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Daughter of Experience

by Dave Miller

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Lushing 06:06
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Wonderful 04:30
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about

Guitarist and composer, Dave Miller (Algernon, Greg Ward’s Rogue Parade, Ted Sirota’s Rebel Souls, Jazz at Lincoln Center, The Scientist, Patricia Barber, Joe Policastro Trio, etc), has been a prominent fixture in the Chicago creative music scene for nearly two decades. His last album (Dave Miller, Tompkins Square, 2020) received unanimously positive reception from publications, including Mojo Magazine and Fretboard Journal. It was hailed by Cult MTL as ”The psychedelic record Booker T and the MGs never made” while the widely celebrated guitar trailblazer, Mary Halvorson, gushed “Dave Miller has a penchant for melodies that stick with you, in a good way. His latest album provides the joy and the lift we all need right now-- through his bad ass guitar playing, a myriad of unexpected shifts reveal a brilliant sonic universe.”

Since the album’s release, never one to rest on his laurels, Miller has lead a quartet with legendary drummer, Jeff “Tain” Watts, performed at Chicago’s Symphony Hall with Greg Ward’s Rogue Parade, and held down the guitar chair for Terence Blanchard’s masterful opera, Fire Shut Up In My Bones at the Lyric Opera of Chicago. On the heels of these accomplishments, Miller has taken a musical right turn, positioning his guitar playing front and center on his new release, Daughter of Experience (Tompkins Square, 6/3/22).

In the midst of mixing Dave Miller at his Chicago studio, Whiskey Point Recording, Dave retreated to the Catskill Mountains for two weeks to write a new record. Despite the intent of at least demoing the resulting material in the studio he was renting while there, he ended up primarily playing a lot of acoustic guitar outside, taking in the solitude, fresh air, and beautiful scenery. Given the full-band electric, ecstatic, and celebratory nature of Dave Miller, this trip, predictably, bore a different breed of musical fruit. Fittingly, Miller recorded these performances alone, entirely on an antique acoustic parlor guitar.

Each of Miller’s solo offerings tend to occupy its own individual stylistic and sonic universe, the through lines being Miller’s singular, melody-driven songwriting and his emotionally-fueled, instantly recognizable guitar playing. Daughter follows suit, but is distinct in that it is his first specifically solo guitar album and his first playing acoustic guitar, exclusively. Did we mention it must be one of the most difficult guitars in existence to play and that it began to literally fall apart during the making of the record? [Insert witty comments here about artist suffering for his art and art imitating life].

And as the world shut down, Miller, once again, retreated into solitude, this time back to Whiskey Point, where developing and recording these pieces became a daily meditation. The resulting unedited performances, stark and vulnerable, capture much of the feeling he experienced while in communion with the natural beauty and rich musical history of the Catskill region. Miller’s “And Haze and Vista” recalls the soul-infused Americana of Woodstock luminary, Bobby Charles. His reduction of Brian Wilson’s sprawling “Wonderful” takes the piece out of sunny California and into the mountainous woods of upstate New York.

Miller, here, also tackles Duke Ellington’s “Single Petal of a Rose”, viewing this masterpiece through a roots music lens, falling somewhere between Marc Ribot and Gabor Szabo. His performance of ace composer Matt Ulery’s “Lushing” (commissioned by Miller specifically for this record) plays as if in an alternate reality where Joe Pass arranged the music of the Impressionists. And, perhaps the most traditional of the pieces, Miller’s own “O Envious Age!” recalls the feeling of a Neil Young lamentation.

Throughout the entirety of Daughter of Experience, Miller’s utterly unique voice on the guitar, steeped in the blues and brimming with soul, is on full display, making for an incredibly intimate and emotional listening experience. He takes his time, breathing through the demanding material, squeezing the beauty out of every phrase. In effect, the album feels like front porch music for the concert hall.

As of this writing, the world has mostly opened up again, reverting back to its old ways, for better or worse. Similarly, Miller has emerged out of solitude once more, though not without a certain hard-won wisdom and inspiration. The world, nature, and one’s own life remain mysterious and unpredictable. As is evident in the music on Daughter of Experience, Miller is content to find, embrace, and express the beauty in any and all of it.

credits

released June 3, 2022

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Tompkins Square San Francisco, California

Tompkins Square label, established in 2005, has released acclaimed recordings by artists such as William Tyler, Gwenifer Raymond, Ryley Walker and Michael Chapman as well as reissues of folk, old-timey, gospel and American Primitive Guitar. The label has received 8 Grammy nominations. ... more

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