B I O
Daniel Young is a singer-songwriter, guitarist, drummer, sound engineer, and producer from Salt Lake City. He grew up on the side of a tall mountain, and that sense of forceful elevation informs all of his work. Daniel's been recording and performing for over two decades—and he's not that old, which tells you much of what you need to know about his commitment to craft, about how deep this runs with him.
There's a heft to the light in the early evening, when every easterly surface shines. That mayfly incandescence, where nothing gold can stay, though it might flash long enough for you to touch its flaming tail. That's the light Daniel Young captures on Another Golden Hour: it was absorbed on the side patio where the songs were born, carried to the basement where they were magnetized, and it's now refracted back to the air around our heads, where those same songs will fade and be reborn. A small resurrection, a rotational miracle; another day, another golden hour. Recorded at Orchard Studios over a two-day session with only a handful of overdubs, Young worked once again with the Rambling Roses, the same crew he had along for 2024's Leave It Out to Dry. They achieve a rare merger of time, texture, and temperament—a unity that miraculously preserves the uncanny elements of each component.
These songs extend Young's abiding interests—and the crazy quilt of his life and times: "Baby, Baby Blue" is a tribute to the dearly departed KSOP (AM 1370), a seventy-year veteran of the good fight of country music and its amplitude modulations; "Holdin' Up" is an earnest question issued to the new depression; "Fires Shall Be Ceased" and "Ways to Communicate" draw on the righteous, rangy energy of a protest tradition that reaches back to Woody Guthrie and the ghosts of Joe Hill that haunt the Wasatch; the title cut is a wavey, dripping distillation of all the sounds that have been trailing Young over the years. Another Golden Hour is a bid for hard-earned hope. You better believe it.
- B. Child
Hamilton, NY
“The pedal steel is a real highlight, as is Young’s voice with his light twang threading through its soulful tone – like a cosmic Gram Parsons”. - Post to Wire
"Think, Neal Casal. Think, The Band. Big names indeed, but the singer-songwriter from Utah deserves all the credit for this beautiful piece of work" - Alt Country NL
"The World Ain’t Gonna Wait", is best listened to on vinyl; not because of any superior audio quality but that format will force you to hear the tracks in the order in which they were programmed. There is a definite flow to the album that will be missed if listened to in shuffle mode or just randomly streamed tracks". - The Amp