When you hear Dave Guy play his trumpet you know it is him right away.
Like many of the greats before him he has a distinct tone and
sensibility that sets him apart from his peers. Unless you are the type
to read album credits you may never have heard his name, but you have
heard him play. In fact, you have likely seen him play. Whether in
person at a show or on national television he has lent his talents to a
who’s who list of world famous artists both in the recording studio and
on stage. And now, with his first solo LP on Big Crown Records, Dave is
stepping from a band’s flank straight to the front—with a well deserved
light shining directly on him and his sound.
Raised in NYC’s East Village, Dave was surrounded by hip-hop and the
hustle that defined the city in the ’90s. In those formative days, he
and his playing were influenced by jazz greats like Donald Byrd and Hugh
Masekela but also by the Native Tongue sounds of A Tribe Called Quest
and De La Soul. His time at LaGuardia Performing Arts High School
furthered this path. Dave remembers sharing playing time with Big Crown
co-founder Leon Michels and drumming powerhouse Homer Steinweiss. “Being
in the All-City Jazz Big Band, I would see them rehearsing all the
time,” Dave recalls. “They were already doing things with the Dap-Kings
back then—which was crazy.” It was
here Dave’s voice as a player began to take shape and continued to be
refined through his studies at the Manhattan School of Music and The New
School.
After a few stints with live hip-hop group Dujeous—Dave was touring with
The Sugarman 3, an organ-driven soul jazz group. Through those gigs he
was recruited to play with the late great Sharon Jones & The
Dap-Kings, touring with and recording on all of her albums until her
untimely passing. During those years he lent his playing to countless
records from the likes of Amy Winehouse, Mark Ronson, Pharell, The
Menahan Street Band, Lee Fields, Al Green, and countless others. But
fast forward to now, and you may best know Dave Guy as the trumpeter
playing with Black Thought, Questlove, and the rest of The Roots
crew—both on tour, in the studio, and on TV with Jimmy Fallon.
On his new record Dave steps to the front of the stage with a debut
album that could have only come from a seasoned veteran. It’s a record
that mixes his musical influences with the energies of the city that
raised him. A New York jazz record that pushes the boundaries of the
genre by incorporating shades of hip hop and soul making it both unique
and modern. This is what you get when someone hones their talent for
years while rubbing elbows with the best of the best. As fate would have
it, a classic case of “when one door shuts, another opens” was really
what got the ball rolling. “I never wanted to force my own project,”
Dave explains. “There was always a lot going on between things—the
timing was never right.” But then, that timing finally fell into place.
The Tonight Show had to pause with the writers’ strike and unexpectedly,
there was a free moment. Within days Dave started recording at NYC’s
fabled Diamond Mine studio with friends and longtime collaborators Homer
Steinweiss and Nick Movshon. What started out as just looking to make
music and create, quickly took shape and direction and they ended up
laying down something wildly special and authentic. An album of songs
that capture different moods and an invitation into the world as Dave
Guy sees it and feels it.
Tracklist:
1. 7th Heaven
2. Footwork
3. I'll Follow You
4. Morning Glory
5. Pinky Ring
6. Diamond Encore
7. Still Standing
8. Dave Wants You
9. Drony Boy
10. Quesodillas
11. The Green Door
12. Ruby's Rubies