Colin Hodgkinson
Colin Hodgkinson (born 14 October 1945) is a British bassist, singer, and composer known for his pioneering contributions to rock, jazz, and blues music since the 1960s.[1] Hodgkinson began his musical journey playing guitar at age 10 before switching to bass at 14, and he turned professional in 1966 after performing in local bands during the early 1960s.[2] His early career featured innovative session work and collaborations, including joining Alexis Korner's band from 1969 to 1984, where he contributed to the British blues revival.[2] In 1968, he co-founded the influential jazz-rock trio Back Door with saxophonist Ron Aspery and drummer Tony Hicks, developing a distinctive chordal bass style that blended double bass techniques with electric rock influences, earning praise from critics like NME for revolutionizing the instrument.[3][2] The group self-released their debut album in 1972 before signing with Warner Bros., releasing subsequent records and touring the United States and Europe until disbanding in 1975.[2] Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Hodgkinson expanded his repertoire with high-profile projects, including work with keyboardist Jan Hammer from 1978 to 1982, a stint with Whitesnake on their 1984 album Slide It In, and over 25 years with the Spencer Davis Group starting in 1984.[3] He also participated in R&B Allstars tours alongside figures like Brian Auger and Zoot Money, and formed a longstanding blues duo with guitarist Frank Diez in 1986.[2] In the 1990s and 2000s, he performed solo bass sets opening for Bill Wyman's Rhythm Kings and collaborated with artists such as Gary Moore and Chris Rea, including three CDs and a 2008 tour.[4] Hodgkinson served as the bassist for Ten Years After from 2014 until the lineup's disbandment in 2024, contributing to albums like A Sting in the Tail (2017) and Naturally Live (2021), and touring extensively during that period.[3][5] His left-handed, pick-and-finger technique—allowing simultaneous chords, melodies, and bass lines—has influenced musicians including Stanley Clarke, solidifying his reputation as an underrated virtuoso in bass innovation.[4]Early career
Professional beginnings
Colin Hodgkinson was born on October 14, 1945, in Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, England, where he grew up immersed in the local music scene that introduced him to jazz through performances and recordings prevalent in the post-war British jazz revival.[1][6] At age 10, he began playing guitar before switching to bass at 14 in 1959, drawing initial inspiration from jazz double bassists such as Charles Mingus, Red Mitchell, and Ray Brown, whose improvisational styles shaped his foundational approach to the instrument.[2][6][3] Hodgkinson turned professional in 1966 by forming his first jazz trio, performing on acoustic bass in clubs across Yorkshire, including venues like the Starlite Club in Redcar, where he honed his skills amid the region's burgeoning jazz circuits.[7][6][8] As a self-taught player, he developed a distinctive left-handed technique on the acoustic bass, emphasizing melodic lines and improvisation within small ensemble settings that blended jazz standards with emerging blues elements.[7][4] Although he had acquired a left-handed Fender Precision model in 1962, by the late 1960s Hodgkinson transitioned to electric bass, adapting it for more versatile gigs and allowing him to explore amplified tones while retaining his focus on melodic phrasing and ensemble interplay in local jazz and blues venues.[4][6] This shift built on his early experiences, strengthening his improvisational command and preparing him for broader professional opportunities in the evolving British music landscape.[2]Collaboration with Alexis Korner
In 1969, Colin Hodgkinson was invited to join Alexis Korner's short-lived New Church band after relocating to London from his earlier work with Eric Delaney's Showband.[9] He served as bassist during European tours alongside musicians such as saxophonist Ray Warleigh and vocalist Annette Brox, contributing to live performances that showcased Korner's evolving blues ensemble.[9] One notable early moment occurred at a debut gig in Vienna, where Korner encouraged Hodgkinson to deliver an impromptu bass solo on Robert Johnson's "32-20 Blues," marking a pivotal step in his onstage confidence.[10] Hodgkinson's tenure included key recordings for Korner's album Both Sides (1970), where he provided the bass on the live tracks "The Duo Thing" and "Rosie," captured during a December 9, 1969, performance at Hamburg's Auditorium Maximum.[11] These contributions offered a solid rhythmic foundation to the band's blues-oriented sound, blending Korner's guitar work with ensemble dynamics.