Tag: features

  • Dan’s Guitar RX: Rock-And-Roll High School(er)

    Dan’s Guitar RX: Rock-And-Roll High School(er)

    In my November ’22 column, Ceil Thompson’s class-project guitar was nearing completion – the lacquer coats were applied and, after it cured for two weeks, she was ready for final sanding, buffing, and assembly.

    1) Mounting-screw holes for the switch plates, control plates, vibrato, pickups, bridge posts, and tuners were all drilled, so Ceil did a dry-run parts install except for the Mastery bridge-post cups because they’re machined, and once pressed in can’t be removed without damaging or destroying them.

    2) With that in mind, I machined brass sleeves with the same outer and inner diameters as the Mastery parts.

    3) We pressed them in to slightly below the surface of the body, then, after the finish had cured, removed them by pulling with a tap that grabbed their inner wall. To our surprise, each left a perfect ring in the lacquer, which will be covered by the flanges on each cup.

    4) Ceil checked the cups for fit, then got the body ready for final sanding and buffing.

    5) After sanding, she finally got to use the StewMac buffer, but only after hearing a few pointers on what not to do with it, such as don’t buff on a corner or hard edge, and don’t present the body to the wheel below center, where it could grab the guitar and send it to the floor (that has never happened to me, but the potential is there). She had no trouble and was soon ready to start installing parts.

    6) Using an X-Acto knife with #11 blade, she shaved parts of the pickguard to custom-fit hardware and pickups.

    7) While wiring the switches, switch plates, and StewMac Lipstick pickups, Ceil changed several capacitors from the actual Jaguar circuit because she wanted them wired as humbuckers rather than single-coils.

    8) She installed the bridge, vibrato, and Rickard Cyclone tuners, strung it, and plugged it in – everything worked as it should.

    9) We realized we hadn’t drilled holes for the strap buttons, and because it’s a set-neck, Ceil had to use a flexible drill to get the proper angle.

    10) With the buttons mounted, she was done.

    In all, Ceil worked on the guitar for seven months (with a long break during summer) and it turned out great – I’m very proud of her. We hope you’ve enjoyed the project.


    Dan Erlewine has been repairing guitars for more than 50 years. He is the author of three books, dozens of magazine articles, and has produced instructional videotapes and DVDs on guitar repair. From 1986 through his retirement in late 2019, Erlewine was part of the R&D team for Stewart-MacDonald’s Guitar Shop Supply; today he remains involved with the company, offering advice to the department and shooting video for the company’s website and social media. This column has appeared in VG since March, 2004. You can contact Dan at dan@stewmac.com.


    This article originally appeared in VG’s January 2023 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.

  • Fretprints: Roy Lanham

    Fretprints: Roy Lanham

    Woefully under-recognized guitarist Roy Lanham was a favorite of leading country and jazz pickers and rock innovators; Merle Travis extolled his musicianship, and when Barney Kessel sought him out for coaching on country picking, Lanham exclaimed, “Take off your boots and hat, and you can be a great jazz player!”

    Emerging when musical boundaries were flexible and undefined, Lanham embraced it all – country, jazz, pop, blues, Western swing, boogie-woogie, nascent rock and roll – even cocktail mood music, and concocted his own sonic stew.

    Born in Corbin, Kentucky, on January 16, 1923, Lanham was drawn to music as a child through avid radio listening. Inspired by guitarist Harry C. Adams on WHAS in Louisiana playing jazz standards, Roy mastered the rudiments on his brother’s Stella before acquiring a Cromwell archtop when he was eight years old. He turned pro at 16, when Archie Campbell (later of “Hee Haw” fame) hired him to play with Grandpappy and His Gang for “Mid-Day Merry-G-Round” on WNOX in Knoxville. There he met the Stringdusters, featuring Homer Haynes and Jethro Burns, and began absorbing their gypsy-jazz influences. Combining the string-band traditions of country and swing-jazz of Django Reinhardt’s combos, Lanham formed his own groups with mandolinist Doug Dalton, rhythm guitarist Bynum Geouge, and bassist Red Wootten. They moved to Chattanooga, evolved into the Fidgety Four, were recruited by crooner Gene Austin as backup band in 1940, and became The Whippoorwills to coincide with a line from Austin’s hit, “My Blue Heaven.”

    The quartet developed a distinctive four-part vocal harmony sound while Roy’s playing progressed through the influences of Charlie Christian and George Barnes, marking his early blend of country and jazz rendered on an amplified Gibson L-5. When The Whipps folded in ’41, he moved to Atlanta, joined Shades of Blue, befriended his idol George Barnes, and, inspired by Sheldon Bennett, began pursuing chord-melody playing.

