Year: 2014

  • Leslie West

    Leslie West

    Leslie West 01
    Photo: Chris Marksbury.

    In deciding who to hit up to play on his new album, Unusual Suspects, Leslie West put a lot of thought into his musical and personal connections. And he’s justifiably proud of the recruits; decades-long friend Steve Lukather, Billy Gibbons, Slash, Zakk Wylde, who affectionately refers to West as “Dad,” and labelmate Joe Bonamassa, who so dug the West, Bruce and Laing version of the Willie Dixon/Eddie Boyd blues standard “Third Degree” that he asked West to cut it again for Unusual Suspects.

    “These guys don’t show up to play on just anybody’s albums,” West notes. “They’re all stars in their own right and fantastic players – each with their own sound and style.”

    What’s the deeper story behind the crew you lined up to make the new album?
    Well, when I signed with Mascot’s label, Provogue Records, they wanted me to play with Buddy Guy. I don’t even know Buddy Guy. I thought, “I wouldn’t know where to begin.” Then he mentioned some other guys. But I had in my own head who I would like to play with. Slash was one, but I didn’t know how that was gonna come about. Funny enough, my wife one day said to me, “You got a message on Facebook from a guy named Peter Merluzzi, who says he’s Slash’s tour manager. He gave me a phone number and e-mail – says Slash has been a fan of yours for years. He wants you to call him back.” I asked her, “Do you think it’s bulls**t?” And she said, “What do you have to lose?” So I e-mailed him, and he told me Slash was playing New York and wanted me to stop down and watch. But I had just undergone surgery on my leg, so I couldn’t go. I was really disappointed. But I wrote back, and said, “I’m working on a track called ‘Mud Flap Mama,’ and I’d love to have him play solos with me.” I sent him the track, and about a week later, Peter sent an e-mail saying, “He loves the track.”

    So, I was going to L.A. for the N.A.M.M. show last January, and to do some recording. We rented a studio in Hollywood, a couple of blocks from where Slash was working. I’m sitting there, and I feel a tap on my shoulder. I turn around and Slash says, “Here I am.” No roadies, no entourage, just him and his guitar. It was incredible. The way he played on the track… I mean, his guitar sounded like a harmonica! After the session, I gave him one of my Dean signature guitars. He was thrilled.

    So that worked out, and the other things seemed to fall in place, too. I’ve known Zakk for years, and knew I wanted him to play on “Nothin’s Changed” – a frantic song that would go with the way Zakk plays and the unfrantic way I play. I thought it would sound good.

    How did you connect with Joe Bonamassa?
    I played on one of his early albums – a track called “If Heartaches Were Nickels,” with Greg Allman. So I told Joe, “I’m doing an album and I’d love to jam with you.” So, one of his favorite tracks of all time is West, Bruce, and Laing’s “Third Degree.” He said, “If you ever want to re-cut it, I’m in.” I said, “Consider it done.” So I had Kenny Aronoff on drums on the whole album, we cut the track and went right to the studio again. The two of us sat in the control room, and played opposite each other – amps in the band room.

    And the Reverend Billy Gibbons?
    Billy was friends with my producer, Fabrizio, but I knew Billy from when ZZ Top did their first tour. I even knew his parents.

    So, all these things seemed to work out… Then Lukather came to the studio one day, to see Zakk. I said, “Listen man, on this track there’s a boogie part that I cannot play. You could play it.” He played it on acoustic, and it made the whole track, right off the bat! It’s so subtle, but man, he plays it so smooth and evenly.

    A lot of people ask, “How did you know which guy should play on what?” Well, it just seemed to fit, you know? I didn’t have to think too much about it. It just worked out.

    How did the players play into the album’s title?
    I called it Unusual Suspects because it’s… You know when you’re doing an album and the label wants you to get guys? You get this guy, you get that guy. Let’s get this guy to play organ, let’s get this guy to play piano, let’s get this guy… I just wanted four or five really great guitarists who, in their own right, stood up like an eagle on the top of a mountain, you know?

