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sábado, 16 de outubro de 2010
Gibson Songwriter Deluxe Standard (16-10-2010)
When you’re unwilling to compromise your art, you need an uncompromising instrument to accompany you. Crafted by the acclaimed luthiers of Gibson’s acoustic guitar facility in Bozeman, Montana, the new Gibson Songwriter Deluxe Standard blends the artistry of the great pre-War flat-tops with the playability and versatility of the finest acoustic guitars of the 21st century. In short, it’s a guitar to take you to the top, and keep you there.
Crafted in the image of Gibson’s great big-bodied, square-shouldered dreadnoughts—with a 25.5” scale length to help it all ring bold and true—the Songwriter Deluxe Standard is made from a solid Sitka spruce top, solid Indian rosewood back and sides, and a one-piece quarter-sawn mahogany neck with 12”-16” compound radius ebony fingerboard. But the implementation of choice tonewoods doesn’t end there: rather than load down the instrument’s superb resonance with excessive plastics, Gibson applies natural maple binding to the body’s top and back, while also binding the fingerboard and headstock in maple.
Further enhancing the guitar’s tonal splendor are details such as its ebony bridge with bone saddle, bone nut, 1930s advanced X-brace constructed of scalloped Adirondack red spruce braces, the use of hot hide glue (employed in the construction of countless great vintage acoustics), and thin hand-sprayed nitrocellulose lacquer finish (your choice of either Antique Natural or Vintage Sunburst).
Publicada por
Leonardo17
TC Electronic BH500 bass guitar amp head (16-10-2010)
TC Electronics — BH500 іѕ thе newest addition tο TC Electronic’s Bass Amp 2.0 line up, аnd combined wіth thе BC410 / BC212 / BC210 cabinet range, іt stacks up tο become аnу rig imaginable – fοr small bar gigs, indoor rock clubs, outdoor stadium concerts, οr anything іn between!
SpectraComp ensures аn even аnd rock solid tone thаt cuts through аnу mix whether thе strings аrе being played fingerstyle, wіth a heavy pick οr slapped hard.
Alѕο, thе 3 user memories lеt users change thеіr tone аt аnу given time whіlе thе integrated tuner allows fοr ѕіlеnt tuning οn thе flу.
Thе Tolex covered BC cabs come іn 3 models: 4×10″, 2×10″ οr 2×12″, аnd thеу саn bе mixed аnd matched аѕ well аѕ stacked both vertically аnd horizontally. Tο top іt οff, thе customized Eminence drivers ensure thе punch аnd tightness οf thе infamous TC Electronic bass tone.
Publicada por
Leonardo17
Etiquetas:
amps
Gibson Les Paul Standard 2010 Limited - 16-10-2010
Les Paul Standard 2010 Limited
Les Paul, Gibson and the Les Paul guitar have always been about innovation. Now, Gibson is bringing the innovation of Robot Guitar tuning technology to the classic Les Paul model with the release of the Les Paul Standard 2010 Limited. With a legacy as one of the most versatile electric guitars available, the new Les Paul knocks versatility right off the charts, courtesy of Gibson USA.
With Robot Guitar automated tuning capabilities, two different but seminal magnetic pickups, a piezo-loaded bridge, and Chameleon Tone Technology courtesy of its Master Control Knob (MCK), the Les Paul Standard 2010 Limited packs a dizzying array of sonic capabilities, all primed to unlock your inner creative potential. From the raw, biting crunch of a hot, chrome-covered, hum-canceling P-90H in the neck position and the sizzling wail and punch of an overwound BurstBucker 3 in the bridge, to the subtle acoustic response of its piezo bridges saddles — and any conceivable blend of the three, accessed instantly from the MCK — the Les Paul Standard 2010 Limited really does pack all the tonal colors of the rainbow. And to keep it all sounding true, Gibson’s exclusive Robot Technology puts you perfectly into tune in seconds at the push of a button, or shifts you into any of a countless number of open and alternate tunings, all accessed at your command.
With Robot Guitar automated tuning capabilities, two different but seminal magnetic pickups, a piezo-loaded bridge, and Chameleon Tone Technology courtesy of its Master Control Knob (MCK), the Les Paul Standard 2010 Limited packs a dizzying array of sonic capabilities, all primed to unlock your inner creative potential. From the raw, biting crunch of a hot, chrome-covered, hum-canceling P-90H in the neck position and the sizzling wail and punch of an overwound BurstBucker 3 in the bridge, to the subtle acoustic response of its piezo bridges saddles — and any conceivable blend of the three, accessed instantly from the MCK — the Les Paul Standard 2010 Limited really does pack all the tonal colors of the rainbow. And to keep it all sounding true, Gibson’s exclusive Robot Technology puts you perfectly into tune in seconds at the push of a button, or shifts you into any of a countless number of open and alternate tunings, all accessed at your command.
