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Bones Maki And The Sundogers
www.sundodgers.com
Style: Authentic
New Rockabilly
Releasenb.:5606
With 3 Rhythm Bomb-only bonus recording, the boys whipped up
another 14 tracks for their second full-length album. Ten Maki
originals were newly-recorded, along with songs by Marty Robbins,
Fred Netherton, Jim Nesbitt, and the Jewels, that make up a
rockin' and swingin' combination of sounds. Tichy and Bruce
return with a vengeance, to lay down their best performances
yet. Staying true to the trio's artistic licenses (yes, they've
been renewed) everything was cut without overdubbing and sent
straight to WSDS studios, where Keith Jason oversaw the addition
of Ampex tape echo.
Bones Maki & the Sun Dodgers perform rockabilly music with
the same instrumentation that the music was born from: electric
guitar, string bass and acoustic guitar. You'll notice that
a drum kit was left out ... but once you hear their music, you
won't miss it! This trio has a full rock-a-billy sound that
refers to records made in the mid-1950s, including the energy
and lowdown feeling of that raucous noise. Since 2001, the Sun
Dodgers have been swinging high and tearing it down around Detroit,
Michigan, and in selected cities across the Great 48.
Grounded in western swing and rockabilly music, Craig "Bones"
Maki sings, plays and writes tunes that reminds one of sounds
that flourished during the 1950s. However, if you ask him, he'll
tell you that the music isn't dead, but thrives in venues where
older musicians still perform - rather than mainly large stages
and TV, good music can still be found in small clubs and fraternal
halls. Entertainers like the Tennessee-born Eddie Jackson (1926-2002)
of Detroit may perform for decades. In 1995, Bones cut his teeth
by sitting in with Jackson at gigs around Detroit's east side.
The following year, he helped found the Big Barn Combo, a rockabilly
band that played all over the Midwest and northern Europe during
its five-year run. Bones is now fronting the Sun Dodgers, where
the good-time western and rockabilly music of a bygone era is
presented with renewed vitality and vim alongside originals
that continue the joyful noise begun two generations ago.
A veteran of the Detroit 1990s rockabilly scene, Kenny Bruce
has grown into a versatile and courageous string bass player.
Kenny has hauled a doghouse all over the States and Europe with
the Big Barn Combo; he moonlights with a jazz trio; and occasionally,
he sits in with uppity bluegrass musicians. Bruce is well-known
in contemporary rockabilly music circles for his warm demeanor
and wicked bass-slapping.
Playing guitar with virtuosity that many mature pickers wish
for, Graham Tichy is, at the tender age of twenty-something,
a whiz. You'll hear the likes of Merle Travis, Scotty Moore,
Joe Maphis and Hank Garland emanating from his large fingertips
with jaw-dropping dexterity. He makes men stomp and women wail.
This young man has a great future in store within the music
racket ... need we say more?
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