    Returning to Cincinnati in ’43, Lanham worked as WLW staff guitarist/bassist, accompanying Merle Travis, Joe Maphis, and Grandpa Jones, and was a coveted session player for King Records in ’44. He recorded with Hank Penny’s Plantation Boys and The Delmore Brothers. With the Delmores he was featured on “Freight Train Boogie” (duet with Jethro Burns), “Hillbilly Boogie” and “Steamboat Bill Boogie.” Several of these country boogies, graced with Roy’s boogie-woogie bass riffs and hot lead licks, foreshadowed rockabilly. He appeared on Chet Atkins’ ’45 Nashville debut, Chester Atkins and his All Star Hillbillies; “Guitar Blues” boasts Lanham’s chord-melody work and two choruses of soloing. After moving to Dayton in ’47, he acquired an Epiphone electric archtop and reconstituted The Whippoorwills with Dalton and a new lineup. Their unique ensemble sound of four-part instrumental and five-part vocals (with singer Juanita Vastine) was revolutionary, flaunting a live version of what Les Paul and Mary Ford achieved with studio wizardry and overdubs.

    Despite all their brilliant innovation, they never resonated with pop audiences. In the late ’40s and early ’50s, they toured with Roy Rogers, held a residency at KWTO (Springfield, Missouri), and recorded in Los Angeles with Smiley Burnette. Concurrently, Lanham enlivened sessions for Johnny Horton, Jim Reeves, Johnny and Dorsey Burnette, Bonnie Guitar, The Browns, and others, and also recorded an instrumental single, “Klondike.” In this period, he began playing Fender electrics almost exclusively.


    “Lover Come Back To Me” exemplified Lanham’s chordal approach. A favorite standard in his repertoire, it illustrates his eclectic jazz-country tendencies and plucked fingerstyle technique. The C11 intro vamp receives an active syncopated treatment while the melody beginning in bar 3 is a straightforward interpretation of the verse theme. Note his combination of four-note chords, triads and single notes throughout as well as passing chords – Gm7 connecting F and Fmaj7 in 3 and C#m pushing into Dm in 7. The brisk block-chord passage in 11-12 is a trademark sound as is the country-rag turnaround in 15-16.


    In ’55, he replaced Jimmy Bryant on “Hometown Jamboree” and was featured weekly in spirited duets with Speedy West on TV – later captured on Guitar Spectacular – but his duties forced the Whipps to disband. His busy L.A. session schedule continued, distinguished by the Fleetwoods’ first #1 hits in ’59 (“Come Softly to Me” and “Mr. Blue”), Spade Cooley’s final album, Ned Miller’s hit “From a Jack to a Queen,” and Loretta Lynn’s debut, “Honky Tonk Girl.”

    On the heels of his pop successes, Dolton Records asked Roy for a solo record, which started a run with The Most Exciting Guitar, an auspicious guitar/bass/drums trio set that mixed jazz, standards, country, and showcased his combined chord-melody and single-line techniques on “These Foolish Things” and “Old Joe Clark.” Sizzling Strings traded on the Whippoorwills’ name and offered jazz/pop renditions of swing classics by Benny Goodman, Glenn Miller, Stan Kenton, and Artie Shaw, as well as the distinctly Western “Kerry Dance,” a modernized fiddle tune. The all-instrumental ensemble sound of this Whippoorwill session replaced vocals with guitar/mandolin interplay woven into creative well-textured arrangements. “Lover” was a tour de force featuring meter, tempo, and feel changes and the virtuosity of Lanham and Dalton, which must’ve inspired the studio-crafted version by Les Paul and George Barnes a decade later on Les Paul Now!. The Fabulous Roy Lanham followed with a program of jazz and standards offset by mood pieces like “Sophisticated Swing,” “Holiday for Strings,” and a swinging chord-dominated bopper “Roy’s Blues.” The Spectacular Six-String of Roy Lanham, released later as a four-song EP, completed the series and, with the previous three, effectively placed his country/jazz style among early instrumental-rock records.

    Roy joined the Sons of the Pioneers in ’61, after the death of guitarist Karl Farr. As session guitarist, he’d already played on several Sons’ albums (with Glen Campbell, Barney Kessel and Jimmy Wyble) and as a member served as comedian, featured soloist, and accompanist. Though his sideman role largely kept him in the background, in ’63 he made a memorable appearance in the movie 30 Minutes at Gunsight.

