There are at least four bands with the name Daddy Long Legs
1) Daddy Long Legs were a London three-piece who made wonky and joyfully noisy pop music.
The band comprised of an Englishman on bass (Jay Ballard), a Scotsman on guitar (Al Joseph) and a half-Portugueseman on drums (Chris Rodriguez); who were all equally in charge of singing, hooting, whooping and shouting.
2) Daddy Long Legs is a recently formed (April 2010) two-piece acoustic/indie/soul group from Keene, New Hampshire.
The band consists of Dave Grundy and Brian Burgess, both of whom do acoustic guitar and vocals for the band. On October 5th, 2010, Daddy Long Legs released their debut EP, King Of The Blue Charade for free download on their official website.
3) Daddy Long Legs is a four piece blues band from Kitchener, Ontario, Canada.
The band is Mike 'Shakey' Elliott, Chris 'Junior' Malleck, Steve Toms and Jeff Wagner. In 2013 they released their fifth album Devil's In The Detailson Busted Flat Records. They played the Kitchener Blues Festival 2012 & 2013 Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Daddy-Long-Legs/199504549828
4) Daddy Long Legs is a German folk/celtic band. They released one album in 2001 called 2nd Birth.
Daddy Long Legs is also a stage musical adaptation of the 1918 novel by Jean Webster.
Record Review
Daddy Long Legs, Evil Eye On You (Norton Records)
posted by: RZO
Record Review by RZO
I’ve seen Brian Hurd emerge from being one of The Visitors—a now defunct garage rock revival band that I loved—to the centerpiece of this dirty Brooklyn blues band.
Hurd is a larger-than-life persona, and it was obvious that he had to move on and do his own thing. And do his own thing he did. Enter Daddy Long Legs, with his towering, string bean body and wispy afro top, chock full of blues licks and yelps that must have come with him from his native St. Louis.
This isn’t to say New York has nothing to do with it. His partners in crime, drummer Josh Styles, who I remembered from The Stalkers, and Murat Akturk—one of the most convincing Johnnie Thunders pre-nasty heroin downfall guitarists turned blues sliders (and also formerly of The Electric Shadows)—know a good tune or two. And with Daddy Long Legs on harp and vocals, tearing it up, track after track, you’ve got a winner.
Daddy Long Leg’s debut on Norton Records, Evil Eye On You, does not disappoint. Although it mostly wallows in the blues, any fan of traditional rock ‘n’ roll will tell you that’s where the magic started anyway. And it’s always nice when an album has a good through line that tells a story. This is the tale of Daddy Long Legs and his mates conjuring up the soundtrack to a rollicking backwoods BBQ.
Track one, “Death Train Blues,” starts with gritty, dirty harp, slide guitar and tambourine. It sounds vintage, as if a repurposed Robert Johnson. “I Feel So Electric” has a nice guitar and stripped down drum opening, while the vocals remind me of “Roadhouse Blues” by The Doors. With “Happy Home,” I hear former garage rock influence by the likes of The Sonics and The Downliners Sect.The guys in action!
“Shackin’ Up” is peppier, upbeat, and a little like old Bob Dylan. Whereas Lux Interior from The Cramps can be imagined with “You’ll Be Mine,” including some nice slide work. The center track “Witch Hunt” serves as a bristling conduit to the remaining tracks, veering from snakebite or an exorcism, with nice yelps and harp. The sting continues with “Trouble (Always Come My Ways),” along with hoops, hollers and rowdy crowd jeers. Once it gets going, it takes off with tambourine and full instrumentation. Love the muffled vocal effects.
“Sittin’ Shotgun” is mid-tempo, and keeps the album chugging along. The pounding, biting, “Comin’ After Me” (recorded previously by greats like The Flamin’ Groovies and DMZ) has good Stonesy backing vocals and callback harp. I found “Candy Sue” to be a nice reprieve, with groovy, danceable, beats that really got my booty shaking. “Thirty Days” is a lively romp, and I can almost imagine a gaggle of train jumpers singing the refrain. The closer, “Evil Eye,” really seals in the down and dirty swampy feel.
Get yer copy at the Norton Records site: http://www.nortonrecords.com/lps_new.php. Now if we can just get Daddy Long Legs to come down to play in Norfolk like they’ve been threatening to…
1) Daddy Long Legs were a London three-piece who made wonky and joyfully noisy pop music.