    What stood out in your mind in the process, watching those guys play?
    Seeing how easygoing Slash was. He walked in wearing a baseball cap and a shirt that says “guitar zero” on it! And the way he played – right on my tail. And Bonamassa, too; I’m running the session during “Third Degree” and at the end of the session, I said, “You’re playing so f***in’ fast but you don’t miss a note!” You know some guys play really fast, but they’re sloppy, but he’s so clear and clean, and he’s a guitar geek. He looks like he’s about 20 still. I really enjoyed the whole experience. I did all the pre-production here in New Jersey, then flew out to L.A. twice to finish the recording. And Fabrizio Grossi, the producer, even came here once to finalize the last couple of mixes.

    Leslie West Dean Guitars

    The Dean Leslie West Standard and Signature guitars (top) have mahogany bodies and necks, maple tops, ebony fretboards, and use the DMT Leslie West “Mountain of Tone” pickup. The Leslie West Mississippi Queen model has a mahogany body and neck, rosewood fretboard, and custom graphics.

    When you were a kid, you lived in the same building as Waddy Wachtel?
    Yeah, I just got off the phone with Waddy (laughs)! We grew up in Forest Hills; he lived on one side of the building, I lived on the other. After two years, we met. He was so talented; he played drums with my band, the Vagrants, until we found a drummer. I remember, as soon as the Beatles would come out with a new song, like “I Feel Fine” or “Ticket to Ride,” he would figure it out so fast that in the time it took me to go down my elevator, go to his side of the building, go up in that elevator, he knew the song already! ’Cuz he’d been listening on the radio, I think WABC, where they were, “First to play the new Beatles song!” And he learned it so fast.

    I remember he bought a Rickenbacker 12-string after George Harrison started playing one, and he had sold me his Les Paul Junior. In fact, he just today told me, “You know, it’s really funny. When I first moved out to L.A., I didn’t have any money and we were in the studio recording, Steve Stills had this Les Paul that I liked. I didn’t have any money, so I called my father.” And I remember his father – he was a real business guy, you know, with a suit and tie. And he said “Dad, you gotta lend me some money.” He says, “For what?” He says, “There’s a guitar I gotta get.” He says, “Whadya mean, a guitar?” “It’s a Les Paul.” His dad says, “You have a Les Paul.” He says, “No, I don’t. I sold it to Les.” His father asked, “What did you sell it to him for? (laughs)”

    I swear, less than an hour ago, we talked about it because he’s doing something with Kenny Aronoff. But Bob – that’s his real name – taught me every lick the Beatles had, and he was playing Beach Boy stuff. I don’t know how he figured this stuff out so fast. Some guys have the gift. Even when he was taking guitar lessons, the teacher said to him one day, “You’re not reading this stuff, you’re playing by ear.” And he says, “Yeah, I hear it and I can play it.”

    So, the Junior he sold you was the one you used in the Mountain days?
    No, I’m not that smart (laughs)! The lead singer of my group, Vagrants… I sold it to him, and he spray-painted it white because, I’m sorry, but the sunburst finish on it was all scarred up and it had scratches on it. And I wanted a nice shiny… so I figured, “I’ll sell it to the lead singer of the Vagrants.” And he painted it white – ruined the damn thing! And of course I wish I had it now…

    Do you know where it is?
    No idea. The reason I started playing a Les Paul Junior was, when we started the group, I had a Hagstrom, and it wouldn’t stay in tune. So Felix Pappalardi one day says to me, “There’s a guy downtown, Matt Umanov. He works on guitars, and he’s got this Gibson Les Paul he got from Clapton and in place of where it would say ‘Gibson’ on the head in mother of pearl it says ‘Clapton,’ but it was cracked. Let’s go down there and if it’s ready, get that.”

    So I go down there, and Matt doesn’t know where that guitar is. He lost it, probably somewhere in his vault! So he says, “I’ll tell you what. I’ll give you this one until I find it,” and he gave me a Les Paul Junior.