    For the next three decades, Lanham worked steadily with the Sons, playing in the Missouri Ozarks every summer and Nevada nightclubs in the winter. In ’83, he traveled to Phoenix to perform in the All American Jam with Duane Eddy, Thumbs Carllile, Bud Isaacs, and other stars, then guested on Tex Williams’ last album in ’85.

    He suffered health problems, and though he underwent open heart surgery and had bladder cancer, they didn’t sideline him until ’86, when a stroke forced his retirement. He succumbed to prostate cancer on February 14, 1992.

    STYLE
    Lanham pioneered an uncommon fusion of country, jazz, swing, and pop that reached an apex with his instrumental albums, peddled as “mood music” in the late ’50s and early ’60s. Howard Roberts and Speedy West enjoyed similar fates with their Capitol records. His crystalline “space age” Fender tone addressed the period’s instrumental-rock trappings and alerted anyone with ears they weren’t hearing Tal Farlow, Barney Kessel, or Joe Pass (though Pass used a Jazzmaster on his earliest records). However, his sophisticated solo lines in “Airmail Special” and ferocious bebop improvising in “Lost Weekend” sent mixed signals to the public and transcended the easy-listening cocktail-jazz marketing confines of the day, making it difficult to pigeonhole him. His technical proficiency and jazz conception, evident in “Can’t We Be Friends” and “These Foolish Things,” defied stereotyping while his melodic pop sense gave martini-sipping audiences the requisite fulfillment in “Eager Beaver.” Moreover, when it suited the music he seamlessly segued into country modes (“Wildwood Flower,” “Steel Guitar Rag”), Western swing (“Kerry Dance”), updated polkas (“Song of India”), bluesy pop (“Mellow Mood”) and occasionally flirted with Ventures-like rock sounds (“Lanham Boogie”). His diversity wasn’t limited to the ’50s; a decade earlier, he innovated within the Delmores hillbilly repertoire, injecting unprecedented electric-guitar riffs, chord punches, and blues-based single-note solos to create pre-rockabilly sounds that paved the way for Carl Perkins, Cliff Gallup, and Scotty Moore.


    Lanham recorded “Kerry Dance” several times in his career. This uptempo example from Most Exciting Guitar launched the solo (0:41) and epitomized his happy collision of country, blues, bop, and Western swing. He begins in a blues vein with bent double-stops and blues-scale riffs in bars 1-4. Note his use of the 9th tone D to broaden the C7 blues base in 4. His familiar country ascent rises to a blues lick in 5-6 and ends with bebop/blues idea in 7-8. What follows defies categorization and works atonal modernism into the proceedings. He applies a series of dissonant intervallic patterns to form angular arpeggios in 9-10. These same cells were used by Pat Martino and Randy Rhoads for a similarly startling effect. Roy melodically outlines a D7-G7-C chord progression in 12-13 and returns to a blues conception for his riff-based closing thoughts. Note the juggling of chromatic notes (F-F#-G) and rhythmic displacement in 14-16 that transform a typical blues-box lick into an ear-catching pedal-tone phrase.


    A prominent aspect of Roy’s style was his alternation of single-note and chord textures. The former was exemplified by fast, fiddle-inspired country licks reminiscent of Western swing and electric bluegrass, swinging jazz, and blues phrases in the vein of Django, Christian, and Barnes, as well as the intricate ornamentation in “These Foolish Things.” The latter was heard in harmonically rich chord-melody pieces like “Tuxedo Junction,” “Roy’s Blues,” “As Time Goes By,” and his trademark rendition of “Lover Come Back to Me” as well as chord interludes and contrast phrases (juxtaposed with single-note lines) in his arrangements. Building on Bennett’s three-part chord style, he advanced the approach by adding a fourth voice to produce larger block chords. He tucked his flatpick between the index and middle fingers, and applied fingerpicking in plucking and arpeggiating full chords, partials, dyads, and triads for a pianistic sound presaging Joe Pass’ approach. He similarly channeled and repurposed Johnny Smith’s plectrum chord-melody style for the fingerpicked chording on “Where or When” and “Body and Soul,” evoked big-band horn-section impressions on “Sophisticated Swing,” and in “Wildwood Flower” applied a country-informed variant for a Merle Travis-approved polyphonic effect.

    Roy was fond of expanding the guitar’s orchestral role. Consider the deliberate extensive palm muting in “Holiday for Strings,” harmonizations in “Tea for Two” and “Slipped Disc,” or the repurposing of standard guitar in the Fleetwoods’ “Come Softly To Me” and “Mr. Blue.” There, he tuned lower (sixth string to C) to create the bass line and combined it with other guitar parts (fills and rhythm chording) for an intriguing layered effect in the arrangements.


