Mike Daly's Renascence album review
Posted: 17 Jun 2018 7:39 am
http://www.livegigsource.com/thanks-to- ... dal-steel/
Here is an excerpt of the review for Mike Daly's Renascence featuring LLOYD GREEN, DAN DUGMORE, BJ COLE, GREG LEISZ, ROBERT RANDOLPH and Mike Daly himself. The album is pure inspiration. In the review I did a track by track due to the frequency of genre and amazing guest talents contributing.
"Mike Daly’s Renascence album reminds me of a modern take of when all the classic pedal steel guitarists released instrumental albums. These guys released jazz albums that would knock the socks off of today’s jazz heads. Check out Buddy Emmons or Julian Tharpe. Some of these cats attempted to push themselves in a time of experimentation and discovery for the pedal steel. The tuning was changing and many people were all sharing ideas, which was different compared to the generation before that kept their tunings secret. Country rock was on the rise and most of these players learned playing Western Swing or Hawaiian, so country music was just something they did mostly for a paycheck. Go ahead and beat me up for saying this but when they played live at weddings, dives, or roadhouses I can guarantee they did not play strictly country. These albums let the artists stretch out while proving their skills and knowledge were not just solely honky tonk. Renascence has the energy you discover when vinyl digging and find an old Flying Fish label album or when a man name Scotty dedicated his life to promoting the steel guitar and personally produced steel guitar albums because he knew nobody else would BUT had to let others hear this music! The pedal steel instrumental album it reminds me most of is Suite Steel which featured five of the most prominent figures pushing boundaries in the 70’s. I’m positive that Mike Daly was inspired by Sneaky Pete and Red Rhodes when he heard that album. Sneaky Pete always rocked some of the craziest licks, and later on Red Rhodes made an album with plenty of FX that the steel probably wouldn’t even be recognizable to a novice. This album collides so many crazy licks with FX and filters that I had to ask Mike what was going on! Renascence is an album that will inspire the next generation of pedal steel guitarists. It is like a present-day version of Suite Steel and features five guests, each of whom play with their own style and push boundaries. It is safe to assume Mike Daly is reviving the art of pedal steel experimentation. This album is fresh and is breathing life into what felt like a void for pedal steel collaboration."
FULL REVIEW HERE:
http://www.livegigsource.com/thanks-to- ... dal-steel/
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Here is an excerpt of the review for Mike Daly's Renascence featuring LLOYD GREEN, DAN DUGMORE, BJ COLE, GREG LEISZ, ROBERT RANDOLPH and Mike Daly himself. The album is pure inspiration. In the review I did a track by track due to the frequency of genre and amazing guest talents contributing.
"Mike Daly’s Renascence album reminds me of a modern take of when all the classic pedal steel guitarists released instrumental albums. These guys released jazz albums that would knock the socks off of today’s jazz heads. Check out Buddy Emmons or Julian Tharpe. Some of these cats attempted to push themselves in a time of experimentation and discovery for the pedal steel. The tuning was changing and many people were all sharing ideas, which was different compared to the generation before that kept their tunings secret. Country rock was on the rise and most of these players learned playing Western Swing or Hawaiian, so country music was just something they did mostly for a paycheck. Go ahead and beat me up for saying this but when they played live at weddings, dives, or roadhouses I can guarantee they did not play strictly country. These albums let the artists stretch out while proving their skills and knowledge were not just solely honky tonk. Renascence has the energy you discover when vinyl digging and find an old Flying Fish label album or when a man name Scotty dedicated his life to promoting the steel guitar and personally produced steel guitar albums because he knew nobody else would BUT had to let others hear this music! The pedal steel instrumental album it reminds me most of is Suite Steel which featured five of the most prominent figures pushing boundaries in the 70’s. I’m positive that Mike Daly was inspired by Sneaky Pete and Red Rhodes when he heard that album. Sneaky Pete always rocked some of the craziest licks, and later on Red Rhodes made an album with plenty of FX that the steel probably wouldn’t even be recognizable to a novice. This album collides so many crazy licks with FX and filters that I had to ask Mike what was going on! Renascence is an album that will inspire the next generation of pedal steel guitarists. It is like a present-day version of Suite Steel and features five guests, each of whom play with their own style and push boundaries. It is safe to assume Mike Daly is reviving the art of pedal steel experimentation. This album is fresh and is breathing life into what felt like a void for pedal steel collaboration."
FULL REVIEW HERE:
http://www.livegigsource.com/thanks-to- ... dal-steel/
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