David Dyson (musician)
David Dyson | |
---|---|
Birth name | David Reeves Dyson |
Born | Rapid City, South Dakota | 3 April 1965
Genres | Jazz, funk, R&B, rock, pop, reggae |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter, arranger, producer |
Instrument(s) | Bass guitar, double bass |
Years active | 1988–present |
Labels | Lohandfunk |
Website | daviddysonbass |
David Dyson (born 3 April 1965) is an American bassist, songwriter, arranger, and producer.[1] Throughout his career he has performed with an array of artists including New Kids on the Block, Meshell Ndegeocello, Lalah Hathaway, Pieces of a Dream, George Duke, Regina Bell, Jonathan Butler, Najee, Candy Dulfer, Rick Braun, Gerald Albright, Norman Brown, Bobby Lyle, Doc Powell, and Michael Franks.[2]
Early life
[edit]Born David Reeves Dyson on 3 April 1965 in Rapid City, South Dakota.[3] When he was two years old, his family relocated to the Washington metropolitan area where he was raised and attended school. Dyson played the baritone (euphonium) in school, but was inspired to switch to the bass guitar at the age of twelve after hearing recordings of Larry Graham and Louis Johnson.[4] At the age of fourteen, he decided that he wanted to pursue a career in music.[2] After high school Dyson attended Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts, where he received a B.A. in 1988.[3] Although he taught himself to play bass, Dyson did take several lessons while attending college. He also learned to play the upright bass, piano, and guitar.[2]
Musical career
[edit]After graduating from Berklee Dyson was offered a bassist position with recording artist Walter Beasley.[1] He performed with him from 1988–1989.[3] In the fall of 1988 producer Maurice Starr was searching for musicians for New Kids on the Block. Dyson auditioned and landed the gig.[5] He toured with them from 1989–1992 as their bassist and musical director.[3] Shortly, After coming off the road with NKOTB, David started developing his original Mutepicking style. Creating a technique which many have attempted to duplicate. In 1992 he was a bassist and composer with Chico Freeman and Brainstorm. From 1993–present Dyson has toured and recorded with Michael Franks, Greg Osby, Terumasa Hino, Gary Thomas, Kevin Toney, Takeshi Itoh, Jack Lee, and Bob James. He was a bassist with Steve Coleman and Five Elements in 1996. Two grammy nominations as a bassist, composer, and co-producer with the Hagans/Belden band (trumpeter Tim Hagans and producer Bob Belden) from 1999 and presently.[3] Dyson began touring with Meshell Ndegeocello in May 1997. He continued through 1999 and from 2001–2002. From 2003–2006 he was a bassist with Jonathan Butler.[3] He began playing with Pieces of a Dream in 2000 at a concert in Baltimore, Maryland after substituting for the original bassist.[2] Dyson recorded and performed with Peter White from 2005–present, Chuck Brown 2006–2007, and Lalah Hathaway 2008–present.[3] In addition, Dyson was a member of the Towson University faculty as a bass instructor in the department of music.[3] He was also head instructor of the course David Dyson's Groove Concepts at MusicDojo.com.[6] Dyson is a faculty member of InDepth Jazz clinics & concerts[7] and an instructor with Gerald Veasley's Bass BootCamp[8] and Bass Break LIVE.[3] He was a staff writer for Bass Musician magazine[4] and is the founder and president of Lil Doc Productions and Lohandfunk Records.[3] Dyson released his debut CD Soulmates in 2000, The Dawning in 2004, and Unleashed in 2008.[1]
Custom bass
