NEWSLETTER

DERRICK HODGE (Thu, 12/4/25)

All Ages
Derrick Hodge
Thursday, December 04
Doors: 7 pm // Show: 7:30 pm
$38.70 to $102.10

Derrick Hodge is one of contemporary music’s most complete and complex artists. Driven by a passion for music rather than genre, he is defined only by his multiplicity. Lauded as a composer and revered as one of the great bassists and musicians of his generation, Hodge’s solo projects-Live Today (2013), The Second (2016), and Color of Noize (2020)-have been met with acclaim from critics and audiences alike. His albums are rich, raw and revelatory, reflecting his breadth of musicality and influence; from roots in the church, to an undercurrent of hip-hop, neo soul and eternal reverence for melody and classical composition. Like the artist, Hodge’s music is defined only by its multiplicity .

Growing up just outside Philadelphia, Hodge’s talent was quickly recognized by the luminaries of the city’s neo-soul movement. As a college student, he became the bass player and musical director of choice for music pioneers like Jill Scott, Maxwell, Floetry, Nas, Common, James Poyser and Musiq Soulchild. At the same time, he was forging a career in jazz circles with legendary musicians including Terence Blanchard, Donald Byrd, Mulgrew Miller and Bootsie Barnes, while also performing in his university’s orchestra.

Hodge has played a foundational role in a wealth of groundbreaking projects and historic firsts. In 2022, he directed the music for the Academy Awards and arranged for Nas’s performance at the Grammys. As part of CNN’S Juneteenth celebration, conducted the first all Black orchestra to perform at the Hollywood Bowl. In 2014 he became the first Black composer to compose Hip Hop for the National Symphony when he acted as orchestral arranger and music director for the 20th anniversary celebration of Illmatic. The event, conducted by Steven Reineke at the Kennedy Center and named one of the top moments in hip hop history by Fender Magazine, was also the first time hip hop was ever performed by the National Symphony Orchestra. He was also the first Black composer to write strings for hip hop at Carnegie Hall and to write symphonic music for hip hop with the Houston Symphony.

This habit of breaking new ground and forging new paths speaks to how significant a cultural force Hodge is both on and beyond the stage. In 2017 he was commissioned by the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture to write an installation of music that accompanies their permanent exhibition exploring geography, memory, and imagination, The Power of Place. Hodge also composed for Social Dance, part of NMAAHC’s Cultural Expressions exhibition exploring African American and African diaspora culture, and its Making a Way Out of No Way, which pays tribute to the creativity, agency and resilience of Black people in the U.S.

Throughout his life, Hodge has devoted himself to projects that elevate and animate the African American legacy: the struggle but also-and always-the poetry and the triumph too. This ability to honor and advance both culture and people is the principle thread which weaves together Hodge’s work.

On August 26, Derrick Hodge will release The Second, his sophomore album for Blue Note Records which finds the 2-time GRAMMY-winner taking on the roles of producer, composer and multi-instrumentalist to present a singular vision. The results are once rich, raw and revelatory, with Hodge forgoing a conventional band approach and instead playing all of the instruments and contributing vocals himself with only a few exceptions – drums from Mark Colenburg on three tracks and one track featuring horns performed by trumpeter Keyon Harrold, trombonist Corey King, and tenor saxophonist Marcus Strickland.

The Second is available for pre-order now on CD or digital download. Fans who pre-order the download will immediately receive the title track which is also available as a single on streaming services.

“I wanted to create something that exposed myself artistically, with a heartbeat for the people,” says Hodge. “My hope is for this sound to uplift people, help them get through whatever, and show that I’m all in for creating music for the rest of my life and career.”

After years as an essential band member in groups led by artists including trumpeter Terence Blanchard, keyboardist Robert Glasper, rapper Common, and R&B singers Jill Scott and Maxwell, Hodge stepped out on his own in 2013 with the release of Live Today, his debut album which introduced a strikingly original voice of his own.

“Mr. Hodge has made a cinematic word of his own,” declared The New York Times in their glowing review of Live Today. JazzTimes called the album “a focused, cohesive and artistically ambitious record,” noting that it’s “identity, and lasting beauty, is found in his arrangements,” and praising how naturally Hodge’s sound wove together jazz and hip hop: “the hypnotic morphing of textures and timbres within these liquid arrangements herald new chemistry and creative fuel.”

The track listing for The Second is as follows:

1. The Second
2. Transitions
3. Song 3
4. You Believed
5. World Go Round
6. Heart Of A Dreamer
7. Underground Rhapsody
8. Clock Strike Zero
9. For Generations
10. Don Blue
11. Going
12. From Me To You
Skip to content