Dave Newhouse - Automatic Writing (2026) [Hi-Res]

Artist: Dave Newhouse
Title: Automatic Writing
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: New House Music
Genre: Canterbury, Fusion, jazz rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) 24/44, FLAC (tracks), 320 kbps
Total Time: 45:02
Total Size: 512 / 319 / 141 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Title: Automatic Writing
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: New House Music
Genre: Canterbury, Fusion, jazz rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) 24/44, FLAC (tracks), 320 kbps
Total Time: 45:02
Total Size: 512 / 319 / 141 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
David Newhouse is an American author, painter and multi-instrumentalist (though primarily known for playing alto and baritone saxophone) located in Maryland. Born in Hawaii in 1953 and having played in several local experimental groups in Maryland during the early 70s such as Tunc and Illegal Aliens, he first came to prominence as the saxophone and keyboard player of the Muffins in 1973, gradually taking up the role of its lead composer. The band's signature Canterbury- and avant-prog sound (with Newhouse pointing out Henry Cow as a particularly significant influence) made a name for the Muffins as one of the first in their home country to adopt such a musical style (nicknamed AmeriCanterbury) and ensured Newhouse of a long and highly productive career in progressive rock circles even after the Muffins' first breakup in 1981.
Throughout the 1980s, Newhouse would go on to collaborate with artists such as Fred Frith, Skeleton Crew and Rascal Reporters before recording his first two solo albums around the turn of the next decade. Newhouse's further solo projects beyond this point have usually taken the form of new bands led by him such as Moon X and, most recently, Manna/Mirage, named after the Muffins' first album and close in style to the band that made him famous. Newhouse's next official solo album Daughter Of Paris wouldn't see the light of day until 2021, after an unyieldingly productive thirty years that saw him reform the Muffins and play with more modern prog giants like Guapo and Nick Prol & The Proletarians, and would reveal a much more musically versatile side of him beyond the avant-jazz rock that had been his trademark.
Throughout the 1980s, Newhouse would go on to collaborate with artists such as Fred Frith, Skeleton Crew and Rascal Reporters before recording his first two solo albums around the turn of the next decade. Newhouse's further solo projects beyond this point have usually taken the form of new bands led by him such as Moon X and, most recently, Manna/Mirage, named after the Muffins' first album and close in style to the band that made him famous. Newhouse's next official solo album Daughter Of Paris wouldn't see the light of day until 2021, after an unyieldingly productive thirty years that saw him reform the Muffins and play with more modern prog giants like Guapo and Nick Prol & The Proletarians, and would reveal a much more musically versatile side of him beyond the avant-jazz rock that had been his trademark.
Tracklist:
01. Dave Newhouse - Automatic Writing (5:43)
02. Dave Newhouse - Song For Saner Times (8:15)
03. Dave Newhouse - Billy's Boots (4:34)
04. Dave Newhouse - Everybody's Moon (6:42)
05. Dave Newhouse - Slightly, Virtually (7:35)
06. Dave Newhouse - One For Brubeck (6:04)
07. Dave Newhouse - Mr. Susie (6:09)
New album by Muffins co-founder Dave Newhouse! "Automatic Writing"! Clocking in at over 45 minutes, it is a high intensity, big band mix of Canterbury, RIO, and Jazz Fusion, along with the Muffinesque melodies you've come to expect from Newhouse.
Someone asked me recently if I thought my music has changed since the Muffin days, and I really don't think it has. To my ears, I'm still making exactly the same music I made back in 1970 when I had a Sears 2-track reel-to-reel tape recorder. a low-fi mic, and a spinet piano in my bedroom at my parents' house. Those same Muses are still with me (thank heavens), and I'm still just writing the music they whisper in my ear. And I'll continue to make this Dave Newhouse music (whatever the heck THAT is) for as long as those Muses stick around.
Someone asked me recently if I thought my music has changed since the Muffin days, and I really don't think it has. To my ears, I'm still making exactly the same music I made back in 1970 when I had a Sears 2-track reel-to-reel tape recorder. a low-fi mic, and a spinet piano in my bedroom at my parents' house. Those same Muses are still with me (thank heavens), and I'm still just writing the music they whisper in my ear. And I'll continue to make this Dave Newhouse music (whatever the heck THAT is) for as long as those Muses stick around.