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CD Available at these stores:

Borders Books & Music-Princeton

Bookmarks-Pennington

NJ Princeton Record Exchange-Princeton, NJ

Rock Dreams-Hamilton, NJ

Failte Coffeehouse-Hopewell, NJ

Barnes & Noble -Princeton, NJ

The Band ......Bios of the group























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T h e B a n d
Jerry Steele, to put it simply and accurately, can play any instrument he picks up really well; and it annoys maggi to no end.  He plays slappin', thumpin', ridin', swingin' Bass in the 6-piece band, and pedal steel and guitar in the quartet.  He's a helluva singer too, but admits he can't sing and play pedal steel at the same time very well.  He has worked with " Chic", " Patti Labelle", and other renowned artists.  He even has an old single lying around in his basement that he recorded with hot Nashville singer-songwriter Buddy Miller a few decades ago(could be a collector's item, if he could only find it). Jerry and maggi have been playing in bands together for about ten years.
John Bushnell- Local guitar legend and wizard John Bushnell has been playing with maggi for about three years.  His mighty chops have been heard in many well-respected bands, including "Castle Browne", "Bricks Mortar", and "Unguided Missile ", his power trio- a fixture at John & Peter's for many years. He has an album selling briskly in germany and japan, and graciously throws maggi a guitar lick or two now and then. His harmonies are always right on the money, having been blessed with perfect pitch...
Tom Reock plays keyboards in about a dozen bands, and somehow manages to keep them all straight- he's got chops, baby, both on the ivories and in his voice.  His last album, Mainstaye, has sold out; however I think he has some cassettes left.  He was the driving force behind "The Whitewalls" and "Down to Earth ", which has been working on and off, for about seventeen years at last count... of course, it helps that the band members all married each others brothers and sisters, ex-girlfriends, and cousins. Tom has been working with maggi for about 5 years, and co-wrote Work In Motion (track #9) with her.
Bob Demetrician is the jump-around guy in the band. He plays percussion (and I mean at least 50 different sounds), the tenor sax, and has the sweet high harmony that maggi sometimes can't reach. He was a sound engineer in NYC, so he's a little picky about the sound at gigs (although Jerry gets to lug the p.a. around and set it up).  This is a good thing since Bob has more than enough gear to play with.  He was also a long time member of the "Down to Earth " band.

Steve DeMet is sometimes known as Steve Demetrician (when maggi forgets to call him Steve DeMet), and is Bob's brother (not husband).  Steve found his way to Broadway, performing on stage and in the pit for Bob Fosse's "Dancin".  He was the drummer for "The Whitewalls", "Gris Gris", and you guessed it..."Down to Earth " - (maggi loved them so much, she stole half the band!).  He's about the tastiest drummer around, and adds a little jazz-inflected sound to maggi's schizo...er, I mean, eclectic sound. Steve has been around the band for 11 years (all the way back to maggi's scary first demo!)

Defiantly rejecting conventional rules of musical genre, Maggi Hill, with absolutely no cause at all, is a rebel. She recently completed her first CD entitled "Keep The Label", on her own Lowbrow Records label. As approximately one-half of the disc was recorded in Nashville, a careful listener will note that those songs have a country rock groove, with the inclusion of pedal steel, fiddles, and a bit of a twang now and again—Maggi picks up accents wherever she goes, thus adding to her genre identity confusion. The remainder of the tracks were recorded here in the NY/NJ/PA area, with hundreds of producers and musicians. They range in sound from reggae to pop to folk, even rhythm & blues. She's so cocky, she thinks she can write and sing anything, and no one has the nerve to tell her otherwise, fearing she'll send her godfather Vinny over to clean out their ears. Several of her songs have been played on 88.5 WXPN, a progressive station out of Philly, as well as on various local stations. Her voice and material are often compared to Linda Ronstadt, Bonnie Raitt, and Natalie Merchant. Maggi performs in the NY/NJ/PA area regularly with a 6-pc band, recently sharing the stage with Bobby Bandiera from Bon Jovi.

P R E S S

East Coast Rocker - June, 2002 (Click here to see review)

"The extraordinarily talented Maggi Hill has done it again with the release of her second outstanding CD, Paradise Lost & Found. As in her debut release, Keep The Label Hill has produced a CD that has every component of success. Combining all of the ingredients for a winner – brilliant songwriting, musicianship, vocals and production – Hill has hit the target again." - Musicians Realm - May 2002 ...link to full review

"Some people just were born to sing country, and Maggi Hill is one of them. Her voice does some of the best natural tremolo sustains since Neil Young, and her harmonies could melt ice cream cones. Maggi Hill's dynamic band is almost as good as her voice." - Lycos Music - January 2001 ...link to full review

"In the title track of this ingenious CD, Maggi Hill implores her listeners to Keep The Label.  She doesn’t need bourgeois material possessions, doesn’t want to identify with any particular class or political affiliation, and I’m sure she doesn’t want her music pigeonholed either.  In this fine debut CD, Hill practices what she preaches.  Diverse, straightforward, lowbrow, original and definitely not belonging to any particular genre, Keep The Label is a delight." - Musicians Realm - July 2000 ...link to full review

"...For whatever mood you are in, there is a song, and each one is better than the last...the only category this CD needs to be filled under is fantastic." - Liner Notes December '98 ...link to full review

"While 'Keep The Label' seeks to define the Maggi Hill sounds, it surveys much of the vintage folk-rock turf of Raitt and Ronstadt with a decidedly '90s sheen." - Trenton Times October '98 ...link to full review

"Maggi's voice is a subtly-controlled powerhouse...she is also a true character, able to win over the crowd by artfully busting its chops a bit (and by looking good)." - U.S. 1 Newspaper - May 1992


click to view cover

Faith In A Seed
Full song 3:55 mins...........

Circe (The Enchantress)
Full song 4:25 mins...........


To order your copy,
click here, or send check/money order for $14 to:

Lowbrow Records
P.O. Box 572
Hopewell, NJ 08525

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