Tag: features

  • Fretprints: Michael Schenker

    Fretprints: Michael Schenker

    Schenker in 1981. Michael Schenker: Laurens van Houten/Pictorial Press Ltd/Alamy.

    Underrated pioneers of melodic metal in the 1970s and ’80s, UFO’s music compared with contemporaries Thin Lizzy, Rainbow, AC/DC, and Whitesnake, yet they achieved only modest success – until uber-guitarist Michael Schenker elevated their status.

    Formed in 1968 by vocalist Phil Mogg, guitarist Mick Bolton, bassist Pete Way, and drummer Andy Parker, from its inception, UFO was a group in search of an identity. Gravitating to the space-rock excursions of Pink Floyd, Hawkwind, and Gong, they initially failed to chart in England while making inroads in Germany and Japan; UFO 2: Flying (’71) put a finer point on it with the 19-minute “Star Storm” and 26-minute title track. Guitarists Bolton, Larry Wallis (Motörhead) and Bernie Marsden (Whitesnake) preceded Schenker’s tenure, but with Schenker aboard, UFO boldly changed course.

    Born January 10, 1955, in Sarstedt, Germany, Schenker was a prodigy. He taught himself to play by decoding songs for his older brother Rudolf (of Scorpions fame). His first performance was a Scorpions club gig at 11, and by 15 he’d mastered the music of Eric Clapton, Leslie West, Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, Johnny Winter, and others. At 16, he debuted on Lonesome Crow, the Scorpions’ first album, displaying precocious guitar and foreshadowing the darker strain of Eurometal and the New Wave of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM). While on tour supporting UFO, he performed with both, and at 17 was recruited into the headliner’s lineup. Though he didn’t speak English, he contributed substantially as guitarist/composer to Phenomenon, marking the band’s transition from an adventurous (if undistinguished) art-rock outfit to a guitar-driven hard-rock powerhouse. Phenomenon found them retaining spacey tendencies in “Queen of the Deep” and “Space Child” while portending the future with the rock shuffle “Doctor Doctor” and heavy riff-dominated “Rock Bottom.”

    Force It continued the momentum and proved to be the band’s U.S. breakthrough with concert favorites “Let It Roll,” “Shoot Shoot,” “Mother Mary” and “Out in the Street.” Critics praised them as listenable metal, paving the way for greater success with No Heavy Petting, which added Danny Peyronel as keyboardist and sported future classics “Natural Thing” and “I’m a Loser.” With producer Ron Nevison, orchestration and keyboards became more prevalent on Lights Out, yet UFO didn’t sacrifice its metal cachet. Paul Raymond (Chicken Shack, Savoy Brown) became a core member, replacing Peyronel as keyboardist and second guitarist, allowing UFO to move comfortably from two-guitar metal instrumentation (Priest, Maiden) to prog-rock/power-pop guitar/keyboard textures. The only constants were the straightforward vocals of Mogg and Schenker’s electrifying guitar – prime factors exemplifying their classic sound on five studio albums and one live recording.

    Lights Out marked UFO’s pinnacle, reaching #23 in America and #54 in Britain, yielding “Too Hot to Handle,” “Gettin’ Ready” and “Lights Out.” Obsession was a diverse, more-polished effort that reached #43 in America while hitting #26 in England. It nonetheless ensured their preeminence as arena stars and offered “Only You Can Rock Me,” “Cherry,” “Pack It Up,” “Ain’t No Baby,” and “Hot ’n Ready,” a frequent concert opener. Amidst driving rock pieces were Schenker’s gentle semi-classical instrumental “Arbory Hill” (with him playing recorder and acoustic guitars) and “Lookin’ Out for No. 1,” an unapologetic power-pop number anticipating ’80s rock ballads. A series of recorded concerts in Illinois, Wisconsin, Ohio and Kentucky resulted in Strangers in the Night, which reached #7 on U.K. charts, #42 in America, and has since risen to the top tier of live rock records. It remains Schenker’s shining hour.


    “Rock Bottom” is a defining tune, with equally definitive solo opportunities, for Schenker. There are many versions recorded throughout his career, but towering above is the live performance on Strangers in the Night. This excerpt (5:10) includes features found in many improvisations. Note the repeated three-note motifs (C#-D-E) played rhythmically in measures 1-2. These gather momentum, and are sequenced and thematically developed as E-F#-G at the phrase ending in 3. Bar 4 begins a lengthy four-bar flight that epitomizes his technical prowess. Check out the ascending scalar line joined seamlessly to a signature descending diatonic sequence in four-note groupings in 4-6, delivered with impeccable picking and precise articulation. A final ascending sequence in 7 leads to a wailing wide string bend in 8 as closure. The logic and clarity in this example illustrate his credo that a Schenker solo “must build.”


    UFO provided the vital step to international acclaim for Schenker. By the winter of ’78, he left to pursue other projects, briefly reuniting with Scorpions on Lovedrive. He considered joining Aerosmith in ’79 and led several MSG lineups in the ’80s. He rejoined UFO three times, punctuated by stints with MSG and side projects; returning first on Walk on Water and later two Shrapnel releases, Covenant and Sharks. UFO-Schenker’s influence on rock guitarists is profound; Randy Rhoads, Mike McCready, Slash, Paul Gilbert, George Lynch, John Petrucci, Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Def Leppard, Metallica, Tesla, Dio, Megadeth, Pantera, Testament, and Slayer are on the short list.

