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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 "For small-combo jump
blues look no further than The Daniel Smith Blues Band." |
Pictures of the Trowbridge
Festival |
Radio Interview on BBC Radio Norfolk - Click
Listen & Read
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Five Nominations
for the A PERSONAL BIOG
NEWS
The Daniel Smith Band |
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Daniel
at Hooker Blues Club in Wrexham
Daniel plays in Wiltshire THE ALBUMS 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' - Daniel's solo
piano blues and boogie woogie CD, 10 tracks, 9
originals, stomping boogies, melodic
self-compositions, old-style downhome Featuring: Dave Briggs - lead guitar & 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
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 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"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. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Dreamtime
Featuring: Alan Barnes - award-winning saxophonist 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 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Southside BoogieBack 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. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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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." "Daniel Smith is out of the top drawer... he
is awesome on keyboards." "His foot-tapping boogie woogie blew me away
- he turned the place into a good time barrelhouse." "Keyboardist Dan Smith is a superb soloist
in his own right." "Rocking piano blues and stompin' boogie woogie."
"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." "... the best boogie piano heard in a long
time... with his jazzy vocals, this guy is seriously talented!" "Dazzlingly accomplished boogie woogie and
blues pianist." Click here to read about band line ups and personnel.
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MORE REVIEWS Daniel Smith and Jon T-Bone Taylor 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. 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. Anyone who stayed home to watch the football missed a real treat. Make sure you catch them next time around. Gordon Baxter, Blues in BritainThe Daniel Smith Blues Band Kettleshulme Village Hall, Cheshire 5/10/07 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 Daniel26 July 2007Hertfordshire Advertiser HUMOUR provided the keynote for the Daniel Smith Blues Band on Saturday at The Maltings Arts Theatre in St Albans.
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Daniel Smith
Aberdour, KY3 0TX, Scotland
Tel: 01383 860 041
Mob: 07847 393318
email: daniel