The singer and songwriter known only as
Dishking has released his new LP album, “1O1.” The record
contains 13 original tracks for an approximate total listening time
of 40 minutes. “1O1” is the latest full-length record in a
growing series of albums from Dishking including 2010's “Sell
Yourself in Gold” and 2009's “The Power of a Loaded Gun,” both
of which were published on the AG Music label. With a plain yet
polished studio production and a soulful, raw overtone, “1O1”
presents the best proof to date that Dishking is among Holland's best
sonic exports in decades.
Dishking, who takes his name from a
blue-collar job he worked to feed himself while writing music, cites
as main artistic influences such titans as Johnny Cash, David Bowie,
Tom Waits, Elvis Presley, Ry Cooder, T-Bone Burnett, and Daniel
Lanois. His own sound takes what he likes best from each while
maintaining a unique, non-derivative angle that is easy to identify.
A consistent stylistic thread of Cash
and Presley runs throughout, made volatile by his Bowie-esque
aggression and pensive by his Waits-like, shadowy drawl. The effect
of Lanois appears mostly in Dishking's attention to studio precision
and crispness of timbre. Perhaps his strongest trait of all, though,
is his knack for narrative songwriting in the tradition of the
American South, which is akin to his penchant for Cooder and Burnett.
Speaking of the lyrical content of his
record, Dishking writes, “The main message my album '1O1' shares is
to deal and learn from your mistakes. [It's about] being able to
reflect on yourself as an outsider. It's literally a one-on-one
conversation that was needed to know where and who you are right now
in return to act and choose differently, starting of a new day, a new
beginning, a new page. That's where the title comes from.”
The title of the LP is therefore not
“One-Zero-One” like the first class in a college course, as the
record is sometimes listed online, but rather, “1O1”
(One-On-One).
Accolades for Dishking's music are easy
to find. Mike Garson, keyboardist for David Bowie, Smashing Pumpkins
and Nine Inch Nails told the artist, "You're a good songwriter;
I especially liked the 'Brimstone' song a lot!" Dutch radio host
Simone Walraven compared his scraping, bluesy voice to those of the
Crash Test Dummies, saying, “Holland's got its own Brad Roberts.”
The popular European music review site, Platomania, proclaims, “Is
it his voice, sounding unhesitated like Johnny Cash's but warm like a
Jim Reeves? Is it the influences of Cash, Elvis, Tom Waits, Tony Joe
White and David Bowie he's using to make his songs so captivating?
It's a combination. And based on this, one could and should only wish
him the successful career that a hard-working, talented man earns.”
“1O1” by Dishking is available
online worldwide. Get in early.
-S. McCauley
Lead Press Release Writer
“1O1” by Dishking –
Website -
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