    STYLE
    Schenker boasted an identifiable, impressive style as a teen on Lonesome Crow, which introduced his guitar skills and early use of the wah pedal (“Inheritance”) that became a central aspect of his sound and style in UFO. Rarely rocking the pedal conventionally, he instead used it as an EQ/booster (in a notched position) to shape and color phrases, accentuate his attack, dynamics, and pinch harmonics, enhance the midrange, change timbre, increase sustain, and cultivate feedback. A disciple of British blues-rock and the Gibson-into-Marshall school epitomized by Clapton, he expounded on EC’s thick sound, soulful phrasing and expansive improvisations, taking Cream’s live ferocity to greater heights while expounding on Clapton’s melodic blues approach in “Badge” and “While My Guitar Gently Weeps.” He merged and repurposed tenets of rock and metal – the heavy guitar/keyboard textures of Deep Purple and Rainbow, guitar orchestration of the Beatles, Allman Brothers, Wishbone Ash, and Queen, metallic riffs and power chords of Zep and Sabbath, blues-based virtuosity of Johnny Winter, angularity, standard-tuned slide and wah quirkiness of Truth-era Jeff Beck, vocal-like wide vibrato and string bending of Leslie West, and exotic modal melodies of Rory Gallagher.

    Schenker was one of the earliest shred guitarists and established many precedents in modern rock soloing. However, his complexity, precise alternate picking, speed, and aggression were tempered by the soulful delivery of blues-rock, with its legato phrasing, choppy-speech rhythms, slinky bends, and sense of melodic structure comparable to classical music. He relied on characteristic pentatonic/blues vocabulary – supercharged with florid passages, frequently developing short motives (unison bends, three- and four-note fragments) repeated as flurries and ostinato riffs (per the live coda in “Shoot Shoot”), added embellishing ornaments and juxtaposed longer diatonic lines – such as the sequences in “Electric Phase” (2:35) and “Lights Out” (2:18). He added neck bending and pushing on strings behind the nut to achieve quasi whammy-bar effects. Schenker crafted purposeful melodies to reflect underlying progressions, particularly in instrumental interludes, exploiting arpeggios to strengthen note-to-chord relationships, deviated from strict blues-based confines to include harmonically-astute diatonic, modal and chromatic note choices, and presaged Eurometal’s incipient neoclassical lexicon – even on unlikely numbers like “Alone Again Or” with its odd mix of Brit-pop/flamenco sounds. Offsetting his shred tendencies are singable structured solos like “Only You Can Rock Me,” “Try Me,” “Looking Out for No. 1,” “Love to Love,” “On With the Action,” the atmospheric slide lines in “I’m a Loser,” and Santana-esque intro in live versions of “Doctor Doctor.”

    Live solos merged thematic elements from studio tracks with more intricate melodic development tantamount to jazz improvisation or classical theme-and-variations procedures, epitomized by “Rock Bottom,” his concert feature with lengthy soloing and multiple enlarged sections. Similarly, he converted twin-guitar harmony lines to a single part in “Doctor Doctor” and added more elaborate fills to songs on stage.

    Schenker was a masterful composer, riff maker and rhythm guitarist in the tradition of his forebears. Consider the boogie-based opening figure of “Only You Can Rock Me” or Blackmore-inspired dyads in “Hot ’n Ready.” His use of the “heavy-metal gallop” punctuated by slashing power chords in “Lights Out” (chorus) and “Rock Bottom” are templates for ’80s metal and power pop, and his chord figures and steady-eighth bass patterns were often given the now-ubiquitous palm-muted metal treatment. Moreover, he was skillful at reinterpreting classic mannerisms of rock. Consider the Chuck Berry comping and double-stops in the refrain of “Natural Thing,” Who-inspired bombast and drama of numerous power-chord figures, melodic counterlines reminiscent of Queen in “Only You Can Rock Me” (chorus), and twin-guitar harmony in “Lipstick Traces,” “Electric Phase,” “Lookin’ Out for No. 1 (reprise),” and “Doctor Doctor.”


    Schenker is among the earliest hard-rock guitarists to breathe new life and energy into pentatonic blues material. “Lights Out,” from Strangers in the Night, boasts a striking case in point. The improvised patterns in this excerpt (4:32) are exemplary. Note his use of short fragments, made from C# minor-pentatonic, repeated, juggled to different starting notes, and rhythmically displaced across the time span in measures 1-3. This is a clever and effective way to expand the pentatonic’s melodic possibilities and create excitement with simple patterns. Measure 4 contains a signature descending blues-scale line phrased as triplets. In measure 5-9 he addresses the A-B-C#m chord progression (played as power chords) with harmonically active melodies decorated with chromaticism. Check out his thoughtful use of major-pentatonic and hexatonic lines over A, more-intricate modal melody (C#m Aeolian Mode) with characteristic hammer-on/pull-off mordents (a fixture of his classical side) over B, and an idiomatic bluesy phrase ending on C#m.