Publicada por
Leonardo17
Epiphone "Inspired By" John Lennon Casinos - 16-10-2010
A Vintage Original and a Revolution
John Lennon's Epiphone Casino made a bigger impact on the imaginations of Beatle fans than any of the several other guitars he played during his career, and became an iconic instrument in the process. The fact is, though, that this guitar is revered in two entirely different incarnations: many love it in its original state as a vintage sunburst 1965 Epiphone Casino, while others admire its "Revolution-era" appearance from around 1968, after Lennon stripped it and altered some of its hardware. Now both versions of this historic electric guitar are available simultaneously in the form of the Epiphone "Inspired by" John Lennon Casinos, which offer the look, tone, and feel of Epiphone's acclaimed U.S.A. John Lennon Signature Casinos, but at a more affordable price.
In any guise, the Casino is a classic tone machine. Outwardly, this model may appear similar to Gibson's legendary ES-335 but several details make it quite different. In addition to the obvious P-90 pickups—which produce a meaty, grainy, punchy tone that many players prefer—the Casino has a fully hollow thinline body with an arched top, and a neck joint that is set further into the body, placing the bridge at the optimum point to maximize resonance. As a result of all this, the Casino has a warm, rich, open voice, but with plenty of bite and definition, making it a great all-around instrument for rock and roll, blues, roots-rock, jazz, or just about anything else.
Link to the official guitars website here.
John Lennon's Epiphone Casino made a bigger impact on the imaginations of Beatle fans than any of the several other guitars he played during his career, and became an iconic instrument in the process. The fact is, though, that this guitar is revered in two entirely different incarnations: many love it in its original state as a vintage sunburst 1965 Epiphone Casino, while others admire its "Revolution-era" appearance from around 1968, after Lennon stripped it and altered some of its hardware. Now both versions of this historic electric guitar are available simultaneously in the form of the Epiphone "Inspired by" John Lennon Casinos, which offer the look, tone, and feel of Epiphone's acclaimed U.S.A. John Lennon Signature Casinos, but at a more affordable price.
In any guise, the Casino is a classic tone machine. Outwardly, this model may appear similar to Gibson's legendary ES-335 but several details make it quite different. In addition to the obvious P-90 pickups—which produce a meaty, grainy, punchy tone that many players prefer—the Casino has a fully hollow thinline body with an arched top, and a neck joint that is set further into the body, placing the bridge at the optimum point to maximize resonance. As a result of all this, the Casino has a warm, rich, open voice, but with plenty of bite and definition, making it a great all-around instrument for rock and roll, blues, roots-rock, jazz, or just about anything else.
Link to the official guitars website here.
Publicada por
Leonardo17
sábado, 9 de outubro de 2010
Randy Rhoads Les Paul Custom (09-10-2010)
A Six-String Tribute to a Metal Legend
Having reintroduced the Les Paul Custom just six years before (following eight years without a true single-cutaway Les Paul in the catalog), Gibson was working through the design for several years, making minor changes along the way while progressing toward the ultimate solidbody electric guitar. Les Paul Customs of the early to mid-'70s have become particular favorites with many great rockers, and possess a combination of details that were only present for a short period – all in evidence here on the Randy Rhoads 1974 Les Paul Custom.
To recreate this iconic metal machine, Gibson Custom uses the solid carved maple top with three-piece body consisting of two mahogany slabs with a thin maple center section, as used in Les Pauls of the period. Also present is the three-piece mahogany neck with ebony fingerboard and Custom fiber headstock veneer, on a 17-degree back-angled headstock for optimum tone and sustain, of course. To recreate the sweet, yet aggressive tone of Les Pauls of the era, Gibson Custom has developed the new Super '74 Humbucker, first used here on the Randy Rhoads 1974 Les Paul Custom, and a big part of this guitar's fiery, singing, sustaining sound. To get the look of the guitar just right, all of the original 1974 Custom's ornate details are painstakingly recreated, including the split-diamond headstock inlay, mother-of-pearl block fingerboard inlays, six-ply white/b/w/b/w/b body-top binding and four and five-ply back and headstock binding respectively, and gold-plated hardware.
