Daniel Smith

"Absolutely brilliant..... A boogie piano maestro with a top class band ... a great performance" - PAUL JONES - BBC RADIO 2

"Dazzlingly accomplished boogie woogie and blues piano" - THE GUARDIAN

"This guy is something else - he sure knows the blues.... I ain't seen nothin' like this since Otis Spann and Memphis Slim" - MOJO BUFORD

"A serious challenger to Jools Holland as the UK's No 1 boogie pianist"
BLUES IN BRITAIN

"Daniel Smith is the only man I've seen play bottleneck piano (with a beer bottle). He is quite simply one of the UK's finest... he just gets better." - BLUES AND RHYTHM

"Daniel Smith is one of the best blues pianists on the European circuit. He can boogie, swing and slam out slow blues like an old master - always crisp, note perfect and his adventutous approach always makes you sit up and listen." - RED LICK MAGAZINE

"For small-combo jump blues look no further than The Daniel Smith Blues Band."
BLUES REVIEW, USA

BAND LINE UP

GALLERY

PUBLICITY


Blues In Britain - Special Feature
click here

Pictures of the Trowbridge Festival
click here

 

Radio Interview on BBC Radio Norfolk - Click Listen & Read
Daniel al
so spoke to BBC Radio 4/World Service as part of the Year Of The Blues feature

 

Five Nominations for the
British Blues Connection's annual

BEST UK BLUES KEYBOARDIST

A PERSONAL BIOG
Daniel Smith is described as the world's greatest Dutch-Indonesian-Anglo-Scottish blues and boogie woogie piano player - and it's probably true! He learnt boogie woogie from his Dutch-Indonesian uncle on regular visits to Holland, his mother's family having emigrated there post-War from Jakarta, Indonesia, where his maternal grandfather had been a jazz piano player as well as an official in the Dutch colonial civil service.

Daniel's Warrington-born father, the artist Bryan Smith, also inspired the young Daniel (having met Daniel's mother on an art scholarship in Amsterdam and moved with his young family to Dollar, Scotland) with his record collection of Fats Domino, Memphis Slim and Jerry Lee Lewis LPs.
Daniel then gave up piano for 8 years, as he left Scotland, studied languages, trained as a teacher and taught overseas in Italy, Germany, Turkey, Egypt and Portugal.

He returned to the UK (London) in the mid-nineties when, on hearing a radio ad on Jazz FM, Daniel had to be persuaded to attend an audition for Sonny Black, (whom he joined) thinking he wouldn't be good enough! Daniel has since not looked back and formed his own band in 1999, which is still
going strong today. He has recorded eight albums

Whilst in London he taught EAL and SEN in comprehensive schools for 13 years before giving up full-time teaching for a while to concentrate fully on music and moving back to Scotland.  Daniel currently combines his music gig schedule with piano tuition and some university English language teaching in Edinburgh

 

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MUSIC BIOG.
Daniel Smith is one of the most exciting talents to emerge on the British blues scene in recent years. In 1994, he first shot to prominence with Sonny Black, gaining rave reviews from press, audiences and fellow musicians alike. 1999 saw him launch his own solo career and form The Daniel Smith Blues Band.

Virtuoso live performances, his acclaimed debut album 'Southside Boogie' - re-released in 2006, BBC Radio sessions, tours backing USA bluesmen, several Edinburgh International Jazz & Blues Festival appearances as well as appearances on the European festival circuit have earned him as string of nominations as Best UK Blues Keyboardist.

In 2002 he released the album 'Dreamtime', also featuring BBC award-winning saxophonist Alan Barnes, to much acclaim and BBC radio play and launched on the New Note record label in April 2003. He has since recorded four more CDs - the band project 'Chicken and Egg' ("For small-combo jump blues, look no further." Blues Review, USA) as well as an acoustic collaboration with George Pearson, 'Sitting On Top Of The World' ("one of the best British blues albums I've heard." Red Lick Magazine), his excellent and popular solo piano showcase, 'So Low Boogie' and his most recent project, 'Once In A Blue Moon' (featuring his current line-up and an array of talent including Earl Green and Alan Glen).

Collaboration with the other side of the Atlantic is also testament to Daniel's talent, with some fantastic critical acclaim for his recordings in the USA blues press and tours with American artists old and new - Mojo Buford, ex-Muddy Waters harp man and latterly, Dave Specter, the dynamically impressive Chicago-based Delmark guitarist. These collaborations have lead to fulsome praise, comparisons with some of the American blues piano greats and invitations to play Stateside.