    UFO was musically ambitious, which suited Schenker’s wide-ranging vision. They blended diverse blues-rock, metal, prog, classical, ethnic, and pop tangents over a variety of grooves, tempos, feels, and textures, sometimes within the same tune. “I’m a Loser” would fit well in the play lists of John Mellencamp, Bob Seeger, or Bryan Adams, while “Born to Lose” melds a Jimi-meets-Eurometal chordal intro with pop-rock balladry and melodic rock solo traversing tricky, modulating changes. “Cherry” could be a Foo Fighters track from ’90s alt-rock and interludes suggesting prog-rock leanings, emphasized by keyboard colors (piano, organ, synth, and string pads), are found in “Let It Roll,” “Love to Love,” and “Rock Bottom.” Conversely, “Rock Bottom” and “Lights Out” convey unabashed heavy metal intensified by guitar-dominated timbres. “Hot ’n Ready,” “Let It Roll,” “Too Hot to Handle” and “Shoot Shoot” are hook-laden hard-rock pieces that Kiss would envy and Schenker’s opening solo in “Out in the Street” is as catchy as Gary Richrath’s tastiest moments in REO’s pop-rock.

    ESSENTIAL LISTENING
    Strangers in the Night is a definitive live recording. Originally 13 tracks, the 2020 Deluxe Edition helps fans investigate Schenker’s claim “There were better takes they could’ve used.” An overview of studio tracks can be found on Best of UFO (1974-1983), but serious rock fans should check out all five studio albums spanning ’74 to ’78.

    ESSENTIAL VIEWING
    Recommended are UFO’s entire ’74 show from “Don Kirshner’s Rock Concert” featuring early versions of “Doctor Doctor” and “Rock Bottom,” an eight-song montage of concert clips from London spanning ’75 through ’77, and a number of illuminating Schenker interviews.

    SOUND
    For more than a half century, Schenker’s signature instrument has been a Flying V. The relationship began when he borrowed brother Rudolf’s red ’71 Gibson Medallion V with T-Top pickups and plugged into a Marshall stack. Early photos depict a stripped mahogany V, later painted black, then white, and finally the trademark graphic black and white panels. He also played a Les Paul Standard and white ES-1275 in the studio. Gibson issued a tribute model V in ’85 and Dean currently markets his signature version. He used .009 Fender Rock and Roll strings, preferred high action, a glass slide, and Herco gray nylon picks held with thumb and two fingers.

    Schenker plugged into 50-watt 1987 Marshall heads (Presence, Treble, Middle and Bass on 10, Volume at 8), later graduated to 2204 and 2205 models, and often chained two together. In ’73, he routinely used at least two full 4×12 stacks. A departure from the norm, he experimented with a Pignose amp on much of Lights Out. His effects were minimal – a modified Crybaby wah pedal and WEM Copicat tape echo.


    “Only You Can Rock Me” rates high on the Schenker scale of strong melodic moments in UFO. This passage, (2:11) from Obsession, presents key lines from the memorable “story solo” – played as a song within a song and delivered practically verbatim onstage. From the outset, he adopts a stately semi-classical attitude akin to Brian May in “Bohemian Rhapsody.” Note the singable intervallic opening in measures 1-2, with its clear harmonic references to E-major and A-major chords answered by a lofty diatonic line similarly gravitating to chord tones in F#m and B. 5-6 contains a quicker contrasting line rising to a climactic string bend. 7 begins a sequence of short three-note motifs progressing to more drama with string bends in the higher register in 8. The diatonic lines with their trademark ornaments in 9-10 convey a classical impression while the held bend and pre-bend in 11 represent Schenker’s transformation of blues melody. The final descending line combines diatonic, pentatonic and blues influences. Note the deliberate chromaticism at the closing.


    Wolf Marshall is the founder and original editor-in-chief of GuitarOne magazine. A respected author and columnist, he has been influential in contemporary music education since the early 1980s. His books include 101 Must-Know Rock Licks, B.B. King: the Definitive Collection, and Best of Jazz Guitar, and a list credits can be found at wolfmarshall.com.


    This article originally appeared in VG’s October 2022 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.


  • Pop ’N Hiss: Dio’s Holy Diver

    Pop ’N Hiss: Dio’s Holy Diver

    Vivian Campbell onstage in 1984 with a Charvel given to him by Grover Jackson; built for Twisted Sister’s Eddie Ojeda, Campbell covered its pink-and-black finish in gaffer tape.

    Vocalist Ronnie James Dio was on a roll as he formed the band that would record his 1983 album Holy Diver. Coming off a successful run in Rainbow and an early-’80s stint in Black Sabbath, he enlisted two former bandmates – bassist Jimmy Bain and drummer Vinny Appice – and together, they began a search for a guitarist who could bring the heavy-metal flash.

    While the three were hanging together in London, Bain recommended Vivian Campbell, a kid playing in a Belfast band called Sweet Savage. Dio called the 19-year-old, inviting him to audition.

    “It was a complete surprise to me,” Campbell recalled. “I had met Jimmy, but didn’t really know him. He was in a band called Wild Horses with Brian Robertson (of Thin Lizzy). They’d played in Ireland a month or two before, and Sweet Savage opened for them. They tracked me down, miraculously enough because my father was the only Vivian Campbell in the phone book! It was 2 o’clock in the morning when they called and woke him up. He then woke me up and said, ‘There’s a drunken Scotsman on the phone for you.’ That was Jimmy!

    “Jimmy told me, ‘I’m in a hotel room with Ronnie James Dio and Vinny Appice, looking for a guitar player. Can you be in London tomorrow night?’ I didn’t have the money, but my father bought a plane ticket. If not for that it wouldn’t have happened.