    With a TV finish or sunburst finish?
    It was the sunburst. But the pickup was so powerful. It just happened to be the right guitar at the right time. And then, all the English groups, when they came over – Mott the Hoople, Martin Barre with Jethro Tull – we’re all friends, we all toured together. They said, “Wow! Where’d you get that?” I said, “Felix gave it to me. But, you know if you go to a pawn shop you can buy one for a hundred bucks.” So while we’re on tour in Texas, that’s all Mick Ralphs would do, was go to all the pawn shops and buy up all the Les Paul Juniors.

    I used to call it a tree with a microphone on it. It was the most basic guitar made. I think it was probably the cheapest Gibson.

    Leslie West in the studio with Slash Steve Lukather Zakk Wylde.
    West in the studio with Slash, Steve Lukather, and Zakk Wylde.

    Do you still have the original one?
    No, I gave it to Pete Townshend when they were doing Who’s Next. I used it in the studio and I gave it to him. I saw his brother years later and he told me that Pete had a flood at this house and all his guitars were damaged.

    What other music and guitarists caught your ear when you were a kid?
    The funny thing is, people say that I play a lot of blues. I didn’t know one blues guy! All I knew was The Who, the Stones, the Beatles. That was my schooling. The John Mayall Bluesbreakers [with Eric Clapton] album, I must have listened to that 3,000 times! I’d listen to that tone, wondering, “What amp is he using?” So I went into Manny’s Music and saw they had Marshall amps – the first store in New York to have Marshalls. All I knew was that it was an English amp and [Jim Marshall] used to work for Vox… The first Marshall I got was a 50-watt head and an 8×12 cabinet, which really had the best sound of all, but just didn’t have a lot of power. So later on, I would slave it through a 100-watt head. I just couldn’t get over the sound of it.

    To this day, tone is the most important thing to me, besides being in tune. I don’t play that fast, I only use two fingers, really, on my left hand, to do all the fingering. I never learned how to use the pinky, I never learned how to use all the fingers like a real pro does. So I had to teach myself, and because I couldn’t play that fast, I wanted to make sure the notes really rang true. I didn’t want it to sound like a mosquito, like a fuzztone, I didn’t want it to sound like I was just driving the s**t out of it. I wanted to feel the air from the speakers – you see air being moved and you see that speaker moving… When I’m on stage and first plug in, and I feel a rush of air in my balls… That’s when I know my guitar is sounding good!

    But the tone was the most important thing, getting a really great tone that I can listen back to six months or a year later and say, “That really sounds great.”

    Did the Les Paul Junior become your favorite because of the way it sounded through a Marshall?
    You know, when I first started, I didn’t use a Marshall. Our management got us a deal with Sunn and I wasn’t so thrilled with that – I didn’t like their guitar head. What happened was, we were playing the first gig for Mountain at the Fillmore West in San Francisco, and they said they would deliver the amps from the airport. Well, the boxes arrived, and I’m expecting to open up these Marshalls. But instead, I see these Sunns, and not only that, they sent me a P.A. head and two 4×12 cabinets, and it had these two other things that you put on top of the speakers that looked like air conditioning louvers, for the highs. It was a small P.A. So I was stuck playing with Albert King and Johnny Winter using these amps that I’d never played before. But, it had four mic inputs and a master volume. So I plugged into one of the mic inputs, got a good sound out of that, then turned the Volume to maybe five or six. It was really funny because you could turn the Bass all the way up and you got more treble. If you turned the Treble all the way up, you got more bass. I remember Albert King, he used to use these Acoustic amps. Well, his amp blew, so he wondered if he could use my amp. I said, “Yeah, but I don’t know how they work.” I had just gotten them. So he had to play out of them and he was having a terrible time because it certainly wasn’t his sound.

