beach last week. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Derelict boat removal

Port of Port Townsend Harbormaster Kristian Ferrero, right, watches as a crew… Continue reading

Rob Birman has served as Centrum’s executive director for 14 years. When the arts nonprofit completes its search for its next leader, Birman will transition into a role focused on capital fundraising and overseeing capital projects for buildings Centrum oversees. (Centrum)
Centrum signs lease to remain at Fort Worden for next 35 years

Executive director will transition into role focused on fundraising

Clallam approves contracts with several agencies

Funding for reimbursement, equipment replacement

Mark and Linda Secord have been named Marrowstone Island Citizens of the Year for 2025.
Secords named Marrowstone Island citizens of year

Mark and Linda Secord have been chosen as Marrowstone… Continue reading

The members of the 2026 Rhody Festival royalty are, from left, Princess Payton Frank, Queen Lorelei Turner and 2025 Queen Taylor Frank. The 2026 queen was crowned by the outgoing queen during a ceremony at Chimacum High School on Saturday. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Rhody coronation

The members of the 2026 Rhody Festival royalty are, from left, Princess… Continue reading

Jefferson considering new site for solid waste

Commissioners direct further exploration

Public feedback still shaping Clallam ordinance on RV usage

Community Development department set to move sections of its proposal

Jen Colmore, Sequim Food Bank’s community engagement coordinator, has been hired as the executive director. She will start in her new role after outgoing director Andra Smith starts as executive director of the Washington Food Coalition later this month. (Sequim Food Bank)
Sequim Food Bank hires new executive director

Sequim organization tabs engagement coordinator

Sara Nicholls, executive director of the Dungeness Valley Health and Wellness Clinic, also known as the Sequim Free Clinic, inspects food items that are free to any patient who needs them. Soroptimist International of Sequim sponsors the food pantry, she said. (Austin James)
Sequim Free Clinic to celebrate 25th year

Volunteer-driven nonprofit will reach quarter-century mark in October

Weekly flight operations scheduled

Field carrier landing practice operations will take place for aircraft… Continue reading