Vintage Guitar
November, 1999 Pg. 164 |
MARK
DOYLE
Guitar Noir
Free Will
I love this. Doyle has been in
the music biz for some time. His first band, Jukin' Bone, made
a couple of obscure albums for RCA in the early '70s and in
the '80s he did tons of session work for the likes of Hall and
Oates, Judy Collins, Leo Sayer, and others. He's toured and
recorded with Meatloaf, Bryan Adams, and was a string arranger
for Maurice Starr.
That said, here's a really cool
instrumental album that features lots of nice guitar work,
a nice original tune, and odd covers that work really well.
Case in point, the opener, "The Perry Mason Theme," sounds
like you remember it from TV. But after the intro, it breaks
into a modern funk groove where Doyle lays down some nasty
notes and tones. A gorgeous cover of "When I Fall In Love"
shows him to be master of volume swells and sweet, stinging
sustain. This one might bring Larry Carlton or Robben Ford
to the mind of some listeners. His version of Brian Wilson's
"Warmth of the Sun" brings everything you'd want to a classic
tune.
As I said, his original stuff
is pretty cool, too. The title cut's biting Strat tone will
leave you smiling. Doyle takes time to show off his chordal
chops on "Spring Is Here," and gets fairly adventurous toward
the end of the CD, doing a nice job with Thelonious Monk's
"Pannonica" and Ornette Coleman's "Lonely Woman." And one
you'd think would never work - a beautiful instrumental of
the Streisand tune "The Way We Were." You get the idea. This
is a killer album from a monster guitarist (who also plays
tons of keyboard). If you like instrumental guitar music that
leans heavily on pop and jazz, check this out. If you are
interested, contact Mark at http://markdoyle.com - JH (John
Heidt) |
|
This
site best viewed with Microsoft IE at a screen resolution
of 1024x768 |
|
Designed
and
maintained by: Conan |
|
|