    But those Sunns were the beginning of my sound. I used them on Mountain Climbing. On the first solo album, Mountain, I used Marshall, but after that it was Sunn. Then, the guy from Sunn said, “I’m going to get them to make a guitar amp.” I said, “You don’t have to. Just take the guts of this head, make a new box that says ‘guitar head’ or something.” They already had it, it was such a great-sounding amp.

    Most of the time, a P.A. head is gonna be very clean-sounding…
    It was clean, but the thing is, the mic inputs distort when you turn them all the way up. There’s your drive. If I was in mic channel one and wanted it clean, you put the Volume at two or three. But I would crank that sucker up to get to the volume I wanted. So it wasn’t that it was a dirty amp – I made it dirty. I’m sure that wasn’t their intention, I mean imagine somebody’s voice coming out of that!

    Leslie West with Joe Bonamassa
    West with Joe Bonamassa.

    What’s your current rig?
    I’m using Dean guitars now – I have four different models – and I use Blackstar amps. The Deans were great because years ago somebody would say, “Why don’t you have your own guitars?” I’d say, “You know, it sort of would look funny, putting my name on a guitar.” What, are you gonna have the Leslie West Les Paul Junior? It’s already a Les Paul! So when Dean came to me and said they’d like to do a guitar, I said, “Well, I want it to be a one-pickup, and I want the V of the neck to be shaped like my hand, and it slots so perfectly. And it has a little cutaway on the top. It looks like, I guess a updated version or like Ferrari made a Les Paul Junior. I play all different ones – there’s the USA Custom, the limited edition, a 40th Anniversary they did with a big headstock with my logo on the bottom of the body, it looks like a peace sign, but it’s really an LW logo. And then there’s an import, and I use them all because they all sound great. And we just came up with the Mississippi Queen model.

    I’m thrilled because it took a long time for me to say, “Okay, I have my own guitar.” I waited for like 40 years!

    I remember, it debuted at one of the summer N.A.M.M. shows in Austin. So I went down and the president of Dean, Elliot Rubinson, gave me a guitar. So here I am, playing my signature model, and I’m so f***in’ proud. And right across the aisle from Dean is Gibson. So a guy walks over while I’m holding the guitar, and says, “You know, we were thinking of making a Leslie West signature model.” I said, “Well, when? You had 40 years!” Timing is everything, you know (laughs)? But it is what it is.

    When I’m testing a new amp rig, I like to hook it up in my garage, which has cement walls that make it so dry and loud, I can really tell if the amp is performing. Anybody can go into a studio or a great room and plug in an amp and have it sound great – like when you go to a N.A.M.M. show and plug in a guitar on that big floor. You don’t really know if the amp’s good. You imagine it sounds good because you want it to. But I put my amps through an acid test every time I get the opportunity. I turn them on just by themselves, no pedals, no nothin’. Just to hear the amp sound and what can I do to make them sound better. Not so much the volume, it’s the tone.

    You’re planning a tour, right?
    Yeah, with Uli John Roth and Michael Schenker. I’d just gotten out of the hospital [Ed. Note: West, who is diabetic, underwent surgery in June to remove his right leg above the knee after complications.] and I had to consider all of the things that go into a tour, plus how I’ll get around. I’ll probably sit down when I play, but I’ll be on a riser. I can play in a chair really well, and I don’t think I’ll be confident enough walking with a prosthetic – it’s not just snap on and go! I don’t want to worry about my balance while I’ve got to play and perform and sing. Maybe in a year or so I’ll be used to it.


    This article originally appeared in the December, 2011, issue of VG. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.



  • Jo’ Buddy

    Jo’ Buddy

    Jo' BuddyTo celebrate 30 years on the road, this Finnish bluesman gathered up the various aggregations he’s toured and recorded with, along with some special guests, to deliver a dozen originals – each screaming “lowdown.”

    “Finnish bluesman”? That’s right. Before you snicker, remember that the best instrumental surf band to come along in a quarter century was Laika and the Cosmonauts from Helsinki. But whereas the Cosmonauts took the template of the Ventures and Shadows and brought it up to date without bastardizing it, Jo’ Buddy (a.k.a. Jussi Raulamo) might get as “modern” as T-Bone Walker or as primitive as T-Model Ford.

