Stu Daye | |
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Born | White Plains, New York |
Genres | Rock/Blues/Pop |
Instruments | Vocals, Guitar, Bass, Mandolin, Banjo, Keyboards, Slide Guitar. |
Years active | 1975–present |
Labels | Columbia, Epic, Word of Mouth, A&M, Warner/Reprise |
Associated acts | Stu Daye Band, Alice Cooper, Nils Lofgren, Tim Curry, Aerosmith, Neal Smith, Billion Dollar Babies, The Mix, The StreetHearts, The Moe, David Grahame. |
Stu Daye is an American musician. Daye has provided vocals and played guitar on records by such artists as Alice Cooper and Nils Lofgren as well as having a successful solo career.
"Free Parking" (Columbia, PC-33936) was Daye's first offering on a major label. It came out on Columbia in April 1976 and was produced by Jack Douglas of Aerosmith and Patti Smith fame. It was engineered by Shelly Yakus and Rod O'Brian. The album featured Steve Gadd and Rick Marrotta on drums, Tony Levin on bass and featured special appearances by Aerosmith vocalist Steve Tyler and Billy Squire. The touring band consisted of at different times Christian Osbourne (guitar), Billy Cross (guitar), Mike Neville (bass) and Steve Missal and Tommy Thomson on drums. During this period Daye toured with Rush on their 2112 tour to showcase his material.
The Stu Daye Band played with names such as Aerosmith, Ted Nugent, Mott the Hoople, Thin Lizzy, Rick Derringer and Jeff Beck with Jan Hammer.
After leaving The Stu Daye Band Cross went on to form the Delta Cross Band whose single 'Astro Kid' was written by Daye. His version of this track can be heard on Daye's 2009 Album All Roads Lead Here
The Mix was formed of New York musicians of the time. It was a classic power trio with Daye on Vocals/Guitar, Corky Laing (later of Mountain) on drums and David Grahame on Bass. Managed by Aerosmiths management Leber & Krebs, they were fast becoming renowned for their energetic live performances making them the darlings of the New York scene. In 1980 they released their first album "American glue" on Leber & Krebs owned label "Word of Mouth" (Epic Records). The album was produced by Felix Pappalardi. At a gig supporting Judas Priest on July 4, 1980 the band played through a hail of fireworks from the Judas Priest fans only to be lauded for completing their set.