As a solo artist and with The Daniel Smith Blues Band, Daniel mixes virtuoso driving barrelhouse boogie woogie with an authentic down-home blues piano style, reflecting influences from Albert Ammons, Memphis Slim and Otis Spann through to Jools Holland.

This is flavoured with refreshing and rhythmic Dr John/Professor Longhair-inspired New Orleans material and cool, classy Gene Harris/ Ramsey Lewis jazz-blues grooves; excellent original material and his soulful bluesy voice set him apart as an exceptional performer.

He has a rare technical and musical ability to produce sustained and inspired keyboards work across the whole spectrum of the blues genre. Whether performing standards or his excellent original material, Daniel Smith is commonly recognised as an outstanding keyboards talent and a boogie woogie pianist without parallel.

Add to this his dry, laid-back, on-stage humour and an absolute killer band - (featuring some of Britain's finest, most experienced musicians) - and you have a class act invoking a genuine sense of the old-time, good-time barrelhouse and speakeasy.
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NEWS
2011 - 2012

After 6 months off the road, Daniel resumes touring with the band in February 2011 throughout the midlands taking in some favourite venues (and visiting old friends) and welcoming the excellent Al Vincent on guitar for this tour.

In addition, throughout the first half of 2011, he has a series of function gigs in Scotland and is running tuition and blues/jazz piano workshops from home in Fife, which run all year round (see the tuition section).

May and June 2011 see a whole series of tour dates in England in Leics, Worcs and Notts with bookings, private functions and arts council tour dates already provisionally booked for 2012. As always, details in the gigs section!

Daniel has put together material for another album, and as and when he has the time and money...

Daniel and the Daniel Smith Blues Band send everyone their best wishes and hope to see you at a gig some time in 2011 - 2012!

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The Daniel Smith Band
Oval Tavern, East Croydon 26/06/08
Blues In Britain magazine

For those who don’t know, Daniel Smith is one of the foremost exponents of boogie woogie piano in the UK and is rightly highly regarded by fans of that music wherever he goes.
Daniel resides in Scotland so a trip to the Oval Tavern is an infrequent occurrence, so it was a privileged crowd that saw his performance on this occasion. He was supported by Jon T-Bone Taylor on guitar, Jim Mercer on upright and electric bass, and Pete Miles on drums.

It was evident from the start of this performance that the whole band was ‘on the money’, it was one of those nights when four musicians fused into a band that totally clicked and played at a level that was a sight to behold. As I arrived the band were playing “On The Outside” with great ensemble work. On “Boogie Woogie on Swannee River” all the musicians soloed, their solos being totally balanced with the ensemble sound. T-Bone was to the fore on guitar on “Friday Night” with a fine extended solo and Pete was playing some great drum fills on “Taint Nobody’s Business”. On “Low Down Dog” it was just Daniel on piano and Pete on drums – and boy did they motor! There was great guitar and a fine ‘Hammond’ sound on “Just Because” and some great keyboard work on “The Chicken And The Egg”. This fast and furious set finished with a rousing rendition of Memphis Slim’s “Everyday I Have The Blues”.

The second set kicked off with Jim Mercer on vocals for Eddie Boyd’s “Too Bad” and some fine solos. After one of Daniel’s own fine instrumentals we had St Louis Jimmy Oden’s “Evil Ways” with more fine soloing, then “Bossing The Blues”, a rip roaring, frenetic instrumental with a great guitar solo. The band then motored through Willie Dixon’s “My Babe” then tore into “Big Frank’s Fish Fry” and roared into the funky “High Heel Sneakers” segueing into “The In Crowd” and back. Next came a boogie woogie tour de force with Daniel playing “Pine Top’s Boogie Woogie” just supported by Pete on drums, this was a marvelous exercise in syncopation with some excellent drum pyrotechnics! This segued into “See See Rider” with the whole band joining in. The finale was “Playing Your Fool” with all the stops pulled out.

This was a bravura performance from all the musicians with Daniel Smith at the epicentre. This was a wonderful night’s entertainment from a band that was simply inspired. It was quite clear that the band enjoyed the experience just as much as the audience, and so they should – it was a tremendous performance. I for one can’t wait to see them again! Daniel will be back at the Oval in September so don’t miss him, it’s well worth the trip. - Bill Smith

 

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Daniel at Hooker Blues Club in Wrexham
Photo by Mike Dean of EyeImagery

mike@eyeimagery.co.uk
www.eyeimagery.co.uk

 