    He regularly hopscotches from his bands Groovy Eyes and the Uplifters to his duo with appropriately named drummer Down Home King III and his Cajun combo, the Crawfish Kings. He also calls in pianist Wiley Cousins, who emigrated from Austin to Finland in ’97, harpist Wang Dang Juke, and former Blasters/Thunderbirds pianist Gene Taylor.

    Whether he’s playing the rawest slide since Hound Dog Taylor, fuzzing up some New Orleans second-line, whipping up a crawfish boil, imagining Jimmy Reed leading a swamp-pop band, or stripping things down to nothing but tremoloed baritone and Down Home’s drums, Jo’ Buddy is the real deal.

    An ocean and five or six decades disappear, yet his ability to mix and match stylistic elements, let alone his tone-master guitaristics, never fail to yield refreshing surprises. This overview (on Ram-Bam Records) is a perfect introduction to this one-of-a-kind artist.

    This article originally appeared in VG‘s March 2014 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.

  • PRS SE Custom Semi-Hollow

    PRS SE Custom Semi-Hollow

    PRS SE Custom Semi-Hollow
    PRS SE Custom Semi-Hollow

    While most guitarists are familiar with PRS (and some dream every day of adding one of the company’s Private Stock axes to their collection), the company’s import SE line typically gets much less play in the git-tar press.

    Developed at the request of Carlos Santana so beginners and “weekend warriors” could experience playing a PRS at a more affordable price, SE series instruments run between $600 and about $900 retail. But their quality, tone, and playability are very much in line with a top-tier professional instrument. The line consists of 10 guitars, including two artist signature models (the Mark Tremonti SE and Paul Allender SE), the SE standard, SE Custom, SE Singlecut, SE Soapbar II, and the brand-new SE Custom Semi-Hollow PRS sent for our perusal.

    The SE Custom Semi-Hollow has a chambered double-cutaway mahogany body with a 1/4” flame-maple cap, a soundhole on the lower bass bout, a set 25”-scale “wide fat” mahogany neck with a 10” radius rosewood fretboard, moon inlays, a small three-ply (black/white/black) pickguard, black speed knobs, and natural-finished wood binding. Unlike its U.S.-made counterpart Custom, the SE Custom Semi-Hollow has a flat top, but retains PRS’ elegant double-cutaway body design with scooped contour on the treble-side cutaway.

    Hardware on the Semi-Hollow includes PRS’ proprietary wraparound tailpiece (which adjusts intonation by moving the entire tailpiece in or out using two small Allen screws), PRS-designed die-cast tuners, and strap buttons. The SE Custom Semi-Hollow is equipped with two PRS-designed exposed-coil humbuckers mounted in crème-colored pickup rings and controlled via a single master volume, master tone, and three-way toggle pickup selector. PRS uses full-sized pots, an open-frame three-way toggle selector, and shields the control cavity and cavity covers on all SE models.

    Coming to us straight from the floor of the NAMM show, our SE Custom Semi-Hollow prototype is finished in Matteo Blue over a flame-maple veneer with a gloss-black body and neck.

    Playability on the prototype was excellent; a dead-on straight neck with low, buzz-free action, nicely polished frets with rounded ends and a very comfortable neck profile, as well as very good access to the 22nd fret.  Even though PRS calls this their “wide fat” neck profile, the width at the nut is still the standard 111/16” and the profile and slightly rolled edge make the neck feel anything but “chunky.” The combination of light weight (just over six pounds) semi-hollow body, maple top, and the wraparound tail give the Semi-Hollow a clear, resonant acoustic tone. The well-conceived, low-profile design of the PRS bridge doesn’t feel bulky or uncomfortable, as wraparound bridges sometimes can. And even though individual string intonation isn’t an option, intonation was near perfect.