[10] The sessions, engineered and edited post-tour, highlighted Hodgkinson's adaptability in supporting Korner's vision for a fusion of traditional blues and contemporary arrangements.[11] This period exposed Hodgkinson to electric amplification within a larger group context, transitioning from his prior acoustic jazz trio experiences—where he had adapted to left-handed bass playing—to the amplified demands of rock-blues fusion.[9] The collaboration immersed him in the British blues scene's shift toward electric ensembles, fostering skills in dynamic interplay that would influence his later projects.[10] New Church disbanded in late 1969 following the European tour, as Korner pursued opportunities with the Collective Consciousness Society alongside Peter Thorup, prompting Hodgkinson to return north and pivot toward forming his own original band.[9]Back Door
Formation and 1970s success
Back Door was formed in 1971 in Redcar, North Yorkshire, as a guitar-less power trio consisting of bassist and vocalist Colin Hodgkinson, saxophonist and keyboardist Ron Aspery, and drummer Tony Hicks.[12][13] The band's inception stemmed from Hodgkinson and Aspery's earlier collaboration in 1968 at the Starlite Club in Redcar, where they began discussing their own project around 1969 before recruiting Hicks to complete the lineup.[12] This configuration emphasized Hodgkinson's amplified bass as the lead instrument, creating a distinctive sound that blended jazz fusion, blues, and rock without relying on guitar.[13] The trio self-released their debut album, Back Door, in 1972 on the independent Blakey Records label, which garnered attention from music press like New Musical Express and led to a distribution deal with Warner Bros. Records for wider release in 1973.[12][14] Under Warner Bros., they followed with 8th Street Nites in 1973, recorded at New York's Electric Lady Studios, and Another Fine Mess in 1975, showcasing their evolving fusion style with originals co-written primarily by the band members.[13][14] Their fourth and final studio album, Activate, produced by Carl Palmer and released in 1976, featured a slightly altered lineup with Adrian Tilbrook replacing Hicks on drums and continued to highlight the group's instrumental prowess.[13][14] Throughout the mid-1970s, Back Door toured extensively across Europe and North America, building a reputation for their energetic live performances and innovative bass-driven arrangements.[13] A notable highlight was their appearance at the Montreux Jazz Festival on June 30, 1974, where they performed a set including tracks such as "Walking Blues" and "Slivadiv," earning praise for their bold fusion approach amid a lineup featuring artists such as Van Morrison and Bill Evans.[15] In early 1974, they supported Emerson, Lake & Palmer on a U.S. tour, further solidifying their acclaim in the jazz-rock scene for tracks that fused bluesy grooves with improvisational flair.[13] Following the release of Activate, Back Door's activity dwindled, and the band dissolved around 1977 as members pursued individual projects, with Aspery moving into session work.[13]Reunions and later activity
After the band's initial disbandment in 1977, Back Door experienced an informal reunion in 1986 with its original lineup of Colin Hodgkinson, Ron Aspery, and Tony Hicks, performing a one-off show at Ronnie Scott's in London followed by a brief UK tour of club venues.[16] The trio fully reformed in 2003, reuniting the original members to record the album Askin' the Way, released that year on Cultural Foundation; the collection included reworkings of six classic tracks alongside thirteen new compositions, reflecting the band's enduring jazz-rock fusion style.[16][17][18] This reformation led to a series of performances, including their final show with the original lineup at the Lion Inn in Blakey Ridge, North Yorkshire.[16] Tragedy struck later that year when saxophonist Ron Aspery died of a stroke on December 10, 2003, at his home in Saltdean, Sussex, aged 57, effectively ending the original trio's activities.[19] In response, Hodgkinson assembled a new configuration of the group in 2006, featuring Rod Mason on saxophone and Paul Robinson on drums, to honor Aspery's contributions and sustain Back Door's sound.[16] This lineup performed select live dates, including appearances at European jazz festivals. The reformed ensemble released the live album Back Door Too! on October 28, 2008, via Hodgkinson's Rokoko Records label; recorded in a single day, it blended energetic renditions of Back Door staples like "Vienna Breakdown" with fresh material, capturing the reunion's improvisational vitality. The group undertook a limited number of subsequent concerts before winding down operations around 2010, as Hodgkinson shifted focus to other projects.[16] Hodgkinson has since played a key role in maintaining Back Door's legacy, overseeing reissues of early recordings—such as the 2002 compilation of BBC sessions, the 2023 release of The Impulse Session (live recordings from 1971), and the 2025 remastered album Live at Impulse Studios / The BBC—and incorporating the band's blues-infused techniques into his parallel work with ensembles like the British Blues Quintet.[16][20][21]Other bands and collaborations
