Artist

STUART HAMM

Genre: Jazz ,Fusion ,Guitar Virtuoso ,Hard Rock
Origin: U.S.A
Listen on Coda
Bassist Stuart Hamm first gained widespread attention through his collaborations in the 1980s with two prominent hard rock guitarists, Joe Satriani and Steve Vai. Born in 1960 and raised in Indiana, he grew up in a household steeped in music, with a father who worked as a musicologist and authored instructional texts, a mother who performed and taught opera, and a brother who specialized in Classical Northern Indian Music. After the family moved to Virginia during his teenage years, Hamm took up the bass and immersed himself in the intricate approaches of fusion groups such as Return to Forever and the Mahavishnu Orchestra, alongside progressive rock acts like Yes, while also performing in his high school jazz ensemble. At age 18 he entered Boston’s Berklee College of Music, where classmates included soon-to-be prominent players such as Vai, Steve Smith, Randy Coven, Victor Bailey, and Jeff Berlin. Hamm developed a close connection with Vai that led him to relocate to California in the early 1980s, supplying bass on Vai’s debut solo album Flex-Able after Vai had already worked with Frank Zappa and David Lee Roth.

Through Vai, Hamm met Satriani, his former guitar instructor. Satriani’s reputation grew with the instrumental releases Not of This Earth in 1986 and Surfing with the Alien in 1987, after which Hamm joined the touring band and contributed to Dreaming #11 in 1988 and Flying in a Blue Dream in 1989. Guitar magazines began to spotlight Hamm’s technical command during this period, prompting three solo albums that showcased his abilities yet achieved limited commercial reach: Radio Free Albemuth in 1988, Kings of Sleep in 1989, and The Urge in 1991. He also rejoined Vai for the 1990 album Passion and Warfare. Like many guitar-focused musicians of the era, Hamm became closely identified with a signature instrument, the Kubicki X Factor.

Although the 1990s brought a period of reduced visibility, Hamm reemerged toward the decade’s end by forming the technically demanding trio GHS with guitarist Frank Gambale and drummer Steve Smith. The group issued Show Me What You Can Do in 1998, Light Beyond in 2000, and GHS 3 in 2002. He also released his own Outbound in 2000 after a nine-year gap and resumed work with Satriani on G3: Live in Concert in 1997, Crystal Planet in 1998, and Live in San Francisco in 2001. Additional session credits accumulated over the years with artists including Richie Kotzen, Adrian Legg, Michael Schenker, Steve Fister, and James Murphy, along with appearances on tribute projects devoted to Peter Green, Queen, Ozzy Osbourne, Rush, Aerosmith, and Alice Cooper.