    To hear it, we plugged the Semi-Hollow into a Koch Twintone II 1×12” tube combo. The guitar’s excellent acoustic clarity was evident even before we plugged it in. And once we did add AC, we found all three pickup combinations to be very well-balanced, with a lush, fat tone through the Koch’s clean channel. The 25” scale length and semi-hollow construction combine to give the guitar a more-than-ample variety of clean tones, from a bright, snappy sound in the selector’s bridge and middle position, to a fat, dark jazzbox tone with the tone control rolled back and the selector in the neck position. The semi-hollow body adds punch to low-end response and warmth to the midrange, while the maple top helps it maintain clear high-end.

    The guitar also performed well through the overdrive channel of the Koch, offering a clear, solid, crunchy, even rock tone with excellent note separation, even as we rolled up the amplifier’s gain. The PRS-designed humbuckers in our tester are not your standard run-of-the-mill import fare; rather, they are very nicely voiced (especially for 25”-scale guitars) with substantial gain and no feedback issues.

    The selection of finishes and exotic woods may be limited with the SE Custom Semi-Hollow when compared to PRS’ core domestic models, but with its pro-level build quality, killer looks, solid tone, and effortless playability, the SE Custom Semi-Hollow is certainly worthy of the Paul Reed Smith name.

    PRS SE Custom Semi-Hollow

    Price: $858

    Contact: PRS Guitars, 380 Log Canoe Circle, Stevensville MD 21666; www.prsguitars.com.


    This article originally appeared in VG May 2007 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.

  • John Oates Launches Design Contest for New Album Cover

    John Oates
    John Oates
    Photo: Phil Konstantin.

    John Oates has partnered with online platform Creative Allies to launch a contest that allows fans the chance to design the cover of his upcoming album, Good Road To Follow, which will feature a three-disc set of genre-specific EPs titled Route 1Route 2, and Route 3. Artists have the opportunity to submit designs online and the public can vote at http://www.creativeallies.com/contests/917-design-an-album-cover-for-john-oates.

    Oates will personally select his favorite design. “I’m so excited to see what people come up with,” he said. “This is a unique way to get the fans involved in the process and I think it will be beneficial for the both of us.” The winner will receive $500, a prize package, and an autographed copy of the CD with his or her design on the cover.

    Oates suggests that the cover should be organic in style and “reflect the overall vibe of a musical journey on a road that never ends.” Designers are invited to submit artwork through Oates’ page on Creative Allies. Submissions for the contest will be open through Friday, January 31.

    Good Road To Follow is set to release March 18 with the lead single “Stone Cold Love” written and produced with OneRepublic’s Ryan Tedder. Other collaborations range from the pop band Hot Chelle Rae, to country icon Vince Gill, and bluegrass legend Jerry Douglas.
  • B.C. Rich Launching Mockingbird Plus FR

    BC Rich Mockbird Plus FRThe B.C. Rich Mockingbird Plus FR uses a Floyd Rose bridge on one of the most popular body shapes in the company’s line. It has a mahogany body with Black Vapor finish, figured maple top, 24-fret ebony fretboard with a 12″ radius, diamond inlays, and the traditional B.C. Rich three-and-three headstock. The new set-neck design adds a contour designed to be as comfortable as a neck-through. Other highlights include traditional Mockingbird electronics configuration – dual humbuckers with a master Volume control, a master Tone, and a three-way toggle selector. The Floyd Rose bridge, control knobs, strap buttons, locking nut, and die-cast tuners are all finished in a gloss black. Visit www.bcrich.com.

     

  • Neil Young

    Neil Young

    Neil YoungUncle Neil’s at it again, issuing the seventh disc in his live Archives Performance Series. Once more he’s alone with his Martins and a piano (a “really outta sight” Steinway), this time post-Thanksgiving 1970 at the erstwhile D.C. club in the title.