The piece de resistance, of course, is the nitrocellulose lacquer finish: dubbed "Randy Rhoads White," the finish on each of two versions reflects the look of a white Les Paul Custom that has aged and yellowed for three decades. After finishing, 100 will be aged by hand to reflect the look of Rhoads' original guitar, and a further 200 will be finished in Gibson Custom's acclaimed VOS process. Either way, every Randy Rhoads 1974 Les Paul Custom off the blocks rocks hard and looks just right.
Each includes a Gibson Custom hardshell case with Rhoads signature, Certificate of Authenticity, owner's manual and adjustment literature, and Gibson's Limited Lifetime Warranty and 24/7/365 Customer Service.
A neck made from three pieces of solid quarter-sawn mahogany is carved to an accurate, comfortable "small D Rhoads profile" and is glued into the guitar's body at a 4-degree pitch. The neck is capped with an ebony fingerboard with mother-of-pearl block in lays and 22 medium-jumbo frets, and its headstock is back-angled to the traditional 17 degrees.
Click Here To Learn More
Having reintroduced the Les Paul Custom just six years before (following eight years without a true single-cutaway Les Paul in the catalog), Gibson was working through the design for several years, making minor changes along the way while progressing toward the ultimate solidbody electric guitar. Les Paul Customs of the early to mid-'70s have become particular favorites with many great rockers, and possess a combination of details that were only present for a short period – all in evidence here on the Randy Rhoads 1974 Les Paul Custom.
To recreate this iconic metal machine, Gibson Custom uses the solid carved maple top with three-piece body consisting of two mahogany slabs with a thin maple center section, as used in Les Pauls of the period. Also present is the three-piece mahogany neck with ebony fingerboard and Custom fiber headstock veneer, on a 17-degree back-angled headstock for optimum tone and sustain, of course. To recreate the sweet, yet aggressive tone of Les Pauls of the era, Gibson Custom has developed the new Super '74 Humbucker, first used here on the Randy Rhoads 1974 Les Paul Custom, and a big part of this guitar's fiery, singing, sustaining sound. To get the look of the guitar just right, all of the original 1974 Custom's ornate details are painstakingly recreated, including the split-diamond headstock inlay, mother-of-pearl block fingerboard inlays, six-ply white/b/w/b/w/b body-top binding and four and five-ply back and headstock binding respectively, and gold-plated hardware.
The piece de resistance, of course, is the nitrocellulose lacquer finish: dubbed "Randy Rhoads White," the finish on each of two versions reflects the look of a white Les Paul Custom that has aged and yellowed for three decades. After finishing, 100 will be aged by hand to reflect the look of Rhoads' original guitar, and a further 200 will be finished in Gibson Custom's acclaimed VOS process. Either way, every Randy Rhoads 1974 Les Paul Custom off the blocks rocks hard and looks just right.
Each includes a Gibson Custom hardshell case with Rhoads signature, Certificate of Authenticity, owner's manual and adjustment literature, and Gibson's Limited Lifetime Warranty and 24/7/365 Customer Service.
Body and Finish
Made from the short-lived tonewood combination of carved maple top and three-piece mahogany-maple-mahogany back, and dressed in an aged nitrocellulose "Randy Rhoads White" finish, the Randy Rhoads 1974 Les Paul Custom embodies the original '59 Les Paul on which Rhoads recorded his classic leads for early Quiet Riot music and Ozzy Osborne's hits "Crazy Train" and "Mr. Crowley." Click Here To Learn More
Made from the short-lived tonewood combination of carved maple top and three-piece mahogany-maple-mahogany back, and dressed in an aged nitrocellulose "Randy Rhoads White" finish, the Randy Rhoads 1974 Les Paul Custom embodies the original '59 Les Paul on which Rhoads recorded his classic leads for early Quiet Riot music and Ozzy Osborne's hits "Crazy Train" and "Mr. Crowley." Click Here To Learn More
Neck, Fingerboard and Headstock
A neck made from three pieces of solid quarter-sawn mahogany is carved to an accurate, comfortable "small D Rhoads profile" and is glued into the guitar's body at a 4-degree pitch. The neck is capped with an ebony fingerboard with mother-of-pearl block in lays and 22 medium-jumbo frets, and its headstock is back-angled to the traditional 17 degrees.