    Lanham’s opener on Most Exciting Guitar was Woody Herman’s “Lost Weekend,” a perfect vehicle for his virtuosity and blend of swing, bop and country tangents. This excerpt (0:56-1:07) begins with a groove riff made of repeated arpeggio patterns that alternate high notes F, F# and G in measures 1-4 resulting in different tonal implications. Blues dissonance is conveyed with F while F# and G, diatonic to D, are sweeter. He applies a characteristic slow string bend in 5 and adds the ninth to his blues line (a signature sound) in 7-8. The stepwise ascent in 9-10 has country fiddle-tune connotations but gives way to a bebop/blues mixture in 10-12.


    ESSENTIAL LISTENING
    The Most Exciting Guitar, Sizzling Strings, The Fabulous Roy Lanham, and The Spectacular Six-String of Roy Lanham are required listening. Also worthy are the Whippoorwills’ Hard Life Blues, Speedy West’s Guitar Spectacular, and his work with the Delmore Brothers.

    ESSENTIAL VIEWING
    Roy’s “Lover Come Back to Me” and “Kerry Dance,” Whippoorwills’ “Hard Life Blues,” “Arkansas Traveler” and “Walking With You,” and a 1986 interview with Deke Dickerson provide enlightening glimpses online.

    SOUND
    Roy began his career on hollowbody archtops – first a Cromwell, then a blond Gibson L-5 purchased around 1940 for $324, retrofitted with a DeArmond pickup. With the Whipps, he played an early (circa ’49-50) Epiphone Zephyr De Luxe Regent with two large built-in pickups, blade selector switch, and master Tone and Volume circuit. Leo Fender gave him a Stratocaster in ’54, starting him on Fender solidbodies; in ’58, he was an early endorser of the Jazzmaster, using a sunburst/anodized-pickguard model at NAMM demos with Speedy West. Roy’s mainstay was red with tortoiseshell pickguard, seen on TV and several album covers. In the ‘60s, he also played a Jaguar and Bass VI.

    The common denominator among these disparate instruments was the single-coil pickup. Loyal to Leo, in the ’70s he favored Music Man Stingray guitars (one with a Jaguar neck), then played G&L guitars in the ’80s, with Fender light strings (unwound G after the ’60s). He used heavy Fender flatpicks and switched to a thin pick in the ’80s. Roy also owned a Fender-style electric with a figured-maple made by Roberto-Venn Luthiery and played a Fender Kingman acoustic with medium strings. His effects were spare – spring reverb, studio echo (Joe Maphis’ Ray Butts EchoSonic amp produced the slap-back effect on “These Foolish Things”) and fleeting use of chorus in the ’70s.

    Roy plugged into Kalamazoo amps in the ’40s with the Delmores and Whipps, and used Fender tweed and blackface amps in ’50s and ’60s. By the ’80s, he preferred a Randall 2000 amp.


    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 January 2023 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.

  • Pop ’N Hiss: Rage Against the Machine’s Evil Empire

    Pop ’N Hiss: Rage Against the Machine’s Evil Empire

    Tom Morello, Tim Commerford, and Zack de la Rocha onstage in 1994.

    With a title taken from a Ronald Reagan quip about the Soviet Union, Rage Against The Machine’s second album, Evil Empire, was created under pressure so intense it damn near killed the band.

    After a successful 1992 debut and songs like “Bombtrack,” “Freedom,” and “Killing in the Name” blew the minds of the multitudes, intense touring earned them worldwide attention. But, three and a half years later, drummer Brad Wilk, bassist Tim Commerford, vocalist Zack de la Rocha, and guitarist Tom Morello felt the weight of expectations from fans and their record company; they had to record again.

    The band itself didn’t make things easy with the personalities of its three prickly, opinionated members – especially Harvard grad Tom Morello, whose famously Type-A personality compelled him to abandon guitar clichés and forge a unique musical vision.

    “The nail in the coffin of traditional guitar playing, for me, was an early [Rage] gig in the San Fernando Valley,” Morello recalled on Tim Ferriss’ Youtube show in 2022. “We were opening for two cover bands that had technically talented guitarists that could shred like crazy and played brilliantly. But I thought, ‘If I’m on a bill with three other guitar players who have that level of useless technique, I don’t need to be the fourth.’” That shift in consciousness became a movement in “nu metal,” rap, and heavy guitar through the ’90s.