1980s session work and Whitesnake
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Hodgkinson established himself as a sought-after session bassist, particularly through his four-year collaboration with Jan Hammer, beginning in 1978. He contributed bass and occasional vocals to Hammer's albums Black Sheep (1978) and Hammer (1979), as well as to the Neal Schon & Jan Hammer projects Untold Passion (1981) and Here to Stay (1982), blending his blues-rooted style with fusion and rock elements during recordings and tours based in New York.[22][23][24] These sessions highlighted Hodgkinson's technical versatility, adapting his fingerstyle technique to intricate fusion rhythms and electronic textures. Hodgkinson joined Whitesnake as bassist in October 1982, aligning with the band's shift toward a harder rock sound amid the era's hard rock boom. He performed on the band's Slide It In album (1984), providing bass lines that supported the group's evolving blues-hard rock hybrid, and participated in extensive touring throughout 1982 and 1983, including key shows like the Monsters of Rock Festival at Castle Donington in August 1983. His tenure ended in December 1983 due to stylistic differences as Whitesnake prepared for its American breakthrough, though his contributions appear on live recordings from the early Slide It In tour, such as the 2014 release Live in '84 – Back to the Bone, capturing performances with bandmates David Coverdale, Jon Lord, Micky Moody, Mel Galley, and Cozy Powell.[2][25][26][27] Beyond Whitesnake, Hodgkinson's 1980s sessions extended to blues and rock contexts, including a live collaboration with Paul Butterfield in 1984, where he supplied bass for Butterfield's harmonica-driven performances during European tours. He also joined the Spencer Davis Group in 1984, contributing bass to their live outings and the 1985 album Live Together with Pete York, adapting his playing to the group's classic R&B-infused rock sound. This freelance period underscored Hodgkinson's adaptability across hard rock, fusion, and blues revival scenes.[28][2][29]2000s–present: British Blues Quintet and Ten Years After
In 2007, Colin Hodgkinson joined The British Blues Quintet, a group comprising vocalist Maggie Bell, keyboardist and vocalist Zoot Money, guitarist and vocalist Miller Anderson, and drummer Colin Allen.[30] The band, known for its interpretations of classic blues material, released the live album Live in Glasgow that year, capturing performances from a show at The Ferry venue.[31] They toured extensively across Europe during this period, including appearances at festivals such as Torrita Blues in Italy.[32] Hodgkinson's tenure with the quintet emphasized collaborative blues performances, drawing on the members' shared history in the British blues scene. The group maintained activity through the early 2010s, with Hodgkinson contributing bass and vocals to their energetic live sets.[2] In March 2014, following the departure of founding bassist Leo Lyons, Hodgkinson auditioned and joined Ten Years After as bassist and vocalist, reuniting with drummer Ric Lee and keyboardist Chick Churchill.[3] Guitarist and vocalist Marcus Bonfanti completed the lineup, infusing the band with a fresh blues-rock energy while honoring their Woodstock-era legacy. The reformed group toured widely, performing at festivals and venues across Europe and North America, including high-profile shows like the Ramblin' Man Fair in the UK.[33] Ten Years After released their first studio album in nearly five decades, A Sting in the Tale, in 2017, featuring original material that blended classic blues-rock riffs with modern production.[34] Hodgkinson co-wrote and performed on tracks like "Iron Horse" and "Up in Smoke," showcasing his versatile bass lines and harmonies. The album marked a creative resurgence, supported by continued international touring that kept the band active through the 2020s.[35] In September 2024, the lineup of Ten Years After announced an amicable split after a decade of collaboration, concluding with final European tour dates in November.[5] Drummer Ric Lee formed a new iteration of the band for 2025 tours in the UK and Europe, featuring bassist Craig Fletcher, guitarist and vocalist Sam C Lees, and multi-instrumentalist Dave Burgoyne on keyboards and violin; Hodgkinson pursued other projects following the change.[36] As of November 2025, Hodgkinson's enduring contributions to blues-rock remain evident through archival releases and his ongoing session work.Musical style and equipment