The band comprised of an Englishman on bass (Jay Ballard), a Scotsman on guitar (Al Joseph) and a half-Portugueseman on drums (Chris Rodriguez); who were all equally in charge of singing, hooting, whooping and shouting.
2) Daddy Long Legs is a recently formed (April 2010) two-piece acoustic/indie/soul group from Keene, New Hampshire.
The band consists of Dave Grundy and Brian Burgess, both of whom do acoustic guitar and vocals for the band. On October 5th, 2010, Daddy Long Legs released their debut EP, King Of The Blue Charade for free download on their official website.
3) Daddy Long Legs is a four piece blues band from Kitchener, Ontario, Canada.
The band is Mike 'Shakey' Elliott, Chris 'Junior' Malleck, Steve Toms and Jeff Wagner. In 2013 they released their fifth album Devil's In The Detailson Busted Flat Records. They played the Kitchener Blues Festival 2012 & 2013 Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Daddy-Long-Legs/199504549828
4) Daddy Long Legs is a German folk/celtic band. They released one album in 2001 called 2nd Birth.
Daddy Long Legs is also a stage musical adaptation of the 1918 novel by Jean Webster.
Record Review
Daddy Long Legs, Evil Eye On You (Norton Records)
posted by: RZO
Record Review by RZO
I’ve seen Brian Hurd emerge from being one of The Visitors—a now defunct garage rock revival band that I loved—to the centerpiece of this dirty Brooklyn blues band.
Hurd is a larger-than-life persona, and it was obvious that he had to move on and do his own thing. And do his own thing he did. Enter Daddy Long Legs, with his towering, string bean body and wispy afro top, chock full of blues licks and yelps that must have come with him from his native St. Louis.
This isn’t to say New York has nothing to do with it. His partners in crime, drummer Josh Styles, who I remembered from The Stalkers, and Murat Akturk—one of the most convincing Johnnie Thunders pre-nasty heroin downfall guitarists turned blues sliders (and also formerly of The Electric Shadows)—know a good tune or two. And with Daddy Long Legs on harp and vocals, tearing it up, track after track, you’ve got a winner.
Daddy Long Leg’s debut on Norton Records, Evil Eye On You, does not disappoint. Although it mostly wallows in the blues, any fan of traditional rock ‘n’ roll will tell you that’s where the magic started anyway. And it’s always nice when an album has a good through line that tells a story. This is the tale of Daddy Long Legs and his mates conjuring up the soundtrack to a rollicking backwoods BBQ.
Track one, “Death Train Blues,” starts with gritty, dirty harp, slide guitar and tambourine. It sounds vintage, as if a repurposed Robert Johnson. “I Feel So Electric” has a nice guitar and stripped down drum opening, while the vocals remind me of “Roadhouse Blues” by The Doors. With “Happy Home,” I hear former garage rock influence by the likes of The Sonics and The Downliners Sect.The guys in action!
“Shackin’ Up” is peppier, upbeat, and a little like old Bob Dylan. Whereas Lux Interior from The Cramps can be imagined with “You’ll Be Mine,” including some nice slide work. The center track “Witch Hunt” serves as a bristling conduit to the remaining tracks, veering from snakebite or an exorcism, with nice yelps and harp. The sting continues with “Trouble (Always Come My Ways),” along with hoops, hollers and rowdy crowd jeers. Once it gets going, it takes off with tambourine and full instrumentation. Love the muffled vocal effects.
“Sittin’ Shotgun” is mid-tempo, and keeps the album chugging along. The pounding, biting, “Comin’ After Me” (recorded previously by greats like The Flamin’ Groovies and DMZ) has good Stonesy backing vocals and callback harp. I found “Candy Sue” to be a nice reprieve, with groovy, danceable, beats that really got my booty shaking. “Thirty Days” is a lively romp, and I can almost imagine a gaggle of train jumpers singing the refrain. The closer, “Evil Eye,” really seals in the down and dirty swampy feel.
Get yer copy at the Norton Records site: http://www.nortonrecords.com/lps_new.php. Now if we can just get Daddy Long Legs to come down to play in Norfolk like they’ve been threatening to…