Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Greatest Rock Guitarists

Today is tax day and as such I do not have time to do a full post today but I wanted to make sure I posted something. A friend on Facebook gave me a gift by asking who I thought was the greatest rock guitarist.

There was quite of few people with the stock answers of Jimi Hendrix, Stevie Ray Vaughn and Eddie Van Halen. Great guitarists all of them but I wanted to dig a little deeper. So submitted for your approval.

Eric Johnson

Monday, April 13, 2015

Top Ten Favorite Acoustic Performances - Part 1


I am looking at to come up with some sort of formula to my posting but Top Ten lists seem to be popular with everyone so here is some of my favorite acoustic performance. Let me know what your thoughts on these or your favorites in the comments.

1. Waltz For Richard - First Aid Kit
I love these girls. They are a sister acoustic act from Sweden. They have a band play with them live but this from back when it was just the two of them. I highly recommend checking them out.


2. I Want You Back - K.T. Tumstall
You may know her from her song "Black Horse and  a Cherry Tree" or "Suddenly I See" used in multiple commercials. This video shows her having fun with a loop pedal.  I have been messing around  with a loop pedal lately and its harder than it looks.

3. Chet Atkins and Jerry Reed - Jerry's Breakdown. 
Two of the greatest guitar players of all time throwing it down. If you don't know who these people are you need to make a point to learn. 


4.Bruce Cockburn - If I had a Rocket Launcher - I used to love this song in the 80's despite its very dark subject matter. On acoustic guitar it takes on an entirely different persona.


5.Bruce Springsteen - Born to Run - It is always a challenge to take a song heavy on orchestration and turn it into a solo acoustic number. This is a good example of doing that. It keeps the essence of the original while reworking it into something new.




Friday, April 10, 2015

The Importance of Networking.

net·work 
/ˈnetˌwərk/

verb
gerund or present participle: networking
interact with other people to exchange information and develop contacts, especially to further one's career. "the skills of networking, bargaining, and negotiation"


In my day job I work as a Software Engineer. In that industry where you rarely stick to a company for longer than 3 years it is important to know as many people as possible. And in a very informal way you trade on favors and friendships I wish I knew this when I was young because it is extremely valuable in music.. Everyone you meet whether you it or not may be able to help you someday. Maybe you will be able to help them and they can owe a favor. Maybe that favor is a desirable gig or the opportunity to play with someone you want to play with.
They say its all in who you know. And that is true but you have it in your power to expand who you know.  This also goes to being nice and professional. If people like you and you are willing to help them. They will help you.
Lets see what the Godfather has to say about it.



Thursday, April 9, 2015

Bruce Cockburn - Guitar Style

I have a huge amount of respect for this guy's guitar playing. Here is a short video that talks about his style.


Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Top Ten : Things to not talk about on stage

I will not name names, but a friend of mine has been known to get political on stage. In all honesty his views do not bother me at all. Perhaps because we have similar views. All the same. Don't do that.

Unless your shtick is to be offensive (done that) there is no need to offend your audience or worse yet the people who hired you to play. I imagine you want to play there again and have your audience come back and say good things about you to their friends.

With all that in mind here is my top ten list of things not to say about onstage.

  1. Politics - We live in a diverse group of political opinions. Unless its your schtick its best you do not know theirs and they do not know yours.
  2. Religion - Unless your in a religious band, then by all means talk it up, but most clubs are hiring to you entertain not win converts.
  3. Judging people - So you have an issue with a group of people, say Pop Musicians, as far as you know half your audience loves Pop Musicians, you potentially just told half your audience not to come back.
  4. Insulting the venue - Insult the venue or their audience they will probably not have you back. Or even worse other venues will find out and they will not hire you either. 
  5. Insulting the Audience - Same reasons as above.
  6. Insulting other musicians - Seeing a theme here?
  7. Profanity - This is mostly just a personal one for me and it certainly has its exceptions. It is probably appropriate for a metal band. But if you have any diversity in your audience try to avoid it.
  8. Apologize  for bad chords or words - They did not notice it until you just called it out.
  9. Belch - Gross!, Are you drunk? Don't do that either. People are there to drink and hear music not to see you get trashed.
  10. Complain - No one want to listen to it. Best case they will tune out, worst case they will leave.
  11. Talking too much. - Talking is good, it engages the audience. Too much talking they will get bored. Once again there are exceptions. I have seen BB King tell some incredible stories on stage.

Ill do a post in the future on what are good things to talk about .

Monday, April 6, 2015

The Broken Bridge Pin

I had a moment of stupidity followed by a moment of brilliance yesterday. Unfortunately the moment of brilliance was not my own, I just benefited from it.

My Moment Of Stupidity
First of all as mentioned in a previous post my primary acoustic is in the repair shop.That leaves me playing my old Sigma Guitar that has not had a new set of strings in several years. Talk about painful.