    “I put fresh strings on my guitar and played all day before I went to the airport. At the time, that’s all I did anyway – 24/7, I was dedicated to playing guitar. That was my obsession. I flew over with my ’77 Les Paul Deluxe, rented a Marshall JCM 800, we got in a room at a John Henry’s rehearsal facility and started playing.”

    Sparks flew immediately as they ran through material, including songs for the new album.

    “There was intense chemistry, from the very first moment,” Campbell said. “We jammed ‘Holy Diver’ a lot! When it came time to playing the solo, it was loosely over what became the final version on the record. I was just jamming away, and Ronnie was in the corner of the room, rolling a joint, and he kept gesturing to us, ‘Keep playing! Keep playing!’ (laughs) It seemed like an eternity. Like every young guitar player, I started off with my fast and furious licks, trying to cram in as many notes as possible until I’d exhausted the toolbox and had to revert to playing more with feel, more basic rock-and-roll kind of stuff. As a guitar player, you’re thinking it’s all about technique… until you realize it’s more about feel.”

    The band rehearsed and recorded at the famed Sound City, in Los Angeles. They were so tight the album was mostly recorded live.

    “We’d go for a good take – guitar, bass, and drums. I’d go in and do another rhythm guitar track on top of it. Then we’d move on to the next song,” Campbell said. “It was definitely old-school, the way we cut it.”

    Vivian Campbell: PG Brunelli.

    The Les Paul was the only electric he played on the album – though there were some pickup swaps.

    “I was experimenting like crazy,” said Campbell. “I went through several pickup changes, but mostly kept a DiMarzio X2N in the bridge. I also put on a Bigsby vibrato that wasn’t a Bigsby – it was some kind of flush-mounted trem that clipped in where the bridge goes. On a couple of solos – the end of ‘Gypsy’ in particular – you hear it. I had it on for a couple of weeks, but threw it away because the guitar would never stay in tune.

    “I ran through a Marshall JCM 800 and a Boss overdrive pedal. That was it.”

    The title track and “Rainbow in the Dark” became rock radio and MTV favorites while the album eventually sold two million copies in the U.S. A four-CD super deluxe edition was recently released (see review in this month’s “Hit List”). The acoustic heard on the intro to “Don’t Talk to Strangers” was a 12-string that belonged to Dio, as Campbell didn’t own an acoustic at the time.

    Campbell was aboard for Dio’s next two albums, The Last in Line and Sacred Heart. He maintains he was then fired because he persistently raised business issues; Dio and his then-wife/manager, Wendy, claimed Campbell quit. For years, Campbell distanced himself from the albums and downplayed his own work. Eventually, though, he reassessed and re-embraced the music. After Dio’s death, he, Bain, Appice, and vocalist Andrew Freeman formed Last in Line, which toured and released new music in testament to the legacy of the original Dio band. Former Ozzy Osbourne bassist Phil Soussan joined after Bain’s death. Their third album is set for release in 2023.

    “There are several factors to it. The passage of time changes your perspective on everything. Ronnie’s passing was one thing. What set me on the wrong path was how I was fired from the band. The way that went down left a very, very bad taste in my mouth,” said Campbell.

    “As a guitarist, at the time I never appreciated what it was I did. I never thought it was any good. I couldn’t understand what Ronnie heard in me as a guitar player. There were so many other guitarists in L.A. who were miles better than me from a technical point of view. When I started doing the Last in Line project, I had to go back and learn my own guitar solos. It was during that process – after years playing with Whitesnake, Riverdogs, Shadow King, and decades with Def Leppard – that made me realize, ‘Oh! That’s quite interesting what I did when I was 20, 21 years old.’ That made me look at it differently. I started to have an appreciation for my playing at the time and for the music we created.”

    Dio died of stomach cancer in 2010, at age 67.


    This article originally appeared in VG’s October 2022 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.


  • Hints of Benson and Martino – Eric Zolan plays “D.D.L.O.D.”

    Hints of Benson and Martino – Eric Zolan plays “D.D.L.O.D.”

    NYC Jazzer Brings Tasty Jazz/Blues/R&B Confection

    Guitarist Eric Zolan knows jazz guitar has been cool, and his new album, “Calder’s Universe” proves it. Here, he and drummer Mike Camacho lay it down on “D.D.L.O.D” with his Gibson ES-446. Catch our interview with him in the May issue. Read Now!


  • Coppock Guitars

    Coppock Guitars

    Front and back of a Coppock Triple Deluxe.

    The obscure Coppock brand of electric guitars first surfaced in 1994, with the publication of Electric Guitars & Basses: A Photographic History, by guitar historians George Gruhn and Walter Carter. And though it was loaded with lovingly detailed information about many rare guitars, one photograph the authors highlighted – on the book’s table of contents – was of an electric lap-steel with an enigmatic logo on the headstock and an aesthetic profile that lent hint it was no Fender or Gibson. Perhaps, though, what most justified its prominent inclusion was its green-and-yellow plastic-sheathed body with art-deco motif.

    The accompanying caption revealed that the otherwise well-informed Gruhn and Carter apparently knew next to nothing about the instrument. Indeed, their brief text offered no specific information whatsoever about the guitar (or its origins), instead, merely noting the obvious – that the Coppock was an obscurity whose appearance hinted at inspiration via instruments produced in earlier decades by two pioneering Los-Angeles-area builders – the National String Company and Electro String (i.e. Rickenbacker).

