Month: December 2013

  • Shawn Starski

    Shawn Starski

    STARSKI-01

    After spending nearly a decade with harp ace Jason Ricci, guitarist Shawn Starski has stepped out with a self-titled album that establishes him as a triple threat, not simply a guitar ace.

    It’s a position he’s not altogether comfortable with, mostly because, prior to composing its songs, Starski had never written lyrics.

    “I wrote a lot of the music with Jason, but I don’t think of myself as a songwriter or singer; I always just thought of myself as a guy who writes music and had other people write lyrics for it. But I’m studying lyrics more now, and finding out why certain people are so relevant because of their lyrics!”

    After leaving Ricci’s band a couple years ago, Starski toured with roots singer Kelly Hunt. And he recently joined Otis Taylor’s band. “Otis is great to work with – and funny. At a gig one night, he told me, ‘I’ll give you a lot of freedom. You can do whatever you want. I’ll give you so much freedom you can hang yourself!’ I think I did an okay job that night.”

    Starski says Taylor’s music fits his style. “He’s going for that trance thing, and I’ve always been into one-chord blues with the drone note you play on top of to make something happen. We have a kick-ass drummer, great bass player, great fiddle player, and Otis just grooving in that pulse. They throw it in your court and you make it exciting.”

    Joining the band of the veteran blues man prompted a change of instruments, too. With Ricci and Hunt, his main axe was a Fender ’62 reissue Strat. “With Otis, I wanted to go for a different sound all together, so I’m using a 2001 Gibson Les Paul. With Jason and Kelly, I always had that clear tone. The Les Paul gives me a bit of a more saturated tone that fits with Otis’ music.” He’s also a fan of Jeff Clements’ instruments.

    On the road, he has been running the Les Paul through a blackface Fender Deluxe Reverb borrowed from a friend. He owns a ’65 Fender Super Reverb that he used on the album, along with a Category 5. And while the disc is predominantly blues, R&B, and soul (with help from singer Elle on two cuts), there’s a definite lean toward jazz on “Hallows Eve.” Though Starski grew up on Hendrix and old blues, he listens to his share of the form.

    “I listen to the old cats like Wes Montgomery, Joe Pass, and George Benson. I love Django. And I really like stuff from more-modern guys like John Scofield, Larry Carlton, and Robben Ford. I listen to all of that music regularly.”

    While he’s mostly known as a sideman, he hopes a gig that’s a little more high-profile, like the one with Taylor, will help his solo career grow. “With Jason, we built that up from nothing,” he laughs. “But now I’m with Otis, and he’s got a lot of great people coming to see him, a lot of good contacts. So, to have my own release right now is a good thing. I’m trying to create a presence with this record so I’m not a complete unknown. So, if I’m trying to sell myself to a club or festival, at least I know my record has some activity and word is getting out. Six months from now, we’ll see where I am and see what kind of gigs I get. I just want to be able to stay out there.”

    As for the new album, he’s obviously happy to see his initial solo project come to fruition.

    “It’s something I started almost two years ago,” Starski said. “I made a demo just to see what was working, and it was supposed to be released, but the record company kind of fell apart. So I put it out myself. It took a while to make it sound the way I wanted, but I found the right guy – Michael Saint-Leon – and he did a fantastic job.”


    This article originally appeared in VG September 2012 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.


  • Justin Hayward

    Justin Hayward

    Hayward concentrates onstage with his iconic ’63 Gibson ES-335 at a recent Moody Blues concert. Photo: Willie G. Moseley
    Hayward concentrates onstage with his iconic ’63 Gibson ES-335 at a recent Moody Blues concert. Photo: Willie G. Moseley

    In addition to touring and recording with the legendary English band, Moody Blues lead guitarist/vocalist Hayward released his most recent solo album, Spirits of the Western Sky, in February. Such work affords him the option of writing songs in a different style. One of numerous aspiring musicians who as a youngster listened to Radio Luxembourg “on a homemade transistor radio,” his first guitar was from Headquarter and General Supplies. “I don’t think it had a brand name,” he said. “But all the guitars I had until my first Gibson ES-335, in 1963, were unsatisfactory and I had to modify them.”

    An ES-335 has been Hayward’s guitar of choice for decades, and he has relied on a Cherry Red ’63 with a factory Bigsby vibrato for most of that time.

    “The first time I played that 335, I knew it was for me,” he remembered. “I had one before I joined the Moodies, but had to sell it because I was broke. [The red 335] came from the factory exactly like that. When I first came to the U.S., I met the guys who made it in Kalamazoo.”

    As for acoustics, Hayward relies primarily on Martin and Collings instruments in the studio. “I love both; one is not better or preferable to the other,” he said. Live, he stages a handful of Guild models. Other touring instruments include the red ES-335, a ’65 Fender Telecaster (used on “Ride My See-Saw”), plus a Collings. One of the acoustics has two pickguards, but again, Hayward’s playing style has nothing to do with the mod.

    “I put the other pickguard on because the wood above the hole was badly scratched in an accident,” he said.

    While he has written many of the Moody Blues’ hits as well as other memorable songs recorded and performed by the band, he’s still compelled to compose material outside of the band. “I am a songwriter, I enjoy recording, and it’s great, so I had a lot of unrecorded songs,” he said. “I can say things that are more personal.” Hayward played all guitars.

    While some songs have orchestral accompaniment, the strings are supplemental. Songs that reference specific genres are grouped, for example, three country/bluegrass style tunes appear in sequence, as do the techno/dance-mix songs toward the end. “It seemed to sound right when [co-producer) Alberto Parodi and I were compiling the tracks,” Hayward said. The country song “It’s Cold Outside of Your Heart” appeared on Moody Bluegrass Two, an anthology of countrified versions of Moody songs on which Hayward and other band members participated along with Vince Gill, Ricky Skaggs, Sam Bush, and other country-music veterans. On the new version, the only change is in the mastering. While he is constantly focused on his songwriting and playing crafts, Hayward doesn’t have a particular favorite guitar passage or passages on the new album.

    “I just enjoy playing,” he said, adding that he plans to continue his primary duty with the Moody Blues, but also more solo albums. Not surprisingly, he eschews examinations of how his solo albums compare to each other. “I don’t compare things. I enjoyed every one, and each has been my whole life while I was recording it.”


    This article originally appeared in VG July 2013 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.