Showing posts with label Mark Doyle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Doyle. Show all posts

Saturday, December 10, 2016

Mark Doyle & The Maniacs - Raw

Size: 114,1 MB
Time: 49:07
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2016
Styles: Blues Rock
Art: Front

01. I'm Not Talkin' (Live) ( 3:10)
02. You Can't Catch Me (Live) ( 3:43)
03. One Sunny Day (Live) ( 4:17)
04. New Set Of Blues (Live) ( 3:06)
05. Red House (Live) ( 6:10)
06. Lonely Boy (Live) ( 4:30)
07. Live Snakes Prelude (History Of Rock 'N Roll) (Live) (24:09)

Formed in 2009, Mark Doyle & The Maniacs is the brainchild of guitarist/producer Mark Doyle. Signed to RCA in the early ‘70s with his first band, Jukin’ Bone (who played their own brand of fiery, Anglophilic blues rock), Mark has gone on to record and tour with artists as varied as Meat Loaf, Bryan Adams, Judy Collins, Leo Sayer, Kim Simmonds and Hall & Oates. A visit to the Discography page at Mark's website details the 65 albums that Mark has been involved in.

In describing the impetus for making their first record, “Shake ‘Em On Down”, Mark explains: “Old heroes die hard, and these were mine back when I was a teenager and first started playing the electric guitar. I’m sure Jeff Beck, Eric Clapton, Peter Green and Kim Simmonds had their own heroes – “authentic” blues men like B. B., Albert, and Freddie King, Otis Rush, Hubert Sumlin and Buddy Guy, but I did not yet know of them, and only discovered them translated and morphed through the brilliant playing of those four English kids.”

The second disc, “Comin’ Home”, featured nine original songs written by Mark and various other combinations of the Maniacs. “We were intent on making the music of the British Blues Boom era a living thing, rather than a museum piece,” Doyle said in 2010. “The new songs we’ve written manage to evoke the spirit of the era while remaining contemporary. And we still went for capturing lightning in a bottle by recording the album as live as possible. The difference is that we’re now an actual working band that played the songs in front of audiences over the year between the two albums.” Both albums won the SAMMY Award for Best Blues CD in 2010 and 2011, respectively, as well as rave reviews in magazines like Vintage Guitar in the States and Blues Matters in England.

Released in 2013, the new album, “Pushin’”, broadens the blues-rock focus even more with six brand new originals by Doyle, a stunning retake of “Nightcrawler” from Jukin’ Bone (Mark’s first band), a turbo-charged version of Freddie King’s “Palace of the King” and a final tip of the hat to British Blues icon John Mayall with “Witchdoctor.”

All three of the afore-mentioned discs received Syracuse Area Music Awards (SAMMY's) for Best Blues CD after their releases.

July 2013 saw the release of Mark Doyle and The Maniacs – “Live and Burnin’”, the first official live CD from the band, recorded multi-track on June 22, 2013 in New Hartford.

And now, in January 2017, a new live album from the current line-up of the band, recorded on a hot, steamy night at the Dinosaur Bar-B-Que. Two very good reasons to buy the new CD are the incendiary version of Jimi Hendrix's classic "Red House," and the almost 25-minute "Live Snakes Prelude - History of Rock and Roll," a truly spellbinding and jaw-dropping journey through the classic music of The Rolling Stones, The Beatles, Peter Green's Fleetwood Mac, Buffalo Springfield, Jimi Hendrix, and Led Zeppelin, to name a few.

With a stellar line-up that, along with Mark Doyle on guitar and vocals, now includes original member Terry Quill on second guitar, harp and vocals, Frank DeFonda on drums and Joel Kane on bass and vocals, this outfit is downright armed and should be considered dangerous. Experience Mark Doyle and The Maniacs, Premium Blues Rock!

Raw

Sunday, August 3, 2014

Joe Whiting & Mark Doyle - The Truth

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 46:22
Size: 106.2 MB
Styles: Modern electric blues
Year: 2007
Art: Front

[3:31] 1. Door #3
[3:30] 2. 21st Century Spin
[3:31] 3. The Truth
[3:47] 4. Bad Stuff
[4:22] 5. Drive
[2:51] 6. Out From Under Me
[3:31] 7. She's The Baddest One
[3:55] 8. Heartbeat
[3:25] 9. I Died A Thousand Times
[4:03] 10. Stop The Fire
[4:32] 11. Juke Joint
[5:18] 12. Just Around The Corner

Put Central New York music stars Joe Whiting and Mark Doyle in the studio together and something magical happens. Still. And again. “The Truth” marks singer Whiting and guitarist/keyboardist Doyle’s first CD of new material together in 21 years. They’ve still got the mean chops that made their collaboration so special in the 1970s with the bands Free Will and Jukin’ Bone, and in the 1980s with The Doyle-Whiting Band.

Whiting can snarl out a line with hip confidence, as in “She’s The Baddest One.” Doyle can fire out a guitar lick as juicy and steamy as an August noon in the South, as he does in “21st Century Spin.” In 2007, in fact, all of the wisdom they’ve accumulated since then makes this union even sweeter. They combine for love ballad “Heartbeat” that’s part pain, part joy and totally spellbinding. They churn out tasty country chords in “I Died a Thousand Times” that’ll put a bounce in every step. They party in hot rock style on “Juke Joint.” It’s obvious they relished every second of making music together on this dozen-song CD, from the songwriting to the recording to the thought of sharing the common bonds of talent and desire to make great music. On the title cut, Whiting sings, “Seems I spend my life, caught between wrong and right, searching for the light called the truth.” Doyle accompanies his vocals with haunting, swampy guitar work. Goes to show you, “The Truth” can hurt and feel good at the same time. ~ Mark Bialczak

The Truth mc
The Truth zippy