    “There’s a clear delineation between musicians and artists,” Morello added. “At some point, you must go beyond being delighted to play your favorite songs. You have to take a step into the unknown to say, ‘This is what has come before, and now I’m going to write my own songs. I’m going to take a risk and put myself out there, and people will hate those songs.’ So, I veered the ship dramatically towards concentrating on the eccentricities of my playing and things that were unique. To that end, I decided to rail against the accepted rules of shred guitar, which in my opinion were making every six-stringer sound the same. One night, I decided to be the DJ in Rage, but I was going to do it on guitar. Discovering how to scratch on the guitar and work the toggle switch like two turntables was key.”

    For Evil Empire, producer Brendan O’Brien took on the task of moderating explosive disputes while packaging the band’s diverse influences to everyone’s satisfaction. The process was grueling and initial sessions, in Atlanta, were a disaster, so they took a break.
    Wilk recalled how touring had taken its toll.

    “The first record came out, and we went on the road for three years straight, living together on a bus,” he told the L.A. Times in 1996. “When you do that, it’s pretty easy to get sick of each other. We went in to make the second record, and all the personal differences we swept under the rug suddenly came up.”

    The band fought so violently in the studio that they briefly broke up before gathering again in L.A. in March of ’95. Rejecting state-of-the-art joints, they pursued a rawer approach at Cole Rehearsal Studios.

    “We thought, ‘Why spend $2,000 a day in some fancy studio trying to re-create the great vibe we have right here?’” Morello told VG. “We knocked a hole in the wall, rented the room across the hall, and ran wires through the hallway.

    Rage Against The Machine 1994: Gie Knaeps/UPPA/Zuma.

    “We weren’t going to go in and play in a studio that had no environment whatsoever,” added de la Rocha. “You get in some places, and it’s like walking into a dentist’s office.”
    Basic tracks and lyrics were composed and recorded simultaneously as the band pulled together.

    “We recorded the rhythm tracks live, needing only a few takes to nail it,” said Morello. “We rarely used click tracks. Instinctive speeding up or slowing down can make it much more exciting.”

    “Bulls On Parade” was a group effort displaying Commerford’s syncopated bass, de la Rocha’s trance-inducing swing, and a wicked guitar solo from Morello creating turntable sounds. The opening riff, he says, was initially written as the coda.

    “When Brendan heard it, he zeroed right in on it and said, ‘Why don’t you try beginning the song that way?’ It was exactly what the song needed,” Morello said. “That’s why he’s Brendan O’Brien.”

    Criticism of military spending gives way to lyrics about the Zapatista uprising and wealth inequality, as on “People Of The Sun” and “Down Rodeo,” while “Vietnow” showcases Wilk’s groove and feel as Morello gets gnarly with a Jimmy Page-inspired riff. Morello used his “Arm The Homeless” superstrat – a Performance Guitars body with homemade neck (dug out of the dumpster at Nadine’s Music Store in Hollywood), Ibanez locking vibrato, and EMG pickups. His rig was – and remains – a 50-watt Marshall JCM 800 2205 going into a Peavey 4×12, fronted by an MXR Phase 90, DOD FX40B Equalizer, two Boss DD-3 Digital Delays, a DigiTech WH-1 Whammy, a Dunlop GCB95 Cry Baby Wah, and a DigiTech XP-300 Space Station.

    With de la Rocha’s lyrics providing a banquet of food for thought, Evil Empire skyrocketed to #1 in the U.S. and ultimately went triple platinum while “Tire Me” won a Grammy for Best Metal Performance. Fanning the flames of activism as a musical alternative for spoiled suburban kids moaning about first-world problems, Morello’s concussion-inducing riffs were the carrot, while de la Rocha’s high-velocity rhymes and passion enticed listeners to examine their worldview. Are you an ally, an enemy, or willfully asleep?

    “It was a long process,” Morello laments. “I had the musical, the political, and the record goal in mind, and sometimes turned a deaf ear to the feelings of my bandmates. I’ve learned that lesson through the years. That’s very important. You have to get that right first, or none of the rest matters.”

    Lesser bands like Korn and Limp Bizkit garnered huge success trailing in the wake of Rage Against The Machine, but its influence is unquestionable – not bad for four leftists who criticize multi-national corporations, cultural imperialism, and government oppression – and were even banned from “Saturday Night Live.”


    This article originally appeared in VG’s January 2023 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.


  • David Crosby & The Lighthouse Band

    David Crosby & The Lighthouse Band

    David Crosby & The Lighthouse Band; Michael League, Becca Stevens, Crosby, and Michelle Willis.

    Once, there was Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young; decades later came Crosby, Stevens, Willis & League – better known as The Lighthouse Band – to light a fire under David Crosby’s tail and get him back onstage.

