photo: indiaCSR
I was first introduced to David's music through Blues and Roots Radio, a global internet radio station and platform for independent musicians, based in Port Credit, Ontario, Canada. I fell in love with his easy style and beautiful lyrics.
David Leask has built an artistic bridge between the influences of his Scottish birthplace and the fresh possibilities of his adopted Canadian home to produce five critically-acclaimed CD's, his previous release, The Clarke Hall Sessions, reaching no. 24 on the FAR Chart.
He has received the Mississauga Performing Artist of the Year Award and numerous international songwriting awards.
Songwriters Magazine called David, "the most consistent Canadian songwriting competition winner."
A born song chaser and a natural storyteller,
Leask comments, “After 30 years of following the muse, I always keep trying to write the best song I've never written. The struggle is to listen hard enough and let the song tell me what it is. At the end of the day, I try and find some truth in the stuff I make up.”
You can learn more about (and listen to) David Leask and his music at:
David's new album, Six in 6/8, is a testament to strength in numbers. It showcases a cast of 19
incredible musicians recorded by 10 different engineers in 11 different studios in 4 diverse and inspiring locales -Toronto, Montreal, Nashville and Muscle Shoals.
Amazingly, 3 of the 6 songs on the album are current semifinalists in the International Songwriting Competition. Leask is no stranger to jumping genres on previous records and Six in 6/8 is no exception, with six songs straddling folk, country, roots-rock, Celtic and soul, all wrapped up in his favorite time signature – 6/8. Why?
“I suspect my love of the 6/8 “lilt” has something do with the movement of the sea and how it’s captured in so many of the melodies from back home,” Leask supposes.
What’s also consistent throughout Six in 6/8 is a depth and potency of emotion, as he tackles subjects like veterans’ PTSD on “Can’t Make It Back Home”, depression and mental health problems on “When You Think No One Loves You” and the stress of our current economic times on “Caught In The Tide”.
His poignant storytelling in the Celtic tradition shines through with the whistle and flute on “Red Balloon”, a tribute to a friend who lived with Lou Gehrig's Disease, ALS.
Six in 6/8 was co-produced with JUNO award-winner Justin Abedin (Jacksoul/Justin Hines), mixed by Grammy Award-winning engineer Chad Carlson (Matraca Berg/Jewel) and mastered by Grammy Award-winning mastering engineer Peter Moore (Bob Dylan).
Join me in September for Part 3 of Telling Stories Through Music
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