Click Here To Learn More
Pickups and Electronics
A pair of Gibson Custom Super '74 Humbuckers accurately replicate the tone and performance of the original humbucking pickups in Randy Rhoads' '74 Les Paul Custom. They are routed through high-quality CTS pots for volume and tone, a Switchcraft three-way toggle switch, and a Switchcraft output jack.
Hardware
Like most classic Les Pauls, the Randy Rhoads 1974 Les Paul Custom carries the legendary complement of Tune-o-matic bridge and stopbar tailpiece, accompanied by a set of enclosed Schaller M6 tuners. As with most Les Paul Custom models, all hardware is gold-plated. Its strap is secured by Schaller GP Strap Locks, as preferred by Randy Rhoads.
Gretsch G5120 Electromatic Hollowbody electric guitar (08-10-2010)
One of the coolest guitars in its price point ($699.00), the G5120 will be a dream come true for many true believers out there. It gives players classic looks and tone in bunches, especially when obtained in the to-die-for Gretsch orange finish that we all know and love.
The G5120 comes packed will all the appointments you would expect from the big G, including redesigned Gretsch humbuckers, an adjustable bridge, die-cast chrome tuners, and, yes, a Bigsby vibrato tailpiece. This makes the G5120 a perfect choice for any guitar player into more traditional tones and cosmetics who might be looking for something a bit different that just another Strat or Gibson, although players of other styles might want to have one of these lying around the ol’ studio for another color choice or character tone.
The Gretsch is also a good choice for jazz, giving a nice dark and woody sound from the neck pickup. Online reviews will tell you that the G5120 will probably need some setup work out of the box, but that is almost expected at this price point. Once she is dialed in, however, the G5120 is a whole lot of bang for the buck and is a worthy contender for those looking for something classic yet a bit off the beaten path
sexta-feira, 8 de outubro de 2010
Happy 70th Birthday, John Lennon! (08-10-2010)
John Lennon would have turned 70 on Saturday (October 9). To mark the occasion we've compiled a video playlist mapping the decade that saw him transform from sardonic Beatle into visionary activist and beyond, remaining all the while simply an extraordinary songwriter. Here's to you, John.
Give Peace A Chance
(Single, 1969)
Apple
We begin in bed. Flanked by the likes of Timothy Leary, Petula Clark, Tommy Smothers and Allen Ginsberg, John delivers his protest rant from behind the beard, long hair and granny glasses that would define his appearance during The Beatles' final months.
________________________________________________________________________
Cold Turkey
(Single, 1969)
Apple
John & Yoko's dalliance with heroin gave birth to this narcoleptic blues howler performed here at Madison Square Garden on August 30, 1972.
________________________________________________________________________
Instant Karma!
(Single, 1970)
Apple
Lennon's only solo appearance on Top Of The Pops was made off the back of this song. In this clip, check out Beatles' minder/confidante Mal Evans on tambourine and John's delight at the drum fill in the third verse.
________________________________________________________________________
Mother
(John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band, 1970)
Apple/EMI
The opening track on his undisputed masterpiece John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band, Mother emerged during his Primal Scream therapy treatments. Lennon: "The piano does it all for you... your mind can do the rest."
________________________________________________________________________
Imagine
(Imagine, 1971)
Apple/EMI
Enter John Lennon the dreaming idealist, this time via a live version from the Mike Douglas show. Hands up who expected a saxophone solo...
________________________________________________________________________
How Do You Sleep?
(Imagine, 1971)
Apple/EMI
Here's Lennon's sneering retort to McCartney's Too Many People, recorded for the Imagine album at his Tittenhurst Estate in 1971. Despite later denying that the song had anything to do with his former partner in song, the vicious lyrics ("the only thing you done was Yesterday" etc.) and the presence of George Harrison on guitar still give this clip extra sting.
________________________________________________________________________
Rock Island Line
(Cover, 1972)
The Beatles were all huge fans of Lonnie Donegan and this clip of Lennon jamming the king of skiffle's crossover hit shows that his admiration for pre-'60s rock'n'roll remained undimmed.
________________________________________________________________________
Attica State
(Some Time In New York City, 1972)
Apple/EMI
Some Time In New York City remains a shambolic artefact of John & Yoko's sojourn into the world of Jerry Rubin (seen here on the far right) and his army of yippie activists. Here's Lennon's commentary on the Attica State prison riots of 1971.
________________________________________________________________________
Mind Games
(Mind Games, 1973)
Apple/EMI
WATCH VIDEO HERE!