    For those keeping score, Cellar Door is Disc 2.5 in the series. Culled from a six show residency, the set leans heavily on the just-released After the Gold Rush. But fodder for fanatics includes a pre-Harvest “Old Man” and a piano-accompanied “Cinnamon Girl.” Somewhat of a bummer, Young includes “Bad Fog Of Loneliness” and “See The Sky About To Rain,” both featured on the previously released Disc 3 recorded just seven weeks later. And except for a bit of period-perfect laconic stoner charm before Buffalo Springfield’s “Flying On The Ground Is Wrong,” there’s little between-song patter.

    What makes Cellar Door well worth the price of admission, however, is its intimacy. Muffled coughs, three-dimensional hammer-ons and pull-offs, time tapped out on a soundboard, even fret buzz – the audio is fantastic (despite what Young tells us about digital) and underscores the songs’ timelessness.

    Young fans are fortunate Winnipeg’s finest had the foresight to be an obsessive archivist.

    This article originally appeared in VG‘s March ’14 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.

  • Pigtronix Intros Echolution 2

    Pigtronix Echolution 2The Pigtronix Echolution 2 uses analog tone shaping and digital signal processing, offering an expanded palette of delay effects in a programmable, MIDI-controllable package. It has a 24-bit, variable-clock, full-stereo delay line that creates echoes from 10ms to 10 seconds in duration. Any two subdivisions of the master delay time can be selected to create an array of polyrhythmic multi-tap patterns. The echoes are then further animated by eight filter modes, multiple LFOs, freeze, reverse, bit-crushing and totally original cascading octave effects created by the Halo and Jump functions. Musicians can exert real-time control via assignable expression pedal and envelope mapping for every knob, as well as complete MIDI control of every function. Sounds can be saved and recalled using its footswitches or optional remote switch. A dedicated PC/MAC application enables the import and export of presets for sharing with other musicians who use Echolution 2. The application also delivers future firmware upgrades and provides users with real-time access to advanced functionality. For more, visit Pigtronix.com.

  • Michael Bloomfield

    Michael Bloomfield

    Mike Bloomfield, 1965. Mike Bloomfield: Sony Archives.
    Mike Bloomfield, 1965. Mike Bloomfield: Sony Archives.

    It’s difficult to critique compilations, especially those that include material from various labels: you never know what licensing restrictions were imposed, which cuts the A&R folks would’ve included but weren’t able to. It’s even harder when the artist in question changed your life.

    BLOOMFIELD_01

    Mike Bloomfield had that effect on people. For a Jewish kid playing the blues in the mid ’60s, that’s no mean feat. But regardless of who his influences were and how proficient he became at various styles that preceded him, there was guitar playing before Bloomfield and guitar playing after Bloomfield. It’s as simple as that.

    This Columbia/Legacy threeCD/one-DVD box is the biggest overview ever devoted to blues and rock’s first real guitar hero. Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, and later Jimmy Page would wear that mantel, but Bloomfield perfected the blues while re-energizing it, melding it with rock, and then taking it to uncharted territory. And you can ask George Gruhn or Dan Erlewine who singlehandedly not only raised the prices of Les Pauls but essentially created a market for vintage electrics that hadn’t previously existed.
    In the 36-page booklet and hour-long DVD, Bloomfield’s praises are sung by everyone from Clapton to Bob Dylan to Miles Davis. But there’s already plenty of proof in the 45 tracks that make up the guitar pudding.

    It’s understandable that much of the material comes from Columbia’s vaults. Bloomfield was signed by the label’s Svengali, John Hammond, and recorded with Dylan. His band the Electric Flag, his groundbreaking Super Session, and subsequent live recordings with co-adventurer (and this box’s producer) Al Kooper were on the label. Between his Hammond sessions (included here for the first time are his audition tapes, along with two cuts by his band with Charlie Musselwhite, only released posthumously) and the Flag and Super Session was when Bloomfield made the most impact, with the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. They simply stormed out of Chicago, ruled the Fillmore circuit, and turned rock music on its head. Only three Butterfield cuts are included (one being the 13-minute tour de force, “East-West”), so, buy the first two Butterfield albums and concentrate on this show.

