{"product_id":"what-you-see","title":"What You See","description":"Product Description\n\nWhat you get with Dennis Jay is a troubadour of quiet conviction and a clear vision from years traveling in the American west. Memories pour out of the bottle and wanderlust sends him on the road in the song Tupelo Flash, where he is \"blinded by west Texas sand, Jett Rinks ghost walking this land [and hears] the Tupelo Flash raising hell.\"\nAbsorbing the influences of classic honky tonk, cowboy ballads, folk and flamenco, Dennis Jay has a driving rhythm guitar style to power his songs and a rich voice to sing them, which can swing from plaintive to joyful with a hint of a yodel. His songs offer reflections on travel and love, going from a lament of lost romance and time (Letters from Mexico), to a bar stool where \"Yesterday's dreams, a home, and a wife, are moving out with the cold, hard facts of life\" (What You See). Out of drifting and reflection, Dennis Jays characters seem to find empathy and courage - \"courage to love, courage to fear,\" where \"each kiss is the magic of this\"(Betrayal).\nThrough the dozen masterful songs on What You See, Dennis Jay grabs your attention from the first listen. And he holds it with that hard guitar strum, and the accompanying single-string Telecaster and Precision Bass lines of his band. Their sound recalls the rhythmic syncopation of Johnny Cashs Tennessee Two, while fiddles, castanets, and marimba flavor the mix.\n\nReview\n\n\"Ghostly, cowboy folk minimalism that s unlike anything else around.\" -- Geoffrey Himes, Washington Post, November 29, 2002\n\n\"Listening to WHAT YOU SEE is like stepping into a smokey, Arkansas honky-tonk on a Saturday night in 1955.\" -- Gus Walker, True West, August 1, 2003\n\n\"Reflects Gillian Welch's talent for channeling antique voices from lost history of American music. Jay though, has picked that preter-retro signal just post-Appalachia. -- Linda Ray, No Depression, July 1, 2003\n\nAbout the Artist\n\nThe critics are calling Dennis Jay's music \"cowboy minimalism.\" Dennis calls it \"Folk \u0026amp; Western,\" the label once given to the classic sounds of Ernest Tubb, Lefty Frizzell, Hank Williams, and Marty Robbins. Born in Wisconsin, Dennis got a large part of his early musical education as a child in Germany, when \"every day I'd come home from school and turn on the Armed Forces Radio Network (AFN). Most of the DJs were regular GIs who'd brought their record collections overseas. A lot of the music was from the south and they'd play a lot of rhythm and blues and a lot of country music. Back then the armed forces were one of the most integrated parts of society, and that was reflected in what the DJs played. It was all just music - not black music, not white music  and most of it was somewhat out of date, since there wasn't the emphasis on constantly playing the current top 10 hits of the time.\"\nAfter returning to the United States, Dennis attended high school in Maryland. He soon bought a brand new Martin D-18 and began writing songs. \"It's still the guitar I write 'em on,\" he says. Dennis spent the 70s and 80s traveling around the West and Midwest, including Kansas, Colorado, Nevada, California, Oregon, Montana, Minnesota, and North Dakota, playing in coffee houses and bars, writing songs, and working odd jobs. When he reached Austin, Texas, Dennis performed both as a solo act and with a band. Next stop was Washington, DC, in the mid-80s, where he formed his own band. He did an occasional solo gig, such as opening for Steve Earle at the Birchmere. Then, for most of the '90s, he got out of music altogether.\nAs Dennis puts it, \"I had pretty much quit the music business. But part of the reason I started playing again was that I discovered a footlocker, in my basement, of copyright tapes that I'd mailed to myself years ago.\" Dennis opened all those envelopes and began listening to his old songs. He liked enough of what he heard that he decided to give them a second life. \"I really wanted to get in the studio and record these songs in the spirit in which I'd written them,\" he says. That meant the stripped-down Folk \u0026amp; Western sound captured on his debut CD, \"What You See.\"\nJoining Dennis in the studio were band members Tim Griffin on lead guitar and Bob Graver on bass (both also on backing vocals), as well as local musicians Fannie Zollicoffer on guest vocals, Susan Jones on fiddle, and Joe Connell on percussion. Co-producer\/engineer Dave McKittrick co-wrote and played guitar on an original instrumental, \"Cancion para la Noche de Casamiento.\" The musicians recorded absolutely live, in a semicircle around the microphones, the way it was done years ago. Despite the odd missed note, the old-style technique captures a tight, emotional performance that sounds alive and of the moment. For the past two years, Dennis has been nominated for WAMA (Washington Area Music Association) awards in the following categories: best country music vocalist, best country music group, and best country music CD. One of Dennis's songs, \"That Last Night,\" was recorded by \u003cbr\u003eASIN: B0000CGDB2\u003cbr\u003eVSKU: DBV.B0000CGDB2.G\u003cbr\u003eCondition: Good\u003cbr\u003eAuthor\/Artist:Dennis Jay|David E. McKittrick|Tim Griffin|Joel Connell\u003cbr\u003eBinding: Audio cd\u003cbr\u003e\u003cb\u003eNote:\u003c\/b\u003e Any images shown are stock photographs and product may differ from what is shown.  \u003cbr\u003e\u003cb\u003eCondition Notes\u003c\/b\u003e: Individually inspected: Guaranteed to play perfectly or your money back. Case may show wear and may be in library packaging. Ships Fast!  \u003cbr\u003e","brand":"Dream Books Co.","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":41516256788538,"sku":"DBV.B0000CGDB2.G","price":5.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0555\/6011\/0138\/files\/B0000CGDB2-0.jpg?v=1783725439","url":"https:\/\/shop.dreambooksco.com\/products\/what-you-see","provider":"Dream Books Co.","version":"1.0","type":"link"}