Daniel plays in Wiltshire


THE ALBUMS

Once In A Blue Moon

Daniel's latest album and a really great combination between a throw-back to some of the older down-home favourites - Otis Spann, 'Honky Tonk Train', 'Pinetop's Boogie Woogie', 'Rock Me Baby' - and some fabulous new material, such as the title track and the rollocking 'Big Frank's Fish Fry'.  Watch out for terrific guest appearances from Alan Glen on some rip-roaring harmonica (surely the UK's finest blues harmonicist) and the always classy soulful vocals of Earl Green. As Daniel clearly has a ball, bashing out the whole range of boogie and blues on the studio grand piano he is joined by his regular line-up, Peter Miles on drums, T-Bone Taylor on guitar and Andy Jones on bass and vocals producing a tight, polished and gritty series of compositions and interpretations on this, his eighth album and perhaps his most enjoyable project to date.

So Low Boogie

'So Low Boogie' - Daniel's solo piano blues and boogie woogie CD, 10 tracks, 9 originals, stomping boogies, melodic self-compositions, old-style downhome
rough-and-ready piano blues, soulful blues/jazz crossover tracks and more. £10.00 per copy inc P&P
To place an order please call or text
07847 393318
or email daniel

 Chicken and Egg

Featuring:

Dave Briggs - lead guitar & vocals
Dino Coccia - drums
Roger Cotton - Hammond organ
Alan Glen - guitar, harmonica & vocals
Jim Mercer - bass & vocals

12 TRACKS - 9 ORIGINALS ALL CLASSICS ... brilliant boogie woogie, dynamite downhome Chicago, blistering blues-rock, cool-infused jazz/blues crossover and a dash of New Orleans - an absolute must!

£10.00 per copy inc P&P
To place an order please call or text
07847 393318;
or email daniel
or USA Purchasers DWM Music

br2magazine has this to say

Blues & Rhythm 191 (August 2004), p. 39

I''ll lay out my opinion from the off, as far as this reviewer is concerned - Dan Smith is one hell of a piano player. He delivers thundering boogies with a rock solid left hand ("Dean's Boogie", "Boogie Woogie On Swanee River"). He can also lay down a thumping Amos Milburn type blues ("Friday Night") with Dave Briggs (no relation to our esteemed reviews editor) on vocal.

Want a little soul jazz? Smith can do that as well ("Hey John", "Jungle Juice,") or a straight ahead blues instrumental like "Captian Morgan" with Alan Glen providing the harp solo. It's all here in the grooves of this cracking twelve tracker.

Strongly recommended to fans of blues piano everywhere.

Phil Wight

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br1- BLUES REVIEW MAGAZINE, USA

"For small-combo jump blues, look no further than the Daniel Smith Blues Band, whose Chicken and Egg (Pinetops 44) is divided between instrumentals and vocal numbers.
Hear rollicking boogie-woogies ("Dean's Boogie", "Swanee River"),jazzy tracks (the title song is cut from the same cloth as "The In Crowd"),and blues (Eddie Boyd's "Too Bad", "Friday Night", "Take A Gamble On Me"). "Hey John", a sad note to a suicide ("Why did you do what you did that day?"), is full of tension, sung over upbeat music broken only by a couple of stormy guitar solos. "Voodoo King" is spare, haunting, yet swinging. On the hot "Captain Morgan", Dino Coccia hits a snappy double shuffle, Smith's piano sparkles, and Alan Glen turns in throaty guitar and meltdown harp."

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 Dreamtime

nn1 Distributed by New Note Records and available in all good record stores  

Featuring:

Alan Barnes - award-winning saxophonist
Dave Briggs - guitar
Dino Coccia - drums
Roger Cotton - Hammond organ player (Peter Green Splinter Group)
Alan Glen - guitar & harmonica from The Yardbirds
Jon T-Bone Taylor - guitar
Jeff Walker - bass

12 TRACKS - 11 ORIGINALS ALL CLASSICS ... brilliant boogie woogie, dynamite downhome Chicago, blistering blues-rock, cool-infused jazz/blues crossover and a dash of New Orleans - an absolute must!

