Dakota Dave Hull
Dakota Dave Hull | |
---|---|
Occupation | Musician |
Instrument | Guitar |
Years active | 1969–present |
Labels | Flying Fish |
Website | www |
"Dakota" Dave Hull (born April 19, 1950, in Fargo, North Dakota, United States)[1] is an American acoustic fingerstyle guitarist who plays in a variety of styles: blues, gospel, ragtime, and folk music. He is also a recognized music historian and published one book, 2012's Ragtime Guitar in the Classic American Style.[2]
Musical career
Hull was born in
Hull has engineered, produced and performed with many artists, include
Critical reception
Reviewing Hull's 1991 album Reunion Rag for AllMusic, Richard Foss praised "Hull's astonishing skill as both a guitarist and composer. At times Hull sounds like John Fahey during the latter's sunnier moments, playing bright ragtime pieces and introspective tunes inspired by American traditional and old timey music. ... Many of these pieces deserve to become classics."[8]
Discography
Solo
- Hull’s Victory (Flying Fish, 1983)
- Reunion Rag (Flying Fish, 1991)
- New Shirt (Arabica, 1994)
- Sheridan Square Rag (Arabica, 2002)
- The Loyalty Waltz (Arabica, 2004)
- Time Machine (Arabica, 2007)
- Under the North Star (Arabica, 2013)
- Heavenly Hope (Arabica 2016)
- This Earthly Life (Arabica, 2016)
- Another Cup (Arabica, 2018)
- The Graveyard Shift (Arabica, 2019)
- Six-Guns & Fountain Pens (Arabica, 2021)
- Better Late Than Never (Arabica, 2023)
With others
- Ace Pickin’ and Sweet Harmony (Train on the Island Records, 1977) with Sean Blackburn
- North by Southwest (Biscuit City Records, 1978) with Sean Blackburn
- River of Swing (Flying Fish, 1977) with Sean Blackburn
- Double Cappuccino (Arabica, 1998) as Hull & Larson with Kari Larson
- Moonbeams (Arabica, 1999) as Hull & Larson with Kari Larson
- The Goose is Getting Fat (Arabica, 2000) as Hull & Larson with Kari Larson
- Airship (Arabica, 2007) with Pop Wagner
- When You Ask a Girl to Leave Her Happy Home (Arabica, 2011) with Duck Baker
- Sukiyaki (Arabica, 2018) with Takasi Hamada, Xavier Ohmura, and Shohei Toyoda
References
- ^ Clark, Jerome (Winter 2006). "Dakota Dave Hull: Voodoo King of the Acoustic Guitar" (PDF). Sing Out!. Vol. 49, no. 4. pp. 65–70. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
- ISBN 978-1-4675-5613-2.
- ^ "Dakota Dave Hull releases two new albums". Mprnews.org. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
- ^ "Dakota Dave Hull". Thecountryblues.com. 20 July 2014. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
- ^ "The Dakota Dave Hull Show | KFAI". Old.kfai.org. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
- ISBN 978-1-85828-961-8.
- ISBN 978-1-5013-4416-9.
- ^ Deming, Mark. "Reunion Rag – Dakota Dave Hull". AllMusic. Retrieved 2020-08-07.