Dismissed by Lennon as "just an album... rock'n'roll at different speeds", the songs on Mind Games soundtracked his 18-month Lost Weekend split from Yoko. The title track eventually made the US Top 20.
________________________________________________________________________
#9 Dream
(Walls & Bridges, 1974)
Apple/EMI
The number nine returns to the Lennon universe, this time in the form of a dreamy ballad taken from 1974's Walls & Bridges.
________________________________________________________________________
Stand By Me
(Rock'n'Roll, 1975)
Apple/EMI
Lennon's cover of Ben E. King's soul standard retains the original's arrangement and sees the rock'n'roll obsessive adding serrated 3am vocals.
________________________________________________________________________
Watching The Wheels
(Double Fantasy, 1980)
Apple/EMI
After a five-year absence, Lennon and Ono's return to the pop world arrived in the form of Double Fantasy (reissued this month in Stripped Down format). This video was put together for the posthumous single release.
Compiled and annotated by Ross Bennett
(on "Mojo Magazine")
________________________________________________________________________
Give Peace A Chance
(Single, 1969)
Apple
We begin in bed. Flanked by the likes of Timothy Leary, Petula Clark, Tommy Smothers and Allen Ginsberg, John delivers his protest rant from behind the beard, long hair and granny glasses that would define his appearance during The Beatles' final months.
________________________________________________________________________
Cold Turkey
(Single, 1969)
Apple
John & Yoko's dalliance with heroin gave birth to this narcoleptic blues howler performed here at Madison Square Garden on August 30, 1972.
________________________________________________________________________
Instant Karma!
(Single, 1970)
Apple
Lennon's only solo appearance on Top Of The Pops was made off the back of this song. In this clip, check out Beatles' minder/confidante Mal Evans on tambourine and John's delight at the drum fill in the third verse.
________________________________________________________________________
Mother
(John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band, 1970)
Apple/EMI
The opening track on his undisputed masterpiece John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band, Mother emerged during his Primal Scream therapy treatments. Lennon: "The piano does it all for you... your mind can do the rest."
________________________________________________________________________
Imagine
(Imagine, 1971)
Apple/EMI
Enter John Lennon the dreaming idealist, this time via a live version from the Mike Douglas show. Hands up who expected a saxophone solo...
________________________________________________________________________
How Do You Sleep?
(Imagine, 1971)
Apple/EMI
Here's Lennon's sneering retort to McCartney's Too Many People, recorded for the Imagine album at his Tittenhurst Estate in 1971. Despite later denying that the song had anything to do with his former partner in song, the vicious lyrics ("the only thing you done was Yesterday" etc.) and the presence of George Harrison on guitar still give this clip extra sting.
________________________________________________________________________
Rock Island Line
(Cover, 1972)
The Beatles were all huge fans of Lonnie Donegan and this clip of Lennon jamming the king of skiffle's crossover hit shows that his admiration for pre-'60s rock'n'roll remained undimmed.
________________________________________________________________________
Attica State
(Some Time In New York City, 1972)
Apple/EMI
Some Time In New York City remains a shambolic artefact of John & Yoko's sojourn into the world of Jerry Rubin (seen here on the far right) and his army of yippie activists. Here's Lennon's commentary on the Attica State prison riots of 1971.
________________________________________________________________________
Mind Games
(Mind Games, 1973)
Apple/EMI
WATCH VIDEO HERE!
Dismissed by Lennon as "just an album... rock'n'roll at different speeds", the songs on Mind Games soundtracked his 18-month Lost Weekend split from Yoko. The title track eventually made the US Top 20.
________________________________________________________________________
#9 Dream
(Walls & Bridges, 1974)
Apple/EMI
The number nine returns to the Lennon universe, this time in the form of a dreamy ballad taken from 1974's Walls & Bridges.
________________________________________________________________________
Stand By Me
(Rock'n'Roll, 1975)
Apple/EMI
Lennon's cover of Ben E. King's soul standard retains the original's arrangement and sees the rock'n'roll obsessive adding serrated 3am vocals.
________________________________________________________________________
Watching The Wheels
(Double Fantasy, 1980)
Apple/EMI
After a five-year absence, Lennon and Ono's return to the pop world arrived in the form of Double Fantasy (reissued this month in Stripped Down format). This video was put together for the posthumous single release.
Compiled and annotated by Ross Bennett
(on "Mojo Magazine")
________________________________________________________________________
Publicada por
Leonardo17
Etiquetas:
articles
quinta-feira, 7 de outubro de 2010
Ronnie Wood Feels Like Playing (06-10-2010)
The new solo album (above) by Ronnie Wood (below). Photo by Jack English. |
Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood released his seventh solo studio album, I Feel Like Playing, on Sept. 28.
