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Brian Dolzani A Place That I Can Feel
As our world is becoming increasingly ungrounded, digital, virtual, and screen-based, as people feel more
disconnected and intangible than ever, we are seeing a movement towards and appreciation of the
classic, the tangible, and in music, the lone troubadour and the song. Enter Brian Dolzani and his new
record, ‘A Place That I Can Feel’.
With veteran musicians Jimmy Johnson on bass (Roy Orbison, Little Richard) and Billy Thomas on drums
(Vince Gill), Brian and producer Scott McEwen (Patrick Sweany, Bobby Bare Jr.) recorded to 16-track
analog tape, mastered to ¼-inch reel, using gear from the 1960’s in a 1930’s-era pharmacy-turnedrecording studio, aka Fry Pharmacy in Old Hickory, TN. ‘It was magic that day,’ says McEwen. ‘We
recorded the 5 full band songs on the first day, and the vibe and, truly, the magic was there and we were
able to capture it. That’s what recording to tape is like. You either get it or you don’t. And luckily, that
day, we got it.’
The other 5 tracks are more stripped-down, acoustic recordings where Brian played all instruments yet
retained this one-take-performance style. The gamble of recording live to tape is something that Brian
immediately appreciated, and recognizes as a key ingredient to the classic records he, and many of us,
loves. The overall sound of ‘Place’ has this classic, key ingredient.
Brian is a classic troubadour in the lineage of Petty, Springsteen, Browne, Young, and he has put his years
of songwriting experience into his latest record. ‘I love pulling from multiple, stricter genres such as
country, pop, blues, rock and roll,’ Brian explains, ‘then breaking out of those boundaries and just trying
to write a great song that hopefully transcends those elements and becomes as big and wide as possible.’
On ‘A Place That I Can Feel’, Brian crafts meaningful, relatable lyrics that are astute and intriguing, often
forthright and simply stated, such as the first track ‘I Belong’: ‘I belong / I belong / wherever I am / I’ll take
my stand / upon this land,’ and in ‘Opposites’: ‘Opposites / opposites / attract they do / especially for a
boy like me / and a girl like you’. His impeccably steady and strong guitar playing keeps the ground under
these choruses, and the tight rhythm section grooves hard on the Petty-meets-Cars-meets-Creedence
‘Am I OK’.
A little later in the record we hear Brian’s take on relationship and fondness for another classic staple of
music enjoyment, vinyl: ‘I love beauty and release / a cup of hot coffee / when I’m feeling sad / buying
vinyl ain’t bad.’ His electric guitar playing also comes front and center on ‘Ocean Life’, a Neil Young-like
rocker with two guitar solos, in the style of a classic Neil song: ‘Ride the waves / ride the waves / on this
ocean life’.
Brian was born and raised in Connecticut, where he lives with his wife and young family. With his split of
Northern-bred and Southern-heart, Brian is consistently on the road, from New England, up and down
the east coast, to Nashville, the Midwest, and Texas, hitting many prime Americana venues, listening
rooms, and record store in-stores along the way, widening the reach of his songs and highly engaging live
performances.
The music that Brian was exposed to early on was through his dad’s record collection, mostly Beatles and
Beach Boys, and the first record Brian’s father gave him was Elvis Costello and the Attractions’ 1980
record ‘Get Happy’. Brian lost his father in a car accident shortly after this initial musical exposure, when
Brian was just fifteen. In Brian’s memory, that’s the exact moment the universe (more specifically, his
grandmother) gave him an acoustic guitar, and he, like most teenagers, yet with understandably more
angst and confused and hurt feelings, channeled his life into music. Even though that was a long time
ago, the artistic personality never quite lets go, and is still able to conjure up these deep feelings of
longing and loss, such as in the song ‘How Long’ from this new record (‘I can’t wait / to see you again /
how long / how long’).
Throughout the 10 songs on ‘A Place That I Can Feel’, we are taken on a journey of personal and universal
feelings that culminates in a road song called ‘Crooked Road’, inspired from the Crooked Road
Appalachian music trail that winds through Virginia: ‘Oh this crooked road / the one that pulls my soul /
oh this crooked road / the one that makes me go / take me home / take me home’.
Brian explains the title of the record: ‘It’s a line from the first song. I relate it to keeping in touch with my
emotions in order to know what I feel and that I feel connected to myself and what’s around me. I think
it’s important to keep this connection with where we are, what’s around us, and make sure that we feel
something about where we are, as well as who we are.’
As we look to the past as well as the future to quell any sense of unease, to seek ourselves in a deeper
way, or to find a familiar ‘place’ that we can live and believe in, Brian Dolzani will return you to a familiar
and necessary form – the felt, the tangible, the record, the singer, and the song.
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