Guitarist Steve
Dawson Draws Lucky Hand On Instrumental Acoustic Album Coming
June 15 from
Black Hen Music
Special Guests Include a String Quartet
Arranged by Jesse Zubot, and Appearances by Charlie McCoy and John Reischman
“It is inspiring to hear modern instrumental music for guitar that is
articulated within true song form. Steve Dawson’s new album conjures the ghost
of John Fahey for me – not in imitation, but by way of joining a tradition
and then extending its range. I find this song cycle to be intelligent and
challenging; joyful and deeply romantic; both earthy and untethered. It is
affirming – and music to which I shall soon be returning.” – Grammy-Winning
Artist and Producer Joe Henry
NASHVILLE, TN – Black Hen Music announces a June 15 release
date for multiple Juno-award-winning musician/producer Steve Dawson’s new
instrumental acoustic album, Lucky Hand. The new recording
showcases Dawson’s brilliant fingerstyle work on a variety of instruments, accompanied
by special guests Jesse Zubot on violin, harmonica legend Charlie McCoy and
mandolinist John Reischman, as well as the presence of a string quartet on a
number of tracks. The album will be available on both CD and vinyl LP formats.
Lucky Hand is Steve Dawson’s 8th album and his first record of instrumental music since Rattlesnake Cage in 2014. The scope of his musical voice broadens to take on a cinematic quality, as he sketches aural paintings and creates tapestries of sound with his guitar. Recorded live off the floor, with up to 12 microphones in various positions throughout the large studio space to capture the guitar and orchestration, Lucky Hand represents the perfect intersection of the primitive and the modern that has fascinated Dawson for so long.
“I wanted to
re-explore the acoustic fingerstyle and slide guitar pieces that I’d started
with my Rattlesnake Cage album in 2014,” says Dawson, “but this
time I thought it would be fun to augment that with something special; so I
hooked up with my old musical partner Jesse Zubot, who created some string
arrangements around the music that were meant to augment them and push the
pieces along, rather than just be passive accompaniment.”
Lucky Hand represents a high point of more
than two decades of musical searching for Steve Dawson. Comprised of ten
instrumental tracks of solo, duo and full-bodied string quartet works, Dawson
has never released music as sweeping, dynamic and visually suggestive as this.
Enlisting Jesse Zubot in the project to create complementary and adventurous
arrangements for his guitar excursions, these completely realized compositions
– with Zubot’s orchestration adding color to the sepia tinged melodies -
represent Dawson’s finest recordings yet. 2018 marks 20 years since the debut
of Zubot and Dawson, and their collaborations never cease to inspire.
“I’m
interested in guitar music as a way to express song-form rather than guitar
pyrotechnics,” Dawson proclaims. “I don’t really relate to modern fingerstyle
music that much, although players from the 1920s up through the 1970s are what
originally and still inspire me. But I still wanted to do something modern and
different, which is where the duo ideas with John Reischman and Charlie McCoy,
as well as the more intense string arrangement concepts all came from.
“We recorded this album in Vancouver, with all of us
playing together live, using vintage mics in a big room. It was me facing the
quartet, which was in a semi-circle in front of me. I’ve never done anything
like that before. We just played the pieces until we got it. The challenge was
to get a good performance from me while the strings were getting through their
intricate parts. Everyone was sweating a little!”
All of Dawson’s records feature a
wide array of stringed instruments, and Lucky Hand is no
exception. His artistry on the six and twelve string guitars shimmers
throughout, while the track “Bugscuffle” showcases his unique tuning and voice
on the Weissenborn lap guitar. “Bentonia Blues” features a thrilling duet between
Dawson’s National Steel Guitar and roots legend Charlie McCoy’s harmonica.
Gorgeous interplay abounds as his guitar converses with John Reischman’s
mandolin on “Little Harpeth.” At times it’s hard to tell where Dawson’s
guitar begins and Reischman’s mandolin ends. A truly masterful performance,
it’s just one of the many breathless, transcendent moments to be heard on Lucky
Hand.
With song titles like “Lonesome Ace” and “Lucky Hand,” a person could be forgiven for thinking that Dawson attributes his creativity to chance and caprice. In truth, each of these songs is named for the inspiration of places he’s encountered around his Nashville hometown. Music like this has nothing to do with good fortune, unless you’re talking about his listeners. For them, Lucky Hand is a royal flush of a record.
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