The disc is Wood’s first new solo album in nine years, and the 63-year-old guitarist calls I Feel Like Playing his best solo outing yet. Featuring a dozen songs, the album takes its name and cover from one of Wood’s more vibrant pieces of recent artwork (Wood is a lifelong artist, respected painter and London art gallery co-owner). The color and verve of the cover is reflected in the swagger of the music on the album.
Wood wrote or co-wrote all but one of the album’s 12 songs; the lone exception being a treatment of Willie Dixon blues classic “Spoonful.” He is joined on the album by a slew of guests, including Slash (“Sweetness My Weakness,” “Spoonful,” “Fancy Pants,” “Forever”), Flea (“Why You Wanna Go and Do a Thing Like That For,” “I Gotta See,” “Spoonful”), Eddie Vedder (co-writer on “Lucky Man”), Billy Gibbons (“I Gotta See,” “Thing About You”), Kris Kristofferson (who contributed to “Why You Wanna Go and Do a Thing Like That For,”), Bobby Womack (“Lucky Man,” “I Don’t Think So” “Forever”), former Faces bandmate Ian McLagan (“Lucky Man,” “Catch You,” “I Don’t Think So,” “100%,” “Tell Me Something”) and others.
Wood has always found time for solo work throughout his long career, starting with aptly named 1974 solo debut I’ve Got My Own Album to Do and continuing with releases including Now Look (1975), Gimme Some Neck (1979), 1234 (1981), Slide on This (1992), Not For Beginners (2001) and various collaborations and live albums.
Those who still regard Wood as “the new guy” in the Stones (he’s been in the 48-year-old band for 35 years now) should note that the guitarist’s career dates back to the raucous early days of the British Invasion.
Wood began his professional music career in 1964 with the Birds (not to be confused with the U.S.-based Byrds), which achieved moderate mid-decade success in the U.K. before disbanding in 1967. Wood then joined the Jeff Beck Group as bassist and did a brief 1968 stint as guitarist for the Creation. Wood and Jeff Beck Group vocalist Rod Stewart joined the Faces in 1969. After he released his first solo album in 1974, Wood joined the Rolling Stones in 1975 and remains with them to this day.
Buddy Guy’s Living Proof (28-09-2010) - RePost
“74 Years Young”: The cover of Guy's Living Proof. |
“When I was 21 some of my older friends, who are no longer with us, they’d say, ‘You’re still a baby,’” Guy said. “And then they said the same thing when I was 31, then 41, and I thought, ‘Man, when do I get old?’ I’ve been hearing that ever since I first went to Chicago—‘You’re still wet behind the ears.’ So when do I get dry?”
Bear in mind here that Guy turned 21 in summer 1957, at which point he was already a formidable blues guitar craftsman who had just made the big move from his native Louisiana to Chicago. So the answer to his own question—“Man, when do I get old?”—is, apparently, never. More than ample proof of this can be heard on his new album, Living Proof, out Sept. 28.
On the album, Guy, 74, takes a hard look back at a remarkable life and career that have made him so many things now: Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee. Five-time Grammy award winner. Profound influence on a generation of rock titans including Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton and Stevie Ray Vaughan. Pioneer of Chicago’s famous West Side sound and living link to that city’s landmark era of electric blues. With 23 trophies, Guy has received more W.C. Handy Blues Awards than any other artist. He has received the Presidential National Medal of Arts and the Billboard Century Award for distinguished artistic achievement. Rolling Stone ranked him 30th among its 100 greatest guitarists of all time.
And yet at a time when many of his surviving contemporaries might be content to let their past achievements do the talking, Guy is positively brimming with new sounds and fresh ideas. The man clearly has no intention of going gently into that good night, as evidenced by Living Proof’s opening track, “74 Years Young.”
In fact, the start of each new decade always seems to energize Guy; witness Stone Crazy (1981), Damn Right, I Got the Blues (1991) and Sweet Tea (2001). So it is with Living Proof, with songs such as “Thank Me Someday” and “Everybody's Got to Go” that are sincere personal meditations on Guy’s past, legacy and mortality.
“The life I’ve lived is what we’re singing about,” he said. “These songs are exactly what I came up through in my life; what I’ve experienced.”
