What do Bon Iver's Justin Vernon, Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter and filmmaker Spike Lee have in common?
They all had a hand in Grammy-winning pianist Bruce Hornsby's daring new album, "Absolute Zero." As you can imagine, it's stylistically unclassifiable and enrichingly trippy.
Hornsby has been scoring Lee's projects — mostly his indie films and the Netflix series "She's Gotta Have It" — for over a decade. They met when Lee directed some videos for Hornsby in 1995.
"I've written 230-plus pieces of music [for Lee] ranging from 1 minute long to 4 minutes," said Hornsby, who performs Friday at the Pantages Theatre in Minneapolis. "Lots of these instrumental pieces — we call them cues — are fully formed. They wanted to be developed into songs.
"Fully six or seven of the songs on 'Absolute Zero' have their origin in Spike Lee film cues." It was a "crazy, intangible, strange process," he said, "putting words to an already completed musical picture."
His process with Hunter is also unconventional.
The pianist, who toured with the Dead from 1990 to '92 and has since sat in with various Dead musicians, had teamed up with Hunter on three previous pieces before working on "Take You There (Misty)" for this new album.
Hunter reached out to him in 2008. They've been writing long-distance ever since.