From Bach to Cello-Rock!

photo by Gretchen Robinette

Great to be featured in Indie Artist Buzz again!  This piece is hot off the press…..

Late this summer we featured rock cellist Noah Hoffeld in our Indie 5-0 series here on independent Artist Buzz. TODAY we get the opportunity to delve deeper into Noah’s psyche. Below tells us in his own words what the transition from Classical cellist to rock cellist was like:

Moving from Classical into Rock wasn’t easy to do. Though many artists in Rock’s brief history have been inspired by Classical Music, only a few were full-on classically trained.  When I think of it, just a handful come to mind- Zappa, Johnny Greenwood, and that great pianist who plays on Freebird. I’m sure there’s a bunch I don’t know of. In Jazz, there’s Miles who, like me, attended Juilliard. It’s cause Classical Music is a very picky head, almost religious in its worldview. Devotees eschew other music like zealots shun a foreign prophet. Though I’ve known some Classical musicians to use Rock as a muscle relaxant, for one to actually pick up a guitar would be beyond bizarre and would cause everyone, them and anyone in a Marshall Stack’s radius, extreme discomfort. Why? Because from a young age they’re taught to revere Classical compositions like Sacred Scrolls. Then they feel powerless to leave anything worthwhile of their own to the future, beyond their interpretation of what has come before. And when asked to improvise, most recoil in utter dread and shame. Sad, no?

To prison-break that mind-cell takes enormous desire, or overwhelming need, like in my case. If you’ve been to the movies, you know the music teacher determined to make you great or destroy you in the process. After four years of abuse, I wasn’t gonna blaze a mind-blowing solo trail, unseating Yo-Yo Ma. And as I was graduating, cello was just making its way into Rock with geniuses like Nirvana. Perfect timing! In sessions with Rock musicians, I discovered new challenges without the sticky head-trips.

I found being around songwriting was infectious and it wasn’t long before I was writing too. Really just a hobby at the time, I liked the results and the process. I kept at it while observing the means and methods of the masters. My hands on the cello, my ears on the songs: how a lyric was shaped to powerful effect or a turnaround thrust a pre into a chorus. Songwriting is wizardry for sure. Me, the Sorcerer’s Apprentice. 

Now every time I tried to stop, writing came back. I was a surgeon trying to amputate his own arm and it wasn’t gonna happen without a lot of blood. Too much for me to shed and survive. So bit by bit, I learned to record and produce. I made my new LP ‘Play Human.’ Found my Inner Rocker. These days rocking out’s the only way I can fully express myself: The cello is there, weaving in and out of grungy guitars and f’d up synths- freed from the Classical cellblock. And I’m free too, to sail the High Seas of Rock and catch the big bad soundfish who swim the Inner Ear Canals.

Playing my own tunes gives me a deep satisfaction I never knew possible. I know Classical Music will always be in my heart. And I’ll always practice it to stretch my cello chops. Who knows? Maybe someday I’ll return to the Classical stage and perform. But for right now I’m happy rocking out, cello-shredding my days away for the Gods of Rock n’ Roll on High.

- Noah Hoffeld

Visit Noah’s website and Twitter to keep up to date with everything going on in the cellist’s world.

Germany Tour!

I had a beautiful 10 days in Germany, playing duo concerts with the wonderful Beatrix Becker, and doing my own solo...

Posted by Noah Hoffeld on Sunday, November 1, 2015
M Pire Magazine Feature

Photo by Gretchen Robinette

Great to be featured this month in M Pire Magazine.  Here's the piece in its entirety, followed by a free stream of the album in question….

Noah Hoffeld's passionate love songs and power ballads deliver his message that now is the best time for us to breathe and tune into who we are. Now in his debut album Play Human, he comes from the heart in eleven new songs that sing that message home. The soulful maturity of this rock record belies the fact that Hoffeld comes from a life in Classical Music. But playing Classical was never everything to Noah. Before graduating from Juilliard, he began pushing the limits by improvising, bringing rock and pop to the cello, and asking questions that would push his career beyond the ordinary.