[edit]In 2008 Dyson was presented with his first David Dyson/Lohandfunk signature series bass[9] created by Pete Skjold.[10] The specifications are: 5 string fretted, ash body, myrtle top, maple fingerboard, maple pick up covers and knobs, 5 piece maple/purpleheart neck, 2-SC-1 pick ups, audere 4-band pre w/5-position z-mode rotary switch – standard (also available with the Skjold/east custom pre-amp).[11] In 2011 Dyson debuted his fretless Skjold signature series bass at the NAMM Show in Anaheim, California.[12]
Discography
[edit]As leader/composer
[edit]- Soulmates (Lightyear, 1999)
- The Dawning (2004)
- Unleashed (Lo Hand Funk, 2008)
As sideman
[edit]With Bob Belden
- Strawberry Fields (1996)
- Tapestry (1997)
- Black Dahlia (2001)
With Steve Coleman
- The Opening of the Way (1996)
- Genesis (1997)
Also as composer/co-producer
[edit]With Tim Hagans
- Animation, Imagination (1999) Grammy nomination
- Re-Animation Live (2000) Grammy nomination
With Unit 3 Deep
- Groove Theory (2017)
With Tracy Hamlin
- Seasons (2005)
- Better Days (2009)
With Marcus Johnson Urban Grooves (2000)
- Just Doing What I Do (2004)
- In Concert for a Cause (2006)
- Phoenix (2007)
- This is How I Rock (2010)
With Jack Lee
- Gracefulee (1993)
- Where My Heart Goes (1996)
- Into the Night (1997)
- Message from Paris (2000)
- Belo to Soul (2002)
With Pieces of a Dream
- Acquainted With the Night (2001)
- Love's Silhouette (2002)
- No Assembly Required (2004)
- Soul Intent (2009)
With others
- Philip Bailey – Soul on Jazz (2002)
- Rick Braun – Yours Truly (2006)
- Jonathan Butler – Jonathan (2005)
- Chico Freeman – Threshold (1992)
- Ron Holloway – Live at the Montpelier Cultural Center (2003)
- Jaared – Forward (2001)
- Jackiem Joyner – Baby Soul (2007)
- Masabumi Kikuchi, DJ Katsuya, DJ Hiro – Raw Material No. 1, M. Kikuchi (1996)
- Bobby Lyle – Straight & Smooth (2004)
- Najee – Rising Sun (2009)
- Meshell Ndegeocello – Lilith Fair Vol. 3 (1999)
- New Kids on the Block – Step by Step (1990)
- Scritti Politti – Anomie & Bonhomie (1999)
- John Stoddart – Love So Real (1997)
- Peter White – Playin Favorites (2006)
- Alyson Williams – It's About Time (2004)
- Frederic Yonnet – Front & Center (2004)
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Berklee Events Calendar – David Dyson, 26 October 2009
- ^ a b c d Schendell, Bonnie, "On the Side – David Dyson", SmoothViews, June 2008
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Bass Break Live – David Dyson Bio. Retrieved 30 January 2011
- ^ a b Bass Musician Magazine Staff, Bass Musician Magazine Archived 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 20 December 2010
- ^ Roberts, Jim "David Dyson Hangin' Tough With The New Kids", Bass Player Magazine, Jan/Feb 1992, p. 13 -14
- ^ Music Dojo Faculty – David Dyson, Musicdojo.com Archived 14 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 21 December 2010
- ^ Our Faculty – David Dyson, InDepth Jazz clinics & concerts Archived 13 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 21 December 2010
- ^ Instructors, Gerald Veasley's Bass BootCamp Retrieved 16 January 2011
- ^ New Lohandfunk/Skjold bass – David Dyson. Retrieved 8 January 2011
- ^ Skjold Custom Bass Guitars – David Dyson, Bass Direct. Retrieved 20 December 2010
- ^ David Dyson Signature Series Construction, Skjold Players. Retrieved 8 January 2011
- ^ David Dyson and Vincenzo Maurogiovanni NAMM 2011 Jam. Retrieved 3 February 2011
External links
[edit]- 1965 births
- 20th-century American bass guitarists
- 20th-century American male musicians
- African-American guitarists
- American funk bass guitarists
- American jazz bass guitarists
- American male bass guitarists
- American music arrangers
- Berklee College of Music alumni
- Jazz fusion bass guitarists
- Living people
- American male jazz musicians
- People from Rapid City, South Dakota
- Smooth jazz bass guitarists
- 20th-century African-American musicians
- 21st-century African-American musicians