    A decade later, speculation erupted online about that Coppock guitar, with nearly every contributor confessing ignorance about the instrument and its origins. One Canadian blogger guessed that perhaps Coppock was that old “English importer of musical instruments” known as “J.T. Coppock (Leeds) Ltd.” Another, from Massachusetts, took Gruhn and Carter’s thought one step further, guessing, “…it looks like a National product branded for Coppock.” Then a U.K. player chimed in with, “… it’s entirely possible that it’s a knock off of a [National] New Yorker [lap steel].” Another, from San Francisco, said, “This instrument may well be a European copy of a National.” Others suggested the color of its knobs hinted at its country of origin, or that it was made by Guyatone or some other Japanese maker of the ’50s.

    (LEFT TO RIGHT) Circa 1957 Coppock Deluxe. A Coppock Deluxe.

    So things stood until March of 2009, when another Coppock instrument surfaced for sale in Seattle. Only this time, it came with a solid story supporting its provenance. The seller, Terry Davis, happened to be the instrument’s original owner, and subsequent research unearthed the back-story about the instruments and their maker.

    John Lee Coppock was born in Minnesota in 1899, and in 1911, his family moved west to the hamlet of Peshastin, Washington. Located in the Cascade Mountains (east of Seattle), Peshastin was apple-growing country and the Coppocks acquired a sizable orchard along the Wenatchee River. In time, John picked up the guitar and his brother, Paul, took up singing, and they performed around the area as a duo. In 1916, John heard a Hawaiian record playing in a music shop and was enchanted by its exotic sounds. Borrowing his aunt’s Spanish guitar and using a bicycle wrench as a tone bar, he began teaching himself lap-steel techniques.

    In 1917, a Hawaiian group performed in Peshastin, and Coppock was further inspired. After much practice (and acquiring a new Gibson guitar), he and some pals formed the Coppock Quintet, and started playing locally. But in 1923, Coppock moved to California, where he eventually performed with Roscoe Karns’ Bird of Paradise (an island-themed stage production), with Dick McIntire, and with Irene West’s show. By ’25, Paul had joined him in Hollywood, and they formed Coppock’s Hawaiians (with native ukulele ace Dave Mahuka), and became peers with some of the most famous Hawaiian steel guitarists of the era, including the early master, Sol Ho’opi’i.

    Ho’opi’i and Coppock’s groups both made a bit of history that year, when they cut recordings for the Hollywood & Sunset Records family of labels, which were one of the very first half-dozen active labels in Los Angeles. Recorded at Sunset’s headquarters (66151/2 Santa Monica Blvd), Coppock’s 78-r.p.m. disc (Sunset Records #1162) – “Tie Me To Your Apron Strings Again” and “The Prisoner’s Song”– was originally sold exclusively through the Kress department-store chain, and that limited distribution mode surely helped them to be acknowledged today as among the rarest 78s from the West Coast.

    “Prisoner’s Song,” a Sunset 78-rpm record from 1925.

    Out of print for eight decades, those recordings by Coppock’s Hawaiians (which mistakenly credited Mahuka as vocalist rather than Paul) finally resurfaced in 2007 on a compilation CD produced in the United Kingdom by Grass Skirt Records (GSK 1002). And, interestingly, though the folks who produced it and penned the liner notes are experts, even they had to admit that, “Almost nothing is known about Coppock’s Hawaiian Quartet… the band is a total mystery.”

    Well, that mystery has been solved. During his Hollywood years, “Johnny” Coppock befriended many top musicians (including other Hawaiian stars like Andy Iona and cowboy stars the Sons of the Pioneers), played many prominent gigs, and even auditioned for the movies and a position with the Paul Whiteman Orchestra. In 1929, he married Verna Mae Palmer, and before long, Coppock opened an instructional studio in a rental house on Long Beach Boulevard in the Southgate neighborhood of L.A. Not long after, Coppock acquired one of National’s metal-bodied resonator guitars, and by ’31 he (and everyone else in his newly-reconstituted band) was playing them. Around this time, the Coppock String Group began performing on area radio stations (including KFVD in San Pedro) and his theme song was always “Imi Au Ia Oe.”

    Coppock and his students, 1951. Students image courtesy Wenatchee Daily World.

    Meanwhile, Coppock took an interest in the new electrified instruments being produced in L.A. by Adolph Rickenbacker, and one photo shows his group with (among other instruments), two Rickenbacker amplifiers, a “Frying Pan” lap steel, and two Rickenbacker Spanish Electrics – including one of only two archtop/f-hole Electro Artist models reportedly ever made.

    In addition to taking on music students and performing live, on radio, and in recording sessions, the ever-ambitious Coppock began experimenting with the manufacture of electric Hawaiian guitars. Coppock’s son, Donovan (b. 1933), recalled his father always proudly stating that he had completed the making of a desk-sized triple-neck console lap steel, just prior to Don’s first birthday. By that point, Coppock had moved his studio to a house at 7029 Santa Fe Avenue (and then to 2819 Gage Avenue) in Huntington Park, and began making guitars he sold to his students. Don recalls that at some point, his dad’s group took a road trip east that included tour stops in Durango, Colorado – and Cleveland, Ohio, a hotbed of the Hawaiian craze and home base of the Oahu Publishing Co.’s Honolulu Conservatory of Music.

