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C. B. Hudson

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C.B. Hudson
C.B. Hudson. Photo by Dan Lindner
C.B. Hudson. Photo by Dan Lindner
Background information
Born (1974-10-08) October 8, 1974 (age 49)
GenresRock
Occupation(s)Guitarist
Instrument(s)Vocals
Guitar
LabelsUniversal Records

Charles Britton "C.B." Hudson III (born October 8, 1974 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma) is an American musician best known as the being the lead guitarist of the rock band Blue October.

Hudson grew up in Dallas and received his first guitar on his 10th birthday. He was influenced by MTV, was a fan of heavy metal and early on was influenced by guitarists Steve Vai, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Joe Satriani, and Eric Johnson.[1] Later, Hudson explored the music of jazz guitarists such as Norman Brown and George Benson.[2]

Hudson played lead guitar in the jazz band at Lake Highlands High School, and upon graduating, he attended Southwest Texas State University in San Marcos, earning a degree in psychology in 1999. He then decided to continue his education and enrolled in the MBA program. In October 2000, Hudson was having lunch at the Kismet Café in San Marcos and met Justin Furstenfeld of Blue October. Hudson introduced himself and passed along his demo recording to Furstenfeld. Hudson auditioned for the band, and was invited to be lead guitarist. Hudson's first concert with Blue October was December 9, 2000 at Lion's Pavilion in San Marcos. At the end of the Fall 2000 semester, Hudson left grad school with nine hours remaining on his degree, and joined Blue October's Consent to Treatment tour.

Consent to Treatment did not sell as well as had been hoped, and in 2002 Blue October was dropped from Universal Records. The band decided to continue independently and toured through the end of 2002.

On Blue October's next album, History for Sale, Hudson's heavy metal influence is especially apparent in the song "Somebody" which Hudson co-wrote with Justin Furstenfeld and Blue Miller. In 2003, the band released the album on independent Dallas-based label Brando Records. With their new album, the band tried once more for a major-label deal. They showcased the new material in New York City, and it was the song "Somebody" that sealed a new contract with Universal.[3]

For Blue October's album, Foiled, Hudson wrote the music for the popular song "18th Floor Balcony" and his jazz influence shines during live performances of "Everlasting Friend" which features a jazz guitar solo to close the song.

C.B. continues to write and record jazz-influenced instrumental solo material under his publishing name Reflxblue.

Hudson married former Houston Texans Cheerleader and choreographer, Elizabeth "Betsy" Rhett Young, in Austin, Texas January 16, 2010. They have a daughter, Ella James Hudson, who was born August 30, 2012.

On December 14, 2010 it was announced that C.B. Hudson was leaving Blue October to build a recording studio in Austin, which was opened on March 16, 2013 under the name Orb Recording Studios[4] in partnership with Matt Noveskey. Although he was no longer a member of the band, he contributed guitar to Blue October's 2011 single "The Chills" which appeared on their album Any Man in America. In 2013 C.B. rejoined Blue October for a three-show run in Texas. The band also tweeted photos from the studio recording sessions for their album Sway which pictured C.B. playing guitar. In April 2013 Blue October announced that C.B had officially rejoined the band.

Trivia

  • Kismet (the name of the café where Justin Furstenfeld and C.B. Hudson met) means "fate" in Turkish, Urdu, Hindi and Arabic.
  • C.B. Hudson and Blue October drummer Jeremy Furstenfeld were born on the same day.

Discography

References


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