    Captured on this 2018 live recording, like CSNY, everyone sings, with Michael League (of Snarky Puppy) and Becca Stevens handling guitars, and Michelle Willis the keys.

    David Crosby & The Lighthouse Band: Scott Harris.

    Croz started writing the song “1974” nearly 40 years ago, but didn’t finish until now with his current musical mates; it’s a magical combination of four-part harmony, ringing acoustics, and piano. “Vagrants of Venice” is a sequel to “Wooden Ships,” the quartet’s voices wafting over a complex pattern from Stevens’ seven-string guitar. At the conclusion, David slyly murmurs into the mic, “This could be a really good night.”

    “Regina” displays Stevens’ fingerstyle ukulele chops, while other tracks deploy League’s electric guitar and bass, along with Becca’s 10-string charango. The Lighthouse Band revisits CSN’s “Guinnevere” with spacious open chords, while Michael takes a melodic, virtuosic bass solo on a nine-minute “Déjà Vu.” The closer is “Woodstock,” and it’s as mesmerizing as you’d expect. This latest platter from Crosby and company is pure joy.


    This article originally appeared in VG’s January 2023 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.

  • This Band Has No Past: How Cheap Trick Became Cheap Trick

    This Band Has No Past: How Cheap Trick Became Cheap Trick

    Rick Nielsen in 1976.

    Bearing an incredibly accurate subtitle, the story told here is presented mostly as an oral history, loaded with minutiae about the adventures of Rick Nielsen, Robin Zander, Tom Petersson, and Bun E. Carlos in their early bands and Cheap Trick. Those dues-paying years created the power-pop powerhouse we know and love.

    Plenty of guitar and bass stories are included. Lead guitarist Nielsen, whose parents owned a music store, started buying, selling, and trading guitars before Cheap Trick was famous. In 1968, Rick traded a Gibson SG and $25 for a ’59 sunburst Les Paul, which he then sold to Jeff Beck for $350. On the band’s 1977’s self-titled debut, Nielsen played a ’58 ’burst through an Orange amp; later pages detail the birth of Hamer Guitars, including Rick and Tom’s close association with luthier Jol Dantzig, who created a 12-string bass for Petersson.

    The book mostly ends where the iconic 1978 live album Cheap Trick at Budokan became a hit, helping the band out of enormous debt and essentially saving it.

    While terrific, the book screams for a sequel covering the Illinois rockers’ full roller-coaster career over the past 44 years.


    This article originally appeared in VG’s January 2023 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.


  • Check This Action: The Sound Of The Surf

    Check This Action: The Sound Of The Surf

    Dick Dale in 1962.

    Before acts like the Beach Boys and Jan & Dean sang about surfing, guitar bands in Southern California started playing a style of instrumental rock that fans dubbed “surf music.” Inspired by the sounds of Duane Eddy, Link Wray, the Fireballs, and Ventures, groups like the Belairs, Eddie & the Showmen, and Challengers became local heroes. And, of course, Dick Dale rightly earned the appellation King Of The Surf Guitar.

    A cool new documentary, Sound Of The Surf, dives into that genre, the culture that surrounded it, and its unlikely comeback in the ’80s and beyond. Fifteen years in the making, it features interviews with Dale, Paul Johnson and Eddie Bertrand of the Belairs, members of the Surfaris, Chantays, and Pyramids, actual surfers from the period, and even the real-life surfer girl nicknamed Gidget, inspiration for the movie and TV series. It’s a fascinating glimpse into a style that can be both powerful and romantic, and is too often overlooked.

    Thomas Duncan produced and directed the film, which was finished and edited before he died in 2021; guitarist, surf historian, executive producer, and narrator John Blair then put together the soundtrack.

    The story opens with Jimi Hendrix’s oft-quoted line from “Third Stone From The Sun” – “And you’ll never hear surf music again” – after which Blair declares, “Hendrix was wrong.” For reasons I’ll get into later, that’s an unfortunate starting point, but, thankfully, it’s followed by the sound of reverby, double-picked guitar and an incessant drum roll.

    Bill Medley of the Righteous Brothers then appears, saying, “I was attracted to the simplicity and the energy of it. That’s what rock and roll is and was.” Blair adds, “There’s no hidden meanings. There’s no message. It’s just pure, unadulterated fun.”

    Along with Dale, the Belairs were also pioneers. Their “Mr. Moto,” written by 15-year-old Paul Johnson, has been covered hundreds of times. Johnson doesn’t claim ownership, but he mentions a fan saying, “You ought to call it surf music.” When he subsequently saw Dale live, he admits, “I was blown away.”

