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From "garymaher@juno.com" <garymaher@juno.com>
Subject Dennis Diken with Bell Sound
Date Fri, 31 Jul 2009 03:51:38 GMT

[Part 1 text/plain windows-1252 (5.0 kilobytes)] (View Text in a separate window)

All kinds of pop people on this one by fellow music geek Dennis Diken.  A friend of mine is doing the distro.  Sounds intriguing . . .

Samples here:

http://www.myspace.com/dennisdikenwithbellsound

Standing In That Line is rather BBoysish.

g

-------------------------

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 8, 2009

LATE MUSIC, THE DEBUT ALBUM FROM DENNIS DIKEN
WITH BELL SOUND, BRINGS CLASSIC POP ECHOES

Smithereens drummer steps to the fore with help from collaborator Pete
DiBella, producer Dave Amels,
plus guests The Wondermints, Andy Paley, The Honeys and Jason Falkner

Album marks re-launch of Cryptovision Records

WOOD-RIDGE, N.J. — “I guess I’ve been writing songs since I was a
kid,” says Dennis Diken. “There are melodies and lyric ideas that I
just can’t get out of my head and some of them have been lodged there
since I was five or six years old! But I grew up thinking I was just a
self-taught drummer and that was my gig.”

Diken, best known for providing the backbeat with New Jersey’s
Smithereens since 1980, has emerged from behind the drum kit to
present the forthcoming album Late Music under the nom du disque
Dennis Diken with Bell Sound. The recording, due out on September 29,
2009, will be issued by Cryptovision, distributed by Select-O-Hits.

Diken hastens to add, “Please don’t call it a ’solo’ album. This music
was hatched by two musically like-minded guys.” Fellow Jerseyan Pete
DiBella collaborated with Dennis to bring 13 songs to fruition,
reflecting their mutual love of classic pop and rock genres. “DiBella
is an inspired musical talent, with a special knack for vocal
arranging. I did my first home recordings with him in the ’70s and we
reconnected in the ’90s. His ability to maximize a minimal recording
setup is stunning. “Standing in That Line” was cut on a four-track
cassette!”

While Late Music was created mostly in East Coast home studios, Diken
headed west to complete the project at the famed Bomb Factory in Los
Angeles. “Dave Amels (Stepford Husbands, Reigning Sound, Mary Weiss)
helmed the sessions, producing and playing a bank of keyboards. We
called on friends from the Wondermints (between gigs as Brian Wilson’s
band) to add vocals and instrumentation.” Their sun-splashed spirit is
evident, especially on “Let Your Loved One Sleep.”

Other guests include multi-instrumentalist Andy Paley (co-producer of
Brian Wilson’s eponymous debut solo album).  “Andy lived and breathed
a good chunk of this record. He literally dreamed parts for “No One’s
Listening” and dashed to the studio one morning after awakening with
some magical ideas.” The Honeys, Brian Wilson’s most celebrated
outside production, sing backup on “Tell All the Fools.” “It was a
thrill to have Marilyn, Ginger and Diane on board. They sound
wonderful as ever.” Popmeister Jason Falkner can be heard on bass and
lead guitar on “The Bad Merry-Go-Round” and “I’ve Been Away,”
respectively. Other vocal contributors include Ben Jaffe of HoneyHoney
and Jude Christodal.

The finely-wrought sound of Late Music owes much to The Four Freshmen,
The Four Seasons, The Bee Gees and The Beach Boys. And Dennis Diken
with Bell Sound’s hat remains roguishly tipped to The Association, The
Who and The Move. Yet Late Music remains their own thing, for them to
offer and the world to dig. And dig, it must. It’s never too late.

Diken is a founding member of the Smithereens, whose other remaining
original members include Pat DiNizio and Jim Babjak, all of whom met
in central New Jersey. (Diken met Babjak on the first day of high
school in 1971; they met DiNizio some years later.)

The Smithereens’ hits include “Blood and Roses,” “Behind the Wall of
Sleep,” “The House We Used To Live In,” “Drown in My Own Tears,” “A
Girl Like You,” “Blues Before and After,” “Top of the Pops,” “Too Much
Passion” and more. The albums Especially for You and 11 certified
gold. In March of 2010 the band will celebrate its 30th anniversary.

The release of Late Music also marks the relaunch of Cryptovision
Records. During the mid 1980s, New York-based Cryptovision records
rated in the top 25 of independent record companies and launched the
recording careers of people like Sam Coomes (Elliot Smith, Quasi,
Donner Party). Other notable Cryptovision artists are Flying Color,
Optic Nerve, Stepford Husbands, and The Mod Fun. Virtually none of the
1980s Cryptovision records have been released on CD.  Dave Amels,
former head of A&R, now company chief, states, “The goal of the new
Cryptovision Records is to both reissue selections from the 1980s
catalog in digital form and to release really great new music . .
.music rooted in the deep American pop and rock ‘n’ roll traditions.”

Reflecting on Late Music, Diken adds, “I’m really proud of our work on
this album. And I got to sing lead on most tracks. I guess you can say
that vocals are my second love . . . next to playing drums.”

# # #

For more information on Dennis Diken & the Bell Sound , please contact
conqueroo:
Cary Baker • (323) 656-1600 • cary@conqueroo.com



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