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    Kirk Armstrong
Genre: Rock
Region: Canada

   Description     Biography     Influences   
Music came naturally to me. I was influenced by everything I heard. My main influences in my teens were Bob Dylan and Jimi Hendrix. I learned to play guitar with the help of some friends, my record player and my ears. I started writing songs as soon as I learned to play. When punk and new wave hit in the late 70’s some friends and I started a collection of bands which evolved into my first professional band, Manikin. Manikin played around the area for a couple of years but was unviable financially. I started to teach guitar around this time in order to supplement my income.
In the 80’s I took an electronics course offered by Algonquin. This helped me come to grips with the music synthesizers which were just becoming affordable for the average person at this time. I started a new band, AKA, which played locally. When AKA folded I sold all my sound reinforcement equipment and bought a Portastudio, a synthesizer and a drum machine. I started to concentrate upon my own original material. I was working in the high tech field at this time and was introduced to computer programming.
In the mid 80’s I left the high tech industry and joined the Murray Reid Group, a popular Valley band, as the lead guitarist. We played constantly for a couple of years and then I decided to go solo. I have been playing solo now for close to 20 years with the aid of computer assisted backing tracks that I have created myself.
I have been teaching guitar privately now for 25 years. I also run a project studio and have produced and performed on CD’s released by GASM and Freddy Dixon, among others. I also worked with the late Terry Carisse for ten years helping him record demos for his songs. Terry Carisse was a six-time recipient of the Canadian Country Music Association's Male Vocalist of the Year, dominating the category from 1980-1986, and still holding the record for the most ever wins as the CCMA's Male Vocalist of the Year. He also earned the CCMA's Songwriter of the Year award in 1985 for his song Counting The I Love You's. Carisse was also named Top Male Vocalist in the RPM ''Big Country Awards'' in 1980-81 and 1987; and won several Big Country awards for Single and Album of the Year as well as Songwriter of the Year.
I have finally released my first CD, Wire, comprised of songs that I have had lying around for years.



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Island
2008


Wire
2007

Step 1 - Personal Info
No. Title Duration Price Download
1.  I Will Give You Everyth.. 5:28 $0.89
2.  It's All I Ever Wanted 3:53 $0.89
3.  You Left Me Here to Cry 3:02 $0.89
4.  Smile Like Winter 4:35 $0.89
5.  Nothing Would Ever Be t.. 5:03 $0.89
6.  The One That Got Away 5:02 $0.89
7.  From My Heart 6:04 $0.89
8.  It Won't Matter 3:42 $0.89
9.  Country Mile 4:02 $0.89
10.  I Hear the Train Go By 5:12 $0.89
11.  Don't Lose Your Way 5:09 $0.89
12.  All My Days 4:56 $0.89
13.  Life Has Taken It's Tol.. 4:46 $0.89
14.  You Can Always Say 5:36 $0.89

Island
Genre:
Release Date: 10/01/2008
14 Songs

  $9.99  (Physical CD)

  $5.00 (Download CD)
earBuzz Review:
Kirk Armstrong combines the soothing vibe of easy listening with a storytelling-singer/songwriter style. It's mellow folk (or soft rock is some circles). The introductory track; "All My Days" is a marriage of airy strings and guitars with Scott Thomas Band-like vocals. Armstrong fills the lovers lament quota with "The One that Got Away", a song seemingly written for a lost lover. The chorus is melancholy and has a sort of Pink Floyd quality to it. "Smile Like Winter" is an observational ballad, painting images of cool weather as a way to describe his yearning for the love of a particular woman. Armstrong gets a little bluesy on "Life Has Taken It's Toll" (aptly titled for that style). "I Hear the Train Go By" is another poetic number, an internal ballad seemingly telling the story of his own struggles. The overall tonality of Island is strikingly similar to well known Hawaiian singer Israel Kamakawiwo'ole's many compositions. His vibrato sounds a bit like Dennis Brown. There's a continued sweet/softness to his voice throughout the record and a lightheartedness to this album, as the world Island would suggest. Need to chill? This album may suit you. MM