£10.00 per copy inc P&P
To place an order please call or text
07847 393318;
or email daniel
or USA Purchasers DWM Music

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 Southside Boogie

Back by popular demand, Daniel Smith's exciting, excellent and popular debut album, Southside Boogie (2000) has been remastered, re-released and has three brand new stomping boogie piano solo bonus tracks to boot.
£10.00 per copy inc P&P
To place an order please call or text
07847 393318;
or email daniel

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Press Releases/Quotes

"Undoubtedly one of the UK's leading blues and boogie woogie keyboards players today." The Stage

"Daniel Smith is one of the most exciting young pianists to emerge on the UK blues scene in recent years. Dynamic and extremely talented, he is clearly gifted technically, yet retains a refreshing, down-to-earth and very rhythmic style, which he blends expertly with his very expressive vocals." Just Jazz

"His debut album could have been recorded in some smoky 'N'Awlins' roadhouse... the boy sure knows his way around the blue notes on an old Joanna. With shades of Pinetop Smith, Jerry Lee Lewis and Dr John, this is accelerator crushing stuff." Classic American Car magazine

"Astounding boogie piano. Smith works up a real sweat, squeezing more notes into three minutes than most people manage in a lifetime." Blues on Stage

"Smith has a delightful light-fingered touch, conjuring up the magic of the great blues pianists and the boogie woogie masters." Juke Blues

"Daniel Smith.... blends subtlety, power, feeling and tremendous ability, reflecting the influence of Memphis Slim and Dr John - he plays a mean, driving, barrelhouse boogie woogie."
Venue Magazine

"Daniel Smith is out of the top drawer... he is awesome on keyboards."
Scott Duncan, Blueprint

"His foot-tapping boogie woogie blew me away - he turned the place into a good time barrelhouse."
Linda Fisher, Blueprint

"Keyboardist Dan Smith is a superb soloist in his own right."
Blues Review, USA

"Rocking piano blues and stompin' boogie woogie."
Time Out

"On the self-penned 'Southside Boogie' [Daniel] Smith works up a real sweat, squeezing more notes into 3 minutes than most people manage in a lifetime."
Blues On Stage

"... the best boogie piano heard in a long time... with his jazzy vocals, this guy is seriously talented!"
Blueprint

"Dazzlingly accomplished boogie woogie and blues pianist."
The Guardian

Click here to read about band line ups and personnel.

MORE REVIEWS

Daniel Smith and Jon T-Bone Taylor
Aikman's Cellar Bar, St Andrews 28/11/07
Blues In Britain magazine

The crowd at Aikman’s soon filled out as show-time approached. Although Aikman's is one of their regular stopping off points, this was my first encounter with the pair as a duo.

There was no script or set list here, with the dynamic duo (Smith on piano, Taylor on guitar) just playing it as they felt it all night long. Both were on top form, as they pounded and picked their way through a couple of excellent sets of blues, boogie woogie and jazz from the likes of Big Bill Broonzy ("Key To The Highway"), Ray Charles ("Hallelujah I Love Her So") and Chuck Berry ("Johnny B. Goode").
Whilst most of the material on offer was not original, it was served up in a very original way, with Smith often setting out on one tune, and eventually ending up back there having taken Taylor on a journey that even digressed into Beethoven, and Elton John!

Taylor was more than equal to the task, though, and whilst several of the crowd may not have been there just to watch the duo, by the end they had pretty much all been won over. This was helped in no small part by an improvised boogie-woogie version of Happy Birthday for one of the punters.

It all added up to a hugely entertaining evening. Smith's banter raised plenty of smiles in the crowd; I never knew, for example, that "Bright Lights Big City" was inspired by St Andrews! Taylor just let his fingers do his talking for him. The natural symbiosis between the two was a delight to behold.

Anyone who stayed home to watch the football missed a real treat. Make sure you catch them next time around.

Gordon Baxter, Blues in Britain

The Daniel Smith Blues Band Kettleshulme Village Hall, Cheshire 5/10/07
Blues In Britain magazine

This was the Daniel Smith Blues Band's second gig on a tour encompassing four separate villages on successive nights arranged by Cheshire's Rural Touring Network as part of their Autumn event programme. The B5470, by day considered to be one of the friendliest hill roads in the Peak District, certainly takes on a different aspect at night, and it was with some relief on alighting in a seemingly deserted Kettleshulme to be directed to the village hall in the company of a local couple who had literally just stepped out of their front door to go to the gig.

The keyboard maestro warmed up the good sized audience with three numbers from his Chicken and Egg CD. The title track, 'Bossing the Blues' and 'Friday Night' allowed fellow members Jon T-Bone Taylor, (guitar) George Pearson (bass) and Pete Miles (drums) ample room to flex their musical muscles. 'Swannee River' has remained a favourite in Daniel's instrumental repertoire since his days with Sonny Black and was attacked with his usual panache before slowing things down for Jon's subtle guitar to take prominence on Bessie Smith's 'Ain't Nobody's Business’. The next number found Daniel, metaphorically, placing himself in the lion's den. The challenge of getting a barrelhouse boogie out of a neglected upright that stood beside the stage proved irresistible, and was gloriously achieved after he removed its top, allowing Jon (still on the platform) to continually loosen the stiff hammers with the aid of a long pole window-opener; combining the sparkle of a Fourth of July baton-twirler with the military efficiency of a Sealed Knot pikeman! 'Hey John', (one of Daniel's up-tempo originals) found T-Bone's outstandingly fluid fretwork featured heavily once again before George, on semi-acoustic guitar, took centre stage for the next two numbers. Cyril Tawney’s 'Sally Free and Easy' rode a gentle rumba rhythm. The first half concluded with more fleet-fingered magic from Daniel on the rumbling 'Southside Boogie'.

