The songs on HOME STUDIO were written, performed and recorded by Hugh Hamilton, with Dean Sabatino playing drums & percussion on numbers 1, 2, 5, 7, 8 & 10.
BRIEF BIOS:
HUGH spent a substantial portion of his formative years trying to control [+]The songs on HOME STUDIO were written, performed and recorded by Hugh Hamilton, with Dean Sabatino playing drums & percussion on numbers 1, 2, 5, 7, 8 & 10.
BRIEF BIOS:
HUGH spent a substantial portion of his formative years trying to control his cowlick and attempting each week to be the first student to identify the untitled music written on the Music Room blackboard at his elementary school. He can still occasionally be found staring perplexedly at wrapping paper and coffee mugs with musical notation.
DEAN spent a substantial portion of his formative years living under a pseudonym while gigging, making albums & music videos and becoming known for his clean drums and beautiful hair...visit www.DeanSabatino.com to learn more...
The two were brought together by the mighty PHIL SULLIVAN, a unique figure in the music industry: a man who has cried like a baby upon entering Studio 2 at Abbey Road, who has been heard singing Beatles songs in Latin while wiring apartment buildings and sketching mic & amp schematics, and who is often mistaken for Johnny Velour. Hugh thanks Phil. Dean is not so sure.
TRUTH IN ADVERTISING: This is a home-made CD in a slim jewel case. Each 2-sided, color paper "cover" is printed in-house and hand-cut to perfection (well, near-perfection) and each CD is titled and signed by the so-called Artist. Rest assured that all proceeds from this sales effort will probably go towards buying recording gear, pizza, and libations (not necessarily in that order).
SONG NOTES BY THE ARTIST:
1. THE LONESOME ROAD - From about 1993. During its formation, two guys named Dave visited my tiny apartment - Dave #1 wore Ray-Bans and had a giant acoustic bass guitar and Dave #2 had bongos and a djembe. We recorded this originally as a trio, on my 4-track reel-to-reel. I've sadly learned the hard way that there are a number of ways NOT to store reels of tape, and I'm afraid that particular recording is history. Cut to many years later: Dean came over for a two-man schmooze-fest...we fired up the CD player and he treated me to some of his current faves while we gorged ourselves on pizza and our favorite ice-cold beverages and tried to answer the age-old question: "To gig, or not to gig?" Almost as an afterthought we headed up to The
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