    Coppock was, according to his son, a very forward-thinking man who took an interest in using new materials to build his instruments. He even went so far as to study at the nearby Plastics Institute, which helps explain the extravagant usage of various plastics as coatings on his guitars. At some point, he made a few two- and three-neck guitars that bore a resemblance to National’s ’38 Grand Console. But of even greater significance is the fact that in the ’30s, Coppock apparently built one of the first solidbody electric Spanish guitars in history, constructed of a radical substance – a thick slab of clear Lucite or plexiglass.

    Coppock’s Hawaiians, circa 1929. Hawaiians image courtesy Peter Blecha.

    Then, when the U.S. entered World War II in 1941, and Coppock could no longer get mahogany from the Philippines, he had to substitute inferior Honduran mahogany for his guitars’ bodies. Frustrated by that turn of events, he stopped making guitars for several years. Long story short; after working for a couple years at the shipyards, in 1944, Coppock and his young family moved in with his aging parents back in Peshastin, and they all carried on working the apple orchard. Even though Coppock also eventually got a job with E.L. Sawyer’s Peshastin Box & Lumber Company (where he apparently acquired superior pine boards for some guitar projects), he never gave up on music, performing locally, and also repairing other local musicians’ instruments in his wood shop. He also took on his first local student, Austin Riley, who initially learned on an old acoustic. At that time, Coppock was playing an electric lap steel he’d built for himself, which fascinated Riley.

    A few months later, Coppock offered to build Riley an electric lap steel, and he selected a design from a few Coppock had sketched out. Before long, Riley had his own instrument (plus an amplifier built by another Peshastin neighbor) – and a wild thing it was! Constructed with a thin (1.25″) body whose (probably alder) core was sheathed with vertically aligned black-and-white plastic panels, the guitar also had a 25″-scale neck and clear plastic knobs.

    The instrument had sleek lines that were undeniably reminiscent of the black-and-white, vertically aligned, ’35 National New Yorker lap steel. What the new Coppock guitar also shared was a design element around the bridge and pickup that is clearly reminiscent of National’s distinctively shield-shaped logo.

    Austin Riley with a 1944 Coppock Deluxe. Austin Riley photo: Austin Riley. John Coppock, circa 1920. Coppock image courtesy Peter Blecha.

    Meanwhile, circa 1950, Coppock tried to teach his son to play bass so they could perform together. And even though his father made him a one-off tubular electric stand-up bass, Don never really had the knack for it. At least the instrument didn’t go to waste though; a photo from a year or two later shows another local kid playing it with a group of Coppock’s other students.

    One of Coppock’s last students was Terry Davis, a local kid who began taking lessons in 1954 or ’55 in his teacher’s crowded shop. “It was just a mess,” Davis recalled in a recent interview. “There were parts of electric guitars all over the place! We’d sometimes have to move things just to play.” In time, Davis’ parents rewarded him by having Coppock build him a lap steel – an instrument that was essentially identical to Riley’s, but with a standard 221/2″ neck, like all other lap steels Coppock was making (including a new one for himself).

    The Coppock guitars also boasted custom-made electromagnetic pickups that feature thick wire wound around bobbins comprised of a metal spindle set between brass top and bottom plates placed adjacent (but unsecured) to a 2.5″ x .5″ Alnico V bar magnet. Don recalls that his father had converted an old hand-crank blade-sharpening tool into a device that wound the wire around the bobbins in a primitive, but effective, way. But even then the task was daunting. Davis’ mother, Loria, remembers when Coppock explained to her the challenge of winding those pickups by hand. “He said, ‘I have to count every turn of the wire in there. It has to be exactly right.’ He didn’t say how many, but hundreds of times, I think. And I thought ‘How does he do that with just his own hands?’.”

    John Coppock passed away February 6, 1959, after a brief illness. And exactly a half-century later, in 2009, Davis sold his guitar. Researching its history included checking in with Gruhn, who’d recently acquired the first Coppock guitar he’d ever had during his storied four-decade career dealing in rare vintage instruments.

    So, for those who love weird old guitars – and maybe love even more when stubborn guitar mysteries are solved, the case of Coppock is a true treat!


    Peter Blecha has explored other rare Northwest guitars for Vintage Guitar, and his latest book, Sonic Boom: The History of Northwest Rock, has just been published by Backbeat Books.


    This article originally appeared in VG November 2009 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.

  • Damon Fowler Brings the Blues

    Damon Fowler Brings the Blues

    Slow and Tasty on “Taxman”

    Damon Fowler has shared stages with Dickey Betts and Butch Trucks, so it makes sense that his music is loaded with guitar jams and sweet slide playing. Here, he and his custom-made Telecaster gets bluesy on “Taxman” from his new record “Damon Fowler & Friends Live At The Palladium.” Check our review in the May issue. Read Now!


  • Austin Guitarst Eric Hisaw on “Someone Else.”

    Austin Guitarst Eric Hisaw on “Someone Else.”

    Rockabilly Meets Punk!

    Straight outta Austin, Eric Hisaw and his early-’80s import Fender Tele play a cool living-room rendition of “Someone Else,” from his new album, “Can’t Stop Time.” Catch our review in the May issue. Read Now!


  • Tomas Janzon swings on “Ascending”

    Tomas Janzon swings on “Ascending”

    Silky-Smooth on a vintage hollowbody

    Hip as all get-out, Tomas Janzon plays some of the silkiest jazz you’ll hear this year. Here, he demonstrates on “Ascending,” a track from his new album, “Nomadic.” That’s his ’59 Gibson L-7, and you can catch our review along with an interview with Tomas in the May issue. Read Now!