After a couple of days of playing on this I finally get to the music store to buy a set of strings for it, because my strings are in my guitar case that is at the repair shop along with my string changing tool . Around 9:30 on the night of Easter I get around to changing the strings.

I was trying to change the strings and could not get the bridge pins out. I usually wrap a string around the pin to pull it out but even that was not working this time.

Never do this next part

I used a set of channel lock pliers to try and pull it out. Five of them came out fine with only minimal damage to the bridge pins. The 6th would not come out. So I started twisting it. NEVER EVER TWIST IT.  The top of the pin came off leaving the bridge pen stuck in the guitar. And even worse no way of keeping a string in to finish changing the strings.

So now you know the problem the point I want to share is how I solved it.

Getting the Pin Out

The First problem is getting the pin out. I did a quick look online and found solution that involved power tools. I was not about to do that. I am fairly certain that I would of just ended up causing more damage that way.
Here is the way I solved the problem.

  1. I loosened the strings so I could get my hand in the sound hole. 
  2. Found the pin inside the guitar.
  3. I tried to push it out but it dug into my hands so I used the wrench to tap on the pin lightly and eventually it came out.
Finding a Replacement

Now that the broken pin was out  I did not want to wait to play my guitar so I needed a replacement. First thing I did is went and looked to see if I could steal a bridge pin off of another instrument. Unfortunately none of them used bridge pins. That would of been the ideal solution.

What ultimately worked for me I cannot take credit for. My friend Bruno had the idea but it worked well so I wanted to share. I actually did this a couple of ways  before I finally got it too work right.
Here are the steps I did.

  1. Found an old set of chop sticks. I eat a fair amount of Chinese takeout so I had that around. I also like the chop stick because it had a tapered in.
  2. So after trial and error I leaned that you need to cut the chop stick first. I used the tapered end that you grab the food with and cut about an inch and a half to two inches long. You need to saw as opposed to cut so it does not split. I carefully sawed it with a serrated steak knife. Don't judge, it's what I had around. I tried originally to cut it but it caused the chop stick to split. 
  3. After that I used the chop stick the same way I would a pin. I want enough stuck out so I can get a grip and pull it out later once I get a replacement pin. I also was careful to hold on to it while I tightened the string.
It works great now. It gets in the way of palm muting but it was better than not being able to play at all and it buys me time until I can get to the music store.

Here is what the final product looked like.



Friday, April 3, 2015

Solo Guitar, Guitar Solo - Stray Cat Strut

Generally speaking if its just you and an acoustic guitar, guitar solos are not the first thing that comes to mine. After year of being the lead guitar player though I was not all that ready to let go of doing solos. 
I have been experimenting lately with adding guitar solos to my solo act. Actually it works as long as you keep a couple of guidelines in mind.

1. If you are loudly strumming open chords a solo will drop the bottom out. If your play more sparse you do not lose momentum in the solo.
2. Hit a bass note or a chord every now again.
3. Rhythm, rhythm, rhythm,. Pay attention to it. That is what's going to hold your song together when you break into a solo.

Here is an example of a solo I have been playing with for my version of Stray Cat Strut by The Stray Cats. It is based on the solo from the original recording but I have modified it to work for my solo acoustic set.



Wednesday, April 1, 2015

The Once and Future Taylor

Anything that once was will come back around again. I had an amazing experience today along those lines. The story starts several years ago.

The guitar was a Taylor 210C and I was playing in a church band at the time. Of course as church bands often do my gig was in the morning so the family is getting ready to go and my pre-teen daughter was helping load the car.
Ok, this was totally my fault. I do not hold her responsible at all.
I asked her to put the guitar behind the car and I would put it in the trunk. We all get in the car, my wife backs up.
Bump!
"What was that?"
My wife said. "Was that your guitar" I ran out of the car and saw what happened, went inside, went did bed and did not say a word to anyone for three hours.

While I slept my wife called a good friend who sold guitars for a living and the insurance company and I had a new guitar in hand the next day. Actually I upgraded to a 310C so there is that.

Another friend of mine asked me if I wanted the destroyed rotting carcass of my old Taylor. I couldnt' even look at it so I said take it away. I think he wanted it for the electronics inside through I later found out he found another guitar with the same story but the body was fine but the neck was broken and he had them put together into a single guitar.

Fast forward to today.

My second Taylor had a small crack on the back that I wanted to get fix. I called a friend and asked for a recommendation and got the name of a local repair guy.  I went there today and him and I instantly hit it off and we we talking and I started telling him the story I just told you. Only about 2 sentences in he goes "That was You?" He turned around and pulled off the shelf what was left of the body of my old guitar. He used what was good to build the other guitar and has been keeping the rest for parts. My guitar was an organ donor. It's a small world.