Bass technique and influences
Colin Hodgkinson is renowned for his innovative left-handed bass technique, which he began developing in the early 1960s after switching from guitar to bass in 1959.[6] He purchased his first left-handed Fender Precision Bass in 1962, a custom order that required a three-month wait and additional cost, marking the start of his adaptation to playing in a mirrored orientation without formal instruction.[4] This approach allowed him to execute complex lines with fluidity, emphasizing a self-taught style that emerged prominently during his professional debut in 1966 with a jazz-rock trio.[6] Central to Hodgkinson's style is his ability to integrate lead melodies, chords, and rhythmic foundations simultaneously on the bass, particularly in guitar-less ensembles. This chordal and melodic versatility became defining during his time with the trio Back Door from 1971 to 1975, where the absence of a chordal instrument necessitated that he handle harmony, melody, and bass lines concurrently to achieve a full sonic palette.[4][37] In such trios—typically featuring saxophone, bass, and drums—his technique effectively substitutes for guitar roles, enabling intricate harmonic progressions and improvisational freedom without additional instrumentation.[3] He often employs double-stops and intervals like fourths to evoke power-chord textures, with the root note positioned prominently for clarity.[3] Hodgkinson's influences draw heavily from jazz and blues traditions, shaping his improvisational and groove-oriented approach. Early inspirations included jazz double bassists such as Charles Mingus, Red Mitchell, and Ray Brown, whose expressive improvisation and harmonic depth informed his chordal explorations on electric bass.[6][3] For rhythmic drive and blues phrasing, he cites players like Chuck Berry and Jimmy Reed, alongside acoustic blues figures including Robert Johnson, Lead Belly, and Blind Willie McTell, which blended with the vibrant blues scene in 1960s England to infuse his playing with raw energy and swing.[6][4] These elements converged to create a fusion style that prioritizes musicality over technical flash. His technique was influenced by acoustic upright bass players, whose jazz phrasing he adapted to the electric bass, amplifying expressiveness in fusion settings. Transitioning to electric instruments in the early 1960s, Hodgkinson favored fingerstyle plucking—using thumb for punchy attacks in blues contexts—for its nuanced control, though he selectively employs a pick for sharper definition in faster or more articulate passages.[3][4] This progression, refined through necessity in sparse ensembles, underscores his philosophy of the bass as a multifaceted voice, capable of leading harmonic complexity while anchoring the ensemble.[3]Gear and innovations
Hodgkinson's primary instrument is a left-handed 1962 Fender Precision Bass, which he purchased new and continues to use for both live performances and recordings.[4] He also employs a 1963 sunburst Fender Precision Bass, particularly for studio work, noting its worn neck up to the seventh fret from extensive playing, which contributes to his comfortable grip and distinctive tone.[3] For amplification, Hodgkinson has relied on Ampeg SVT heads and cabinets since at least the late 1970s, favoring their clarity and power in live settings such as the bass-led trio format of Back Door.[38] By the late 1980s, he adopted the Ampeg SVT-2 head paired with Eden 4x10 cabinets for a punchy sound suitable for band tours, including with Ten Years After, while occasionally using a Markbass 2x10 combo as a compact monitor.[3] He pairs this setup with custom-gauge Rotosound strings—gauges of .100 for E, .080 for A, .050 for D, and .035 for G—selected in the early 1970s for enhanced bending and tonal flexibility.[3] In addition to his Fender basses, Hodgkinson has incorporated custom instruments for versatility, including a left-handed 1979 Carl Thompson 4-string bass with a 32-inch scale, built specifically for him.[39] Later, in the 2000s and beyond, he added a fretless Warwick Thumb 5-string for its rich sound in select sessions, though he returned to vintage Fender tones as his preference, and an Ashton acoustic bass for home practice with heavy strings.[3]Discography
Solo albums
