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Gary Davies - manager/keyboards

© Steve Strowbridge
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2023 - Gary has stepped back from live performance and moved to band manager.
- Instruments/Gear
Piano
Roland Stage piano rd 150, Motif 6 synth, Mackie Monitors
Beautiful Kawai KX 15 upright piano at home.
- Joined The Band
Day one.
- Musical Education
Virtually zero I am ashamed to say - Completely self taught.
Early piano lessons, moved to guitar then back to piano. My sight reading is painfully slow and is a hinderance sometimes.
Passed the ABRSM Jazz piano Grade 5 exam in 2001 (highly recomended).
Student at the school of hard gigs since the age of 15!!
- Influences Other Than Steely Dan
Russell Ferrante and Yellow Jackets, Bill Evans, Keith Jarrett, Herbie Hancock - sixties blue note jazz stuff. Warren Bernhardt.
Tom Waits, Early Boz Scaggs, Sixties, Seventies (some eighties) Rock/Jazz/Funk and anyone else who can play!
Jeff Porcaro's grooves, Peter Cook, Stephen Hawking, George Orwell and so on.
Bad influences - Pete Bacanin, Steve Hayes, Rob Rolph.
- Favourite Steely Dan Songs
Love every track from "Royal Scam" "Aja" "Gaucho" "Nightfly" equally.
Really enjoying"Dirty Work" live at the moment.
- Favourite or Interesting Nearly Dan Experience
It is always an interesting process to take theses songs from the songbooks, check thru the chords and get them to a stage where they can be performed live - the brass parts have to be transcribed by ear usually.
Giving a deeper understanding of Becker and Fagen's love of jazz harmony and song structure along the way.
Memorable gigs at the Liverpool Echo Arena recently, Blue note - Milan.
Jazz Cafe is always a night to remember. Any festival gig is usually great fun.
- Essential Listening
All Bill Evans
All Yellow Jackets
Maiden Voyage, Driftin’ - Herbie Hancock
Kind of Blue - Miles Davis
Keith Jarrett - Standards vol 2
Raidogs, Small Change - Tom Waits
Down two then left, Silk Degrees, Middle Man Boz Scaggs
Livin' on the Fault Line - Doobie Bros.
Beatles, Chuck Berry, Ray Charles... I could go on.
- Comment
Well what can you say, it has been a lifetime ambition to play Steely Dan songs live.
As a pianist it has been a steep learning curve, with insight into song structure, arrangements, jazz harmony, great soloing.
Myself and all of the other players are constantly striving become better musicians, and what better music to do that with?
People ask me how I keep such a large band together? It is really down to the individual members over the years
giving their time commitment for very little money, and keeping the spirit of the band going on the road
when things don’t go to plan.
Every gig now is dedicated to the memory of my late father who started me playing in the first place and was a huge Steely Dan Fan.
Finally, sincere thanks to the fans that come to see the band time and time again from all over the country.
It's still growing.
God bless Nearly Dan and all who sail in her!