Daniel MacMaster explained

Daniel MacMaster
Birth Name:Daniel Stewert MacMaster
Birth Date:11 July 1968
Birth Place:Barrie, Ontario, Canada
Death Place:Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
Genre:Hard rock, glam metal
Occupation:Vocalist
Instrument:Vocals, keyboards, harmonica, tambourine
Years Active:1988–2008
Past Member Of:Bonham
Scorcher
Emerald Monkey
Monkey Macmaster

Daniel Stewart MacMaster (July 11, 1968 – March 16, 2008) was a Canadian singer, who was lead vocalist for the Canadian/British hard rock band Bonham.

Career

With Bonham, he released two albums: 1989's The Disregard of Timekeeping (which peaked at Number 38 on the Billboard charts) and 1992's Mad Hatter. In 2001, Daniel was looking to put a new project together, starting with guitarist Stefano Fantin, and a string of small club dates were performed in the Barrie area, though, due to musical differences, they parted ways. In 2005, Daniel released a solo album entitled Rock Bonham...And The Long Road Back which was re-issued by Suncity Records in 2006.[1] Later, MacMaster started a new project with Connecticut-based singer-songwriter Jimmy D of the band Emerald Monkey, dubbed Monkey-MacMaster. The group was planning on releasing music and playing shows; in addition MacMaster had been working on his own material. However, neither of these projects were completed due to MacMaster's death.

Death

MacMaster died from a Group A streptococcal infection, which he thought was a cold, after developing sepsis, at Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre, on March 16, 2008.[2] He was married and had two children, Kaleb and Aryanna.

Discography

Studio albums

with Bonham

with Scorcher

Guest appearances

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: DANIEL MACMASTER INTERVIEW. SleazeRoxx.com. July 23, 2012. January 25, 2006.
  2. Web site: BLABBERMOUTH.NET – DANIEL MACMASTER's Cause Of Death Revealed . Roadrunnerrecords.com . July 23, 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110607014515/http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=93107 . June 7, 2011 .