  • “Monster” Mike Welch

    “Monster” Mike Welch

    “Monster” Mike Welch digs deep on “Walking to You Baby”

    “I was thinking about my late friend, Luther ‘Guitar Junior’ Johnson, and how his records were always direct, full-throttle, hard blues, and it inspired me to dig deep on this one!” said “Monster” Mike Welch of this run at “Walking to You Baby.” Recorded live at producer Kid Andersen’s studio (except for the horn overdubs), it was the first song they cut with the legendary Jerry Jemmott on bass. “It ended up feeling so real that it to be the first song on the album.” Mike is playing a reissue Fender Strat that has been part of his sound for 30 years with a USACG neck, Lindy Fralin pickups, and Curt Mangan .099-.042 strings plugged into a vintage tweed Bassman that Kid keeps at the studio. Kid also keeps cameras in the studio for live-streaming, and this take is the one you hear on Mike’s new album, “Nothing But Time,” set for release June 30 on Gulf Coast Records. The first single, “I’ve Got Nothing But Time,” streets May 26. Preorder now at www.monstermikewelch.com!


  • George Fullerton

    George Fullerton

    George Fullerton Photo courtesy of Fender Musical Instruments Corp.

    George Fullerton, whose decades-long association with Leo Fender earned the two early electric-guitar innovators a place in history, He died July 4, 2009 at the age of 86. He succumbed to heart failure at St. Jude Medical Center in Fullerton, California, the Orange County town where he and Fender had began building stringed instruments in 1948.

    Fullerton was born in Arkansas before his family moved to the Golden State town that bore their surname. In the late ’40s, he was doing radio repair and driving a truck for a moving company during the day, then playing in a band on weekends. He also attended Fullerton Junior College to keep up with changes in the electronics industry.

    Fullerton first met Leo Fender in a park where musicians played; Fender provided sound systems for bands, and George began helping Leo at such concerts.

    “Leo had a radio repair shop, and I used to buy records from him,” Fullerton told Vintage Guitar in 1991. “One day he showed me a small electric guitar that he and Doc Kaufmann made, and I got to play it with my band.”

    Fullerton went to work at Fender’s shop on February 2, 1948. His first job was repairing amplifiers, and he and Fender began working on a prototype solidbody Spanish electric guitar the same year.

    While Fender had already built and marketed some steel guitars along with Kaufmann under the K&F brand, Fullerton recounted in his 1993 book, Guitar Legends: The Evolution of the Guitar from Fender to G&L, that when he signed on with Leo’s shop, he told Fender he knew more about “the regular guitar” than steels. Accordingly, Fender counted on Fullerton’s input about the development of electric Spanish instruments from the beginning of their association.

    The Fender company’s solidbody electric guitar debuted in 1950, going through more than one name change until it settled into the market as the Telecaster. Originally derided by musicians as a homely, plank-like instrument, it quickly won over guitarists with its distinctive “twang” tone, setting the stage for Fender’s further innovative musical instruments.

    Fender and Fullerton next developed what was perceived as an entirely new instrument – a solidbody, guitar-shaped electric bass. With a fretted neck and easy playability, what became known as the Precision Bass was designed as an alternative to the cumbersome upright “doghouse” bass found in most combos. Fullerton noted that he and Leo would often work long into the night on their new creation, and recounted that by the time the P-Bass was developed, the two were assisted by Hawaiian musician Freddie Tavares in developing instruments.

    As for the “how and why” regarding the Precision Bass acquiring a 34″ scale (which is still the industry standard for electric basses), Fullerton recalled, “We tried some shorter scales like 30″ or 32″, but they didn’t seem to get the resonance we needed. We may have even tried a 36″ scale, but the distance between frets was too wide to be practical. In trying to get things right, we even took gut strings off of upright basses and wrapped wire over the part of the string that would be vibrating over the pickup.”George Fullerton Photo courtesy of Fender Musical Instruments Corp.”

    Fullerton test-runs a Stratocaster in the Fender factory in the ’50s. Photo: Willie G. Moseley.

    The Stratocaster, which would ultimately become the world’s best-selling electric guitar, was up next for the Fender company, and this time around, Leo, George, and Freddie had the input of a musician named Bill Carson, who would field-test prototype instruments for the company. Carson would ultimately join the Fender company, working in guitar production at the factory, and later, in sales.

    Fullerton is credited with the idea of the teardrop-shaped jack on the top of the Stratocaster. Such an innovation would help prevent damage to the instrument if a guitar cord was abruptly pulled out of the jack.

    Fullerton’s wife, Lucille, also played a part in the marketing of the Stratocaster, suggesting the phrase “Original Contour Body,” which appeared on a decal on the headstock.

    While Fullerton wasn’t as involved with the development of subsequent Fender models, the company’s custom-color concept, introduced in the late ’50s, was his.

    “The first custom-color instrument was a Fiesta Red Jazzmaster, and I still own it,” Fullerton said. “The sales staff laughed when it was introduced, but I had the last laugh!”

    Fullerton was Vice-President for Production when the company was sold to CBS in 1965, and Leo Fender retired. Fullerton remained with the Fender company under CBS ownership until 1970. He worked briefly with Ernie Ball in the development of Earthwood guitars and basses. In the mid ’70s he joined Leo Fender in the original Music Man company, and ultimately, the two, along with longtime Fender salesman Dale Hyatt, founded yet another guitar company, G&L.