Proceedings reopened leisurely with 'Hallelujah I Love Her So' and 'Key To The Highway', before the band's tightness was emphasized when Robert Lockwood Jnr's 'Take A Little Walk With Me' segued into a fantastic Ramsey Lewis styled 'The In Crowd' before metamorphasising once again into the frantic 'Boogie Bash'. Pete was then given his own chance to shine when his fellow band members left the stage allowing him to launch into a mesmeric drum solo involving the full spectrum of the kit that, as it progressed, gave every indication of continuing well into the night. Not even Daniel, menacingly brandishing a fire extinguisher, could dampen his enthusiasm - the drummer simply incorporated it into his percussive armoury, leaving the hapless band leader, still holding the apparatus, to trade long-suffering looks with the audience like a slim-line Oliver Hardy. When normal service was resumed it was back into jazzy territory with the swinging original 'Dream Time' reminiscent of some of Dave Brubeck's compositions. Jon's killer Blues licks on 'Johnny B. Goode' ably demonstrated that this perennial favourite doesn't have to be taken at motor racing pace to be exciting before he and Daniel, prompted by half time requests, made a popular return to the upright raising the roof again with another wonderful improvised boogie medley that incorporated the piano styles of Jerry Lee Lewis, George Gershwin, Russ Conway and even Les Dawson along the way! The rhythm section returned for a tough version of Lieber and Stoller's 'Kansas City' that concluded a fabulous night's entertainment.

Martin Byrom, Blues in Britain

 

Humour key for Daniel

26 July 2007

Hertfordshire Advertiser

HUMOUR provided the keynote for the Daniel Smith Blues Band on Saturday at The Maltings Arts Theatre in St Albans.

Had Daniel Smith not been the king of the keyboards, he would still have won a few hearts with his sardonic, dry sense of humour - and his hunky dark good looks didn't go unnoticed either by my female companions.

It made a refreshing change to have a keyboard player at the centre of the action instead of the inevitable guitarist. Not that democratic Dan hogged the limelight. I've never seen such a generous frontman making sure his players got their fair share of the limelight.

Even drummer Pete Miles scored a 10-minute drum solo. It's a long time since I've seen that but then it's rare to find a drummer of this calibre who can capture people's attention with a flick of a stick.

After leaving the stage to the drums, Daniel came back on holding a fire extinguisher which caused a chuckle but, just as we wondered if this was a hint to wind it up, he held it up horizontally for Pete to play.

This band look at each other, "talk" to each other in a non-verbal way and appreciate each other in the way that true professionals acknowledge each others' skills.

What struck me was that we had no flim-flam. No-one was glammed up or striking poses. The window-dressing was superfluous because these guys can play.

Lead guitarist Jon 'T-Bone' Taylor, hunched over his instrument in such a contorted, loving way you could almost see him suffering for his art, made me think of a chef slaving over a hot stove but he certainly cooked up a storm.

Bass player George Pearson - in true deadpan bass-player style - kept in the background but blossomed when he sang a couple of numbers. I almost think he is a better blues singer than Daniel.

But when you play boogie-woogie like Dan the man you don't need a strong vocal ability. I felt he was at his happiest on the instrumental numbers. Don't get me wrong. The man can sing but it's carried by his powerful playing.

Just running one hand lightly across a few keys he could create a whole range of sound so fluent, so rich that you could only marvel at his control.

As the evening drew to a close he treated us to a rendering of bottleneck piano playing - something I had never seen before.

Another first on the night included a well-deserved standing ovation at the end. Move over Jools Holland - a new king of the keyboards reigns.

Once again Bob Ayre, who puts on these storming blues sessions under his Shades of Blues umbrella, has brought something spellbindingly wonderful to St Albans. We owe him a debt of thanks.

MARY BROSNAN

 

Daniel Smith
Aberdour, KY3 0TX, Scotland
Tel:  01383 860 041

Mob:
07847 393318

email:
daniel