    Dick Dale was as individual a guitar stylist as Merle Travis or Django Reinhardt. I’ve never seen a guitarist with such raw power. Drawing thousands of teens to his shows, he worked with Leo Fender to develop the Showman amp and outboard Reverb unit, and his fiery adaptation of “Miserlou,” a belly-dance number he heard his uncle play on oud, is perhaps the ultimate surf anthem.

    But in ’62, the Beach Boys scored their first hit, “Surfin’ Safari.” With instrumental groups being a regional phenomenon, for most consumers the Beach Boys were surf’s personification. A few instrumentals charted nationally – notably the Chantays’ “Pipeline,” Surfaris’ “Wipe Out,” and Pyramids’ “Penetration” – something that unfortunately eluded Dale. Then came the Beatles in ’64, and the ocean might as well have dried up. Some, like Bertrand, have a philosophical take (things change), but Medley calling the Beatles “bubblegum” comes off as sour grapes.

    Jump ahead to the ’80s surf revival. Blair’s band, Jon & the Nightriders, was extremely important. The quartet’s high-speed, reverb-dripping brand bordered on punk and helped draw audiences back to surf.

    Even bigger was Pulp Fiction in ’94. If his appearance in Beach Party didn’t garner Dale worldwide acclaim, “Miserlou” opening Quentin Tarantino’s movie did. His comeback is mentioned along with America’s Los Straitjackets and bands around the globe.

    Paul Johnson’s Packards are name-checked, and Laika & the Cosmonauts are briefly seen, though not heard. But to me, Johnson is the one guy who came back but wasn’t just a nostalgic retread, with his Christian-based instro-surf, and the Cosmonauts furthered the music with great compositions and, being from Finland, demonstrated the universality the film set out to achieve.

    Hendrix’s quote shows up again, but with a different twist. Post-resurgence, among dubious claims, like allegedly giving a young Jimi guitar lessons, Dick Dale said that Hendrix heard that he’d contracted cancer; thus, surf music was over. As music historian Jim Washburn says, “Aside from Dick’s claim, I have never heard it sourced from elsewhere, and I’ve read almost everything extant on Hendrix.”

    So why include it, let alone anchor the film’s beginning and end on it? There are other ways to illustrate surf music’s resilience.

    I’m not out to knock one of rock’s greatest guitarists, whose later albums and tours were downright awesome. So I e-mailed Blair, who said that Thomas Duncan wanted the movie to tell a story – “not necessarily a historically point-on, accurately detailed, Ken Burns-type of film.” But aren’t documentaries supposedly based on fact?

    Performing ’til the end, Dale died in 2019, at 81. Blair says that the film revolves around him, adding, “The Hendrix story is the story he tells.” However, it’s included with no caveat. According to Blair, “It’s historically accurate in the context of how Dick Dale saw it.”

    But if those two elements conflict, it’s the documentarian’s job to accurately sort things out – even if a guitar hero spins a colorful yarn.


    © Dan Forte; all rights reserved by the author.


    This article originally appeared in VG’s January 2023 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.


  • Larkin Poe

    Larkin Poe

    Rebecca (left) and Megan Lovell.

    The latest from the Nashville-based multi-instrumentalist Lovell sisters continues to fashion elements of Southern rock, blues, and wicked slide guitar into a creative juggernaut. Megan wields enviable feel and sensuous perfect pitch and maturity on lap steel and resonator. She also sings harmony, while Rebecca belts out touching stories and doubles on keys and rhythm guitar. They benefit significantly from drummer Kevin McGowan and bassist Brent “Tarka” Layman handling rhythm-section duties.

    Larkin Poe
    Blood Harmony

    With production help from Rebecca’s husband, guitarist Tyler Bryant (also reviewed this month), the sisters skillfully blend a fusion of radio-friendly blues and contemporary country; fine examples include “Southern Comfort,” “Georgia Off My Mind,” and “Bolt Cutters & The Family Name.” The rest of the album is all killer, no filler. Substantive lyrics uplift filthy slide guitar like on “Summertime Sunset” and the fuzz-laden guitar tones on “Bad Spell.” Rebecca sings the daylights out of the ballad “Might As Well Be Me,” giving the great Beth Hart a run for her money.

    Fans of heartfelt songs, blues, contemporary country, and bodacious bottleneck guitar need look no further than this powerhouse sister act.


    This article originally appeared in VG’s January 2023 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.

  • Crucial Audio WahVelope

    Crucial Audio WahVelope

    Price: $571
    www.crucialaudio.com

    Crucial Audio makes high-end tube pedals and studio gear at its shop in southern Delaware. Its latest, the WahVelope, is both auto-wah and envelope filter – and it also hides a punchy tube overdrive up its sleeve.