And he’s experienced a lot, and it wasn’t all good, so the man knows whereof he speaks. His late-’50s and 1960s battles with seminal Chicago blues label Chess Records, which refused to record him playing in his own style, put stinging restrictions on his career until he left the label in 1968 (“They said I was just playing noise, and wouldn’t let me get loose like I wanted to”).
Nonetheless, his loud, aggressive and flamboyant live performances from the 1950s onward proved him a musician’s musician with an unpredictable style of musical extremes that could range from traditional to radical within a single performance. Well more than a decade after his career took off in earnest during the late 1980s blues revival, the New York Times noted in 2004 that Guy “mingles anarchy, virtuosity, deep blues and hammy shtick in ways that keep all eyes on him” and called him a “master of tension and release” whose “every wayward impulse was riveting.”
| Buddy Guy. Photo by Christian Lantry |
At Guy’s Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction in 2005, Clapton told the audience that Guy “was for me what Elvis was probably like for other people—my course was set, and he was my pilot.”
The bad old days at Chess are long gone now and, to put it mildly, Guy greatly appreciates the unwavering support he now gets from his record company and the team around him.
“These guys said, ‘It’s your guitar; your studio; you just go be Buddy Guy,’” he said. “And I’ve been trying to be that for 50 years. I had the freedom of playing with only me to say, ‘Let me try that again.’”
Although Guy will forever be associated with Chicago, his story actually begins in Louisiana. One of five children, he was born in 1936 to a sharecropper’s family and raised on a plantation near the small town of Lettsworth, about 140 miles northwest of New Orleans. Guy was only seven years old when he fashioned his first makeshift “guitar”—a two-string contraption attached to a piece of wood and secured with his mother’s hairpins.
On Living Proof’s “Thank Me Someday,” Guy recounts his early efforts with that crude instrument, and his ability to keep faith when his family ran him out of the house for making such a racket with it.
“I would go out in the yard, on the levee, to practice,” he said. “We didn’t have electric lights or running water—you could hear that guitar a mile away in the country, so I’d have to go a long way away so they didn’t say ‘Get out of here with that noise!’”
Living Proof also illustrates Guy’s versatility. Stalwart blues fans will note that songs such as “Too Soon” and blistering instrumental “Skanky” show his proficiency at roadhouse R&B.
Not that he gives a damn about genre distinctions. Not in the least.
“Before the ’60s, we were always just R&B players,” Guy said. “Then they branded us—there was Chicago blues, Memphis, Motown, and so we were considered blues players. But in Chicago, if you wanted to keep your gig, you had to be able to play all the top tunes on the jukebox, whether that was Lloyd Price or Fats Domino or Ray Charles. Now if you play a Little Richard song, the audience looks at you like you’re crazy, but we always had to do that for a black audience back then.”
An especially important element of Living Proof is that longtime friend and fellow blues titan B.B. King makes his first guest appearance on a Buddy Guy album. Together, they reel off the introspective “Stay Around a Little Longer” like the old friends they are. Guy doesn’t take his relationship with King for granted, though. Never has.
“B.B. created this style of guitar we all play,” Guy said. “I grew up listening to people like him, T-Bone Walker and Muddy Waters, and I still take 95 percent of my playing from him. So to have someone like that in the room with you makes chillbumps come up on your skin.”
The only other guest on Living Proof is Carlos Santana, who joins Guy on the slinky “Where the Blues Begins.” Noting that he and Junior Wells covered Santana’s “Vera Cruz” more than three decades ago, Guy said, “When I’m playing with someone that good, I just have to close my eyes and say, ‘Here I come!’”
Asked what exactly it is that he considers himself living proof of, Guy answers modestly, with no mention of his own talent or his influence. For him, it’s more a matter of sheer perseverance.
“Do you know how many guys I started out with who just threw up both hands and quit?” he said. “My first wife said to me, ‘It’s me or the guitar,’ and I picked up my guitar and left. We still laugh about that. But I’m still picking away at it. I don’t know nothing else.”
Besides, Guy said, it’s just not in the nature of those who understand and play the blues to simply stop doing it.
“I heard B.B. King say, ‘I can’t slow down, because I still think there’s somebody out there who doesn’t know who I am yet,’” he said. “But, you know, blues players don’t stop; they just drop. It’s like my mother used to say about religion—I’m too far gone to turn around.”
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Leonardo17
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quarta-feira, 6 de outubro de 2010
10 Hall of Fame Acts for 2035 (06-10-2010)
All the infe of this post was taken from Gibson.com site...