    Besides the Hammond audition showing Bloomers’ acoustic prowess (which he’d return to late in his career), some of the more interesting gems here are a Kooper remix of the “Like A Rolling Stone” backing track and a scathing alternate take of Dylan’s “Tombstone Blues,” two unreleased live cuts by the short-lived Flag, Bloomfield/Kooper taking on a T-Bone Walker slow blues, and Bloomfield’s slide reunited with Dylan in 1980 for “The Groom’s Still Waiting At The Altar.”

    Sweet Blues, the DVD documentary, is well done, with rare footage and current and archival interviews with Dylan, Kooper, Musselwhite, Bill Graham, B.B. King, Elvin Bishop, Carlos Santana, Nick Gravenites, Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Casady, and Bloomfield’s mother and brother, as well as Michael himself. The only criticism of the DVD is that it will leave Bloomfield fans wanting more (please release this as a separate DVD with bonus material – namely the rest of these interviews!).

    Bloomfield’s drug problems were well-known, and he overdosed in 1981, only 37 years old. As Kooper sings in a hidden-track tribute, “They just don’t make ’em like that anymore.”


    This article originally appeared in VG‘s March ’14 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.


  • Toby Keith

    Toby Keith

    Toby KeithToby Keith’s previous two albums – Bullets in the Gun (2010) and Clancy’s Tavern (2011) – were two of his finest, enhanced by first-rate original material, powerful vocals, and restrained, hard-edged production. His skill at writing miniature dramas has served him well and does so again. The title song, a bartender’s thoughtful musings on the troubled souls he serves carries emotional clout, bookended by the lighthearted “The Size I Wear,” a sly paean to barroom pickups.

    The tale of “Scat Cat,” a reprobate hellraiser unable to stay out of trouble, holds together nicely, its rocking arrangement enhanced by Eric Darken’s slashing guitar. The philosophical “Get Got,” by Keith and frequent writing partner Bobby Pinson, cleverly incorporates time-tested homilies about life. The ballads are equally strong. “Haven’t Seen The Last Of You,” “Missed You Just Right,” and the Keith-Scotty Emerick tune “You Ain’t Alone” are all pained, passionate reflections on lost love.

    He can afford to bypass two of Nashville’s three most over-recorded and clichéd current song topics: hot women and beer (the third involves pickup trucks). Unfortunately, “I Like Girls That Drink Beer” and the chugging “Haven’t Had A Drink All Day,” are Keith and Pinson at their most formulaic. At least the latter has some first-rate guitar from Brent Mason, Kenny Greenberg, and Russ Pahl. But not even Mason, Greenberg, and an engaging Dixieland arrangement can save “Cold Beer Country,” which is more beer commercial than drinking song.

    Acts at the peak of Nashville stardom, who own their own label and produce themselves, are free to do what they please. Keith uses that freedom wisely and the album’s high points prove it. He doesn’t need to waste time writing and recording throwaways. Leave that to the many lightweight writers and singers on Music Row.

    This article originally appeared in VG‘s Feb. ’13 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.

  • EarthQuaker Debuts Pitch Bay, Terminal Fuzz

    Earthquaker Pitch BayThe EarthQuaker Pitch Bay is a three-part polyphonic harmonizer and distortion generator that can be adjusted by stepped semitones, from one to 12 semitones (full octave) above and below the root. Each voice (Pitch up, Pitch down, and Root) has an adjustable mix that can be cut or boosted. It also has an adjustable input gain, all-analog signal path, all-digital pitch shifting, and true-bypass switching.

    Earthquaker Terminal FuzzThe EarthQuaker Terminal Fuzz adapts the company’s JAX fuzz, allowing control over gain, fine-tuning the EQ, and a giving it adjustable volume boost. The Voice knob controls upper and lower midrange, while Treble adjusts top-end response. It also has a control for Fuzz, all-analog signal path, and true-bypass switching. For more, go to www.earthquakerdevices.com.