    “What Leo tried to do with Music Man guitars, and later, G&L, was design guitars through his CLF Research company that didn’t look like the instruments he’d designed at Fender,” Fullerton said. “He wanted these newer brands to be improvements on his earlier designs. In a lot of ways, he had his work cut out for him. But he felt his later designs were the best he’d ever done.”

    Fullerton even owned patents on guitar design. One was for a three-bolt/tilt-neck adjustment, and he averred that his patent is not the one used on Fender instruments after he left the company.

    Fullerton’s patent was found on Music Man and G&L instruments. “The problem with the Fender type was that as the neck was adjusted, there was a shaft inside that was turning against a metal plate on the bottom of the neck, changing the angle,” he recalled. “This meant not enough vibration from the strings was being conducted through the neck joint, because contact between the neck and the body was lessened; there was a gap. My neck patent assured that a neck could be tilted while maintaining contact between the neck and the body.”

    G&L instruments were built in a facility on Fender Avenue in Fullerton, where Leo had built a complex. The line initially consisted of the F-100 guitar and the L-1000 and L-2000 basses, and quickly expanded to include numerous models that appealed to many working players.

    Fullerton had bypass surgery in the mid ’80s, and, under the advice of his doctor, sold his G&L stock to Leo then settled into a vice-president/consultant position. He continued to monitor Leo’s well-being as his health deteriorated due to Parkinson’s Disease. When Fender passed away in March, 1991, Fullerton helped design his headstone.

    Fullerton continued as a consultant with G&L, and the company ultimately marketed a George Fullerton signature Legacy model guitar.

    Fullerton’s Guitar Legends book was later supplemented with Guitars From George and Leo: How Leo Fender and I Built G&L Guitars, published in 2004.

    Fullerton with Bill Carson in 1997.

    In ’07, Fullerton became a consultant for Fender’s Custom Shop, which in November of that year Fender produced a George Fullerton 50th Anniversary Stratocaster.

    Lucille Fullerton died April 20, 2009, and her life partner crossed the way less than 11 weeks later. Fullerton is survived by his daughter, Dianne, son Geoff, and two grandchildren.

    Both Fender and G&L posted tributes on their websites, and accolades for Fullerton were read across the globe.

    Susan Carson, widow of Bill Carson (who died in early ’07) and a former Fender District Sales Manager herself, recalled Fullerton as “…an incredibly kind and gentle man who did not hold grudges, who was quick to give others credit, and who loved his wife and family first and foremost. He was truly Leo’s right-hand man, and he seemed to admire Leo very much; his loyalties to Leo were unmatched. George has been an under-recognized and under-appreciated figure in the guitar industry, and I would hope his memory would be elevated to that which he deserved.”

    Longtime Orange County guitar technician Steve Soest recalled an incident that exemplified the dedication of Fullerton and Fender to building the right instruments for professional musicians, citing a visit to the G&L facility in Fullerton.

    “One time I was there, showing George and Leo a near-mint ’58 Precision Bass I’d just purchased,” Soest recounted. “Leo studied the bass for the longest time, then turned to George and asked, ‘When did we stop running the strings through the body?’ People always wonder why they didn’t remember detail upon detail, or certain dates in guitar history. To them, that stuff wasn’t important, it was all about positive evolution of function and form in the design of the instrument – nostalgia be damned! Witnessing that sort of relationship first-hand demonstrated to me just how important George was to Leo, then as in years past, as a top player on his A team.”

    And perhaps Fullerton himself accurately predicted his legacy when, in 1991, he told VG, “The Telecaster, Precision Bass, and Stratocaster are still the most demanded, the most popular, and most copied instruments in the world, and I feel privileged to have been involved in their development. I think three instruments have established a precedent with their popularity and demand, and have created an endurance record that has never been equaled, and maybe never will be in the future.”

    VG‘s final question for Fullerton in the ’91 interview was whether the label “unsung hero” was appropriate in his case. Fullerton’s response? “Well… maybe.”


    This article originally appeared in VG‘s October 2009 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.


  • Have Guitar Will Travel 087 – Rhys Lewis and Chase Mitchell

    Have Guitar Will Travel 087 – Rhys Lewis and Chase Mitchell

    HGWT episode 87 has host James Patrick Regan speaking with singer/songwriters Rhys Lewis and Chase Mitchell. Rhys grew up in England and studied at the London Center of Contemporary Music. He talks about touring and performing as a solo artist and with a band. One of his favorite places is Denmark Street, where he loves gazing at old guitars like his ’68 Gibson ES-150. Chase is a native of West Virginia and joined a band when he was nine years old. He “retired” from band life at 13 to launch a solo career. A fan of cool old guitars, he looks forward to one day scoring a ’68 Pink Paisley Telecaster. Please like, comment, and share this podcast! Listen Here!

    Each episode is available on Stitcher, iheartradioTune In, Apple Podcast, YouTube and Spotify!


    Have Guitar Will Travel, hosted by James Patrick Regan, otherwise known as Jimmy from the Deadlies, is presented by Vintage Guitar magazine, the destination for guitar enthusiasts. Podcast episodes feature guitar players, builders, dealers and more – all with great experiences to share! Find all podcasts at www.vintageguitar.com/category/podcasts.