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Andy Timmons
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| By
Vinnie
Apicella
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Most probably recall the
name Andy Timmons for his stint with Glam/Metal sensations Danger
Danger
a decade ago. Upon seeing a full scale solo record here-with no less
than sixteen tracks and not one "Naughty Naughty" remake in the bunch,
I
was a bit thrown before learning the facts. Timmons' guitar work in
fact
transcends any of his earlier bands' platinum selling successes. Forged
upon technical ambition and a desire to survive, Timmons' six string
life began and flourished as a session musician working with the likes
of Paula Abdul, Paul Stanley, and Joe Satriani among others-yes, a Rock
guitarist to be sure, but an accessibly capable performer as evidenced
by a stirring mix of instrumentals and one newly recorded vocal track
tribute to George Harrison, "Slips Away," which concludes the
collection. The sixteen songs cover the first two mid-nineties solo
releases from Timmons under the heading "Ear X-Tacy." His influences
range far and wide from classic seventies, "Super '70s," Rock to delta
style Blues," "Falling Down," to the let 'er rip fret burning of
"Beautiful Strange," and "Electric Gypsy." Rarely do solo artists,
instrumentalists no less, come along that attract my attention enough
to
stay tuned all the way through-big name Rock band guitarists who've
gone
on to inspire as soloists, like a Montrose, whose "Speed Of Sound" late
eighties' instrumental I would measure up to this in many
respects-Timmons' managed to keep me seated for thirteen of the tracks
before I succumbed to the lower back stress attributed to my
ergonomically-challenged desk chair… but I did return to finish the
job and was equally impressed with the latter four tracks, having of
course first returned to the shredding "Groove Or Die," in the best
Satriani tradition. In fact when we think of Rock/Metal guitar players
philosophizing through their fretboards, right away you're prone to
draw
up comparisons to Gods like big Joe, or Vai, who runs the label
incidentally, the Malmsteen types; Sure enough Timmons proves capable
of
scaling the quarter-mile in record time as well but it's the emotion
and
feel with which he conveys that stands out and makes such a mammoth
undertaking interesting enough to listen to. So from "Groove Or Die" to
the subdued Santana-inspired "A Night To Remember," to the thickly
layered "Carpe Diem," there's plenty to reach out for on this
domestically released first timer that you don't need to play guitar to
appreciate.
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