    Inside the oversized WahVelope you’ll find two 12AX7 preamp tubes and 100 percent analog circuits, all meticulously built by Crucial Audio’s Steve Kollander. For guitarists, the box can deliver an accurate auto-wah effect, which simulates a wah pedal and is based on the speed of the Rate control. For even more control, there’s a jack for an expression pedal for real-time foot rockin’. Envelope filtering, of course, is different from auto-wah, giving a funky, organic wah sound that reacts to the speed and dynamics of a player’s picking – the harder you hit the string, the bigger the “bloom.” The filter in the WahVelope can conjure a range of voices, from the classic Jerry Garcia effects, to a range of vintage reggae and funk tones. You can even combine the auto-wah and envelope filter.

    Other switches include Wah Up/Down to determine how the effect travels, Wah Voice for specific textures (more bark or quack), and Envelope Sense, which determines the threshold of the effect. The WahVelope’s secret feature emerges when you turn the funk-inducing knobs down – and the Gain up – invoking a sweet, tube-fueled booster pedal. In that light, it’s like three pedals in one – auto-wah, envelope filter, and badass tube booster. Another asset is that your tone is bathed in those preamp tubes when the effect is on. When off, the WahVelope offers true-bypass.

    Sure, there are more-affordable wah and filter units out there, but if you want the ultimate boutique experience, the WahVelope delivers the funk – big-time.


    This article originally appeared in VG’s January 2023 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.

  • Austin Mics DIY Summer Reverb

    Austin Mics DIY Summer Reverb

    $139.99 (kit), $199 assembled
    www.austinmics.com

    Rick Wilkinson’s Austin Mics company, based in San Diego, specializes in do-it-yourself ribbon-microphone kits and DIY guitar pedals. His latest is the Summer Spring Reverb pedal, a digital spring reverb simulation with an Accutronics reverb module.

    The kit includes chassis-mounted Neutrik connectors, powder coated die-cast enclosure, jewel indicator light, high-quality filter caps and resistors, and a “crash circuit” that, with a kick or bump, randomly fires one of 10 samples. Assembly (which is optional) requires a soldering pencil, solder, an included flush-cutter, a Phillips screwdriver, adjustable wrench or pliers, a smart phone or tablet (for the assembly instructions), basic soldering skill, and about two hours. All components are labeled and bundled, and the instructions have clear pictures with useful notes.

    Functionally, controls include Dwell, which adjusts intensity of the reverb, Mix to control the ratio of reverb to dry mix, and Tone.

    The pedal does a great job of simulating classic spring reverb – creating a clean, full sound with slightly trashy low-fi trails. The controls do a good job mimicking what those on a genuine outboard spring reverb unit do; Dwell not only controls the intensity of the reverb, but can drive the effect into mild overdrive/distortion, contributing to authenticity. Adding even more is the “crash” feature, which produces a substantially loud crash.

    The Summer Spring Reverb is a fun, relatively easy DIY project that generates a high-quality, authentic-sounding reverb simulation.


    This article originally appeared in VG’s January 2023 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.

  • Elite Acoustics EAE D6-8 Pro

    Elite Acoustics EAE D6-8 Pro

    Price: $999
    www.eliteacoustics.com

    A knee-jerk first impression of the Elite Acoustics D6-8 Pro might be, “Dang, that is small.” But its one-foot cube packs serious effects and features, including an 80-watt amp, six-channel mixer, and a raft of digital effects. Stereo operation, Bluetooth capability, and the ability to save “user scenes” all help make it not just another acoustic amp.

    A bi-amped design, the top of the D6-8 Pro has a digital screen that lets the user easily jump between effects, levels, and deeper tweaking. Plenty loud, its effects sound sumptuous, even for a small cab housing an 8″ woofer and 1″ tweeter. You can deeply edit chorus, delay, and reverb effects, as well as find a compressor and noise gate for each channel.

    The back-panel digital mixer is just as important as the top, with a three-band EQ with mid sweep, high-pass filter, and notch filter on each channel. Connections include 1/4″ and XLR inputs, stereo Channel 5/6, and XLR outs.

    In tests, the Elite D6-8 PRO was a powerhouse of flexibility and tone, delivering big, gorgeous acoustic/electric sounds from its tiny footprint – it also works with vocals, keyboards, and other instruments. And while it’s not cheap, it’s a certifiable case of “you get what you pay for.”


    This article originally appeared in VG’s January 2023 issue. All copyrights are by the author and Vintage Guitar magazine. Unauthorized replication or use is strictly prohibited.