MP3 The David Samuel Project - Feels Real Good
David Samuel takes his heavy guitar driven blues rock to a new level on this one. Though his tone has been compared to SRV and Jimi Hendrix it''s his insanely, catchy, grooves and Tiffany Tyler''s breath taking vocals that seperate them from the rest.
9 MP3 Songs
ROCK: Roots Rock, ROCK: Progressive Rock
Details:
Buy the Feels Real Good CD and get 5 songs for free!
Once you buy the CD I will send you a secret URL to download 5 songs off my new Blues For A Day CD for free! Just a little gift to get in the spirit of the Holidays!
The David Samuel Project
David Samuel achieves palettes of color from his Stratocaster, driving the guitar with funky wah-wahs, smooth sustain, walls of feedback, and any limitless combination of tonalities to color his songs with life. This is rock n'' roll with all its roots intact, a hint of blues, a touch of funk and soul, a storm front of energy unleashed from the first note to the last song of the night!
“I want to be around for 20 years,” says the band leader, vocalist and guitarist as he talks about his desire to replicate the success and longevity of such bands as U2 and Aerosmith. “I don’t want to be done in 3-to-5 years when the flavor of the moment’s gone.”
Lead vocalist Tiffany Tyler, Samuel’s costar in the group and the only member to make the transition from the Project’s earlier incarnation, shares Samuel’s vision of taking their catchy, funky rock to the national stage.
“The stuff we’re doing now is more modern, more sellable,” she says, comparing their latest direction to the group’s bluesier, more psychedelic roots. “This is our own crossroads.”
While the group’s sound has changed a great deal in the last year, the anchors of it remain firmly in place. Samuel is still a guitarist that takes his cues from Jimi Hendrix, Eddie Van Halen and Stevie Ray Vaughan, and the group continues to pump out songs that get lodged in your head as they defy easy categorization.
On “Ashur,” they combine Tower of Power horns with funky blues guitar riffs. On “Ingram House,” they paint a picture of artistic tenacity with soaring vocals and a dark, epic musical framework. On “Take Time,” they create a song so insanely catchy that you’ll be singing it to yourself even as you curse Samuel for pushing repeat on your internal iPod.