Play Human follows on the heels of his single, 'One Family,' created for Martin Luther King Day 2015. The song was inspired by the intensity of current events and by what Noah calls "the ever-growing imperative of Dr. King's Dream." The vocal, set to piano and strings, rallies against abuses of power and backpedaling of the civil rights train. The self-produced song and music video were an internet success, shared by over 100 people in their first week on Facebook. Noah's musical life is varied, alternating producing and touring his own music, playing featured cello for the likes of Renee Fleming, Philip Glass, Bebel Gilberto, and Brad Mehldau, recording cello solos for films like The Skeleton Twins (Kristin Wiig and Bill Hader), Experimenter (Peter Saarsgard), and for Showtime's Happyish and an upcoming HBO miniseries. And he's a composer himself, currently attached to two indie films in production. He enjoys arranging and producing other artists and his productions recently earned him a place on the endorsed artist roster of hallowed Moog synthesizers.

In addition to rocking out on guitar and keys, Noah plays what he calls Cello-Rock. He sings while playing cello, creating pulsing, rhythmic patterns on the strings with the bow, and adds vocals to ambient layers of looped cello and drum programming. 'Same Old Song' - the first single off Play Human- is a cello-based romp dedicated to the grooves he grew up on. Noah takes us back and lures us into our own musical memories with the infectious beat of this pop-rock tune. Hoffeld performs powerful and intimate solo concerts, singing from the cello, piano and guitar, while incorporating electronics, live looping and beat production, as well as explosive full band shows. All the performances include mesmerizing instrumental numbers plumbing the emotional bounds of his cello playing. Critics say his songs and shows have "depth and soul" (The Berkshire Eagle), are "moving and haunting" (SeeDance.com) and are "filled with expressiveness and warmth" (Tablet Magazine).

Growing up in a home that valued the arts turned Noah towards cello, piano and voice at a very early age. But it was his parents' eclectic listening habits that formed him. "Mom and Dad were both fanatical about art and classical music and they both worked in the arts, but they listened to all sorts of things. On any given day I was equally likely to soak in a Mozart Serenade as I was to be getting down to a new cut by Michael Jackson. I sang in the Metropolitan Opera Boys' Choir and went to pre-college at Juilliard on the weekends, but at night I was devouring records by Bowie, Lou Reed and the Beatles." All those influences find a home in Play Human.

The debut LP, produced by Hoffeld and mixed by Mark Plati (Bowie, The Cure, Philip Glass) is the culmination of his musical searching and deeply held beliefs. "I always wanted to share my view of things through the cello, purely through sound. But I came to a certain place where I realized using lyrics was going to be necessary. I had some very specific things I wanted to say. I couldn't stop playing for playing's sake but I needed to add another dimension to the picture." After graduating, he started to write songs. And spurred on by an intense need to communicate to a broader audience than just Classical fans, he taught himself to play guitar and bass, and to produce tracks to make those songs come alive.

A longtime devotee of yoga and meditation, Noah believes in the power of reflection to create the change we're looking for in our lives, and he takes to heart Gandhi's 'Be the change that you wish to see in the World." The title song 'Play Human' incites us to take a bigger view of life, and to stand up for our brothers and sisters. The chorus shouts out, 'Why don't we all play human for a change? Loving each other shouldn't be out of range." And the thrashing 'Role of Rock' insists that saving the World is the purpose Rock was born for.

Noah has been in a photo spread with supermodel Iman and taught cello to James Taylor. And he's a surfing novitiate at Brooklyn's Rockaway Beach.

Noah recently released his single "Same Old Song", and already received high praises. Baeble Music says the debut song has an "irresistible 80's feel", and declares that "Noah Hoffeld's "cello rock" is the new sound you never knew you needed."

Web/Social Media Links: http://www.noahhoffeld.com

Enjoy the free album stream and please follow me on SoundCloud! Have a beautiful one…..