Colin Hodgkinson's solo discography consists of one primary album, highlighting his versatility as a bassist and vocalist outside his band commitments. This work emphasizes his innovative bass techniques and blues influences in intimate settings.[40] His debut solo album, The Bottom Line (Bass Solos and Trios), was released in 1998 by the German label Inakustik. The record features a minimalist approach, primarily showcasing unaccompanied bass performances alongside Hodgkinson's vocals on blues covers such as Robert Johnson's "32-20 Blues" and Jesse Fuller's "San Francisco Bay Blues." One track, "The Black Mirror," includes a trio collaboration with guitarist Frank Diez, adding subtle texture while maintaining the focus on Hodgkinson's raw, acoustic-electric bass tone. Produced by Inakustik GmbH & Co. KG, the album received critical acclaim for its innovative exploration of bass as a lead instrument, earning an 8/10 rating from AllMusic reviewers who praised its sincerity and technical prowess. Despite its artistic merit, the release achieved limited commercial success, reflecting Hodgkinson's niche appeal in the blues and jazz fusion scenes.[41][42] As of November 2025, Hodgkinson has not released additional solo albums, shifting his creative focus toward collaborative band projects such as the British Blues Quintet and ongoing Ten Years After activities.[40]Back Door recordings
Back Door, the jazz-rock fusion trio led by bassist and vocalist Colin Hodgkinson, produced a core discography of four studio albums during their active 1970s period, emphasizing instrumental interplay with Hodgkinson's innovative lead bass techniques integrated into complex jazz-rock arrangements. The debut, Back Door, was independently released in 1972 on Blakey Records and reissued by Warner Bros. Records in 1973 after the band signed with the label.[43] This album, recorded in a single day, captured the group's raw energy and featured tracks like "Vienna Breakdown," which exemplifies Hodgkinson's driving bass lines as a central melodic element.[44] The band's Warner Bros. era continued with 8th Street Nites in 1973, produced by Felix Pappalardi at Electric Lady Studios, incorporating blues influences and tracks such as "Linin' Track" that highlight the trio's rhythmic synergy.[45] Another Fine Mess followed in 1975, introducing keyboards by guest Dave McRae and Hodgkinson's first recorded vocals, blending jazz improvisation with rock structures on songs like "T.B. Blues."[46] The final 1970s studio effort, Activate (1976), produced by Emerson, Lake & Palmer drummer Carl Palmer, pushed the jazz-rock boundaries further with extended compositions and electric piano contributions from McRae. Post-dissolution in 1977, releases included live and archival material drawn from BBC sessions. The Human Bed (2002) on Hux Records compiled 1973–1974 radio performances, preserving the band's live intensity. Reunions in the 2000s yielded Askin' The Way (2003), a studio album on Cultural Foundation featuring original member Ron Aspery before his death in 2003.[47] In 2008, Hodgkinson reconvened a version of the group with saxophonist Rod Mason and drummer Paul Robinson for Back Door Too!, a studio recording on Rokoko Records (in-akustik), revisiting classic material alongside new compositions and marking a nostalgic return to the trio's fusion roots.[48][49] The band's output spans from 1972 to 2008 for primary releases, with subsequent archival efforts unearthing unreleased 1970s material on independent labels. Notable post-2012 issues include BBC In Concert (2013) on Gearbox Records, capturing a 1973 live broadcast; The Impulse Session (2023) on Bonfire Records, featuring a rare 1972 recording from Impulse Studios in Oslo; and Vienna Breakdown: The Recordings 1971–1976 (2025) on Esoteric Recordings, a comprehensive 5-CD box set compiling the Warner Bros. albums, BBC sessions, and bonus tracks.[14]| Album Title | Year | Type | Label | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Back Door | 1972 (reissue 1973) | Studio | Blakey Records / Warner Bros. | Debut; self-produced, bass-led fusion. |
| 8th Street Nites | 1973 | Studio | Warner Bros. | Produced by Felix Pappalardi; blues-jazz blend. |
| Another Fine Mess | 1975 | Studio | Warner Bros. | First vocals by Hodgkinson; guest keyboards. |
| Activate | 1976 | Studio | Warner Bros. | Produced by Carl Palmer; extended improvisations. |
| The Human Bed | 2002 | Live (BBC sessions) | Hux Records | 1973–1974 radio recordings. |
| Askin' The Way | 2003 | Studio | Cultural Foundation | Reunion album with Ron Aspery. |
| Back Door Too! | 2008 | Studio | Rokoko Records (in-akustik) | Credited to Colin Hodgkinson Group; reunion with new lineup; mix of old and new tracks. |
| BBC In Concert | 2013 | Live | Gearbox Records | Archival 1973 performance. |
| The Impulse Session | 2023 | Live/Studio | Bonfire Records | Unreleased 1972 session from Impulse Studios, Oslo. |
| Vienna Breakdown: The Recordings 1971–1976 | 2025 | Compilation/Box Set | Esoteric Recordings | 5 CDs including albums, sessions, and unreleased material. |