"Oh, sure. It’s easy to look back 30 or 40 years after the fact and point to an artist whose legacy demands their invitation to The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (The MC5, Iron Maiden, The Jam, The Smiths…none of whom made yesterday’s short list, by the way). Ah, but to look at today’s artists and try to intuit just how lasting their legacy will be — now that’s a different matter. A group or artist might seem important now, but could fade away into oblivion in an instant (anyone remember how big MC Hammer once was?). Nevertheless, let us take a stab at predicting the future and name the top ten contenders for the Rock Hall from today’s music world. For the purposes of this exercise, we’re looking at artists on the upswing of their career, either just starting out or still peaking. Enjoy…
Foo Fighters

First off, Dave Grohl will be in the Hall of Fame long before 2035. Nirvana’s up for admission in 2014 and the Foos will be up in 2020. And they should be first ballot HOFers. In the aftermath of Kurt Cobain’s death, Grohl carved out a hard rock legacy unmatched in the last two decades. And yeah, if you’ve caught them live in recent years you know Dave and the boys are still peaking.
Jay-Z

The debate about whether rap has a place in The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has already concluded with the admission of Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five and Run-D.M.C. in the past five years (so get over it!). And if rap has a place, then certainly its biggest stars should expect an invitation — and Jay-Z has been the biggest rapper on the planet for over a decade. Keep an eye out for his lovely wife to make the Hall, as well.
Jack White

Jack White may be one of those guys who get in more than once. The White Stripes are a shoe-in, given their towering influence over indie and rock scenes since the release of White Blood Cells in 2001. But Jack’s other projects — including The Raconteurs, The Dead Weather, some fab solo material and a staggering list of production credits — is too great to ignore.
The Strokes

Nine years later, the shockwaves from The Strokes’ debut, Is This It, are still being felt. Garage and indie guitar rock were suddenly thrust into the spotlight, and have remained a — if not the — dominant creative force in popular music ever since. Would Kings of Leon, Arctic Monkeys or The Yeah Yeah Yeahs have existed without The Strokes? Maybe, but they wouldn’t have gotten played on the radio.
Kanye West

This rapper-singer-producer is one of the most important artists in the industry — just ask him! Seriously, West’s production style has placed him two cuts above the competition. And you know his acceptance speech won’t be dull.
Arcade Fire

This coterie of Montreal musicians under the auspices of Win Butler is perhaps the most interesting thing to happen to rock music since David Bowie. Constantly venturing forward in both songwriting and soundscapes, Arcade Fire may be the band we look back on as the most important of this era.
Kings of Leon

Marrying indie with Southern rock, Kings of Leon have made unapologetic dirty guitar music cool again. And just when you think they’ve peaked, they come along and outdo themselves with an even better album (fingers crossed for Come Around Sundown, to be released next month!). Also, they wrote “Sex on Fire.” Case closed.
Lady Gaga

The musical love child of Elton John and Madonna (both of whom are in the Hall of Fame, by the way), Lady Gaga continues to titillate and tantalize with over-the-top stage shows and music videos. But underneath it all are the piano-playing and songwriting chops destined to make her a multi-decade legend rather than a flavor-of-the-month pop star.
Weezer

These nerd rock heroes may have spawned a lot of bad imitations, but don’t hold it against them (the same can be said for soon-to-be HOFers, Green Day!). Rivers Cuomo continues to be one of the catchiest songwriters on the planet, even if his lyrical topics aren’t standard rock and roll fare. “Buddy Holly,” “Island in the Sun,” “Hash Pipe,” “The World Has Turned and Left Me Here” — these are the songs an entire generation of pimply faced kids will associate with their own coming of age.
Kid Rock

“My name is Kiiiiiiiiiiiiddddd!!!” No one in recent memory has reveled in the sheer awesomeness of rock and roll like Kid Rock. Whether he’s channeling ZZ Top, Run-D.M.C. or a case of PBR, no one brings it like the K.I.D. He’s also one of the few artists who have married rock with hip-hop and somehow remained relevant."
"Oh, sure. It’s easy to look back 30 or 40 years after the fact and point to an artist whose legacy demands their invitation to The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (The MC5, Iron Maiden, The Jam, The Smiths…none of whom made yesterday’s short list, by the way). Ah, but to look at today’s artists and try to intuit just how lasting their legacy will be — now that’s a different matter. A group or artist might seem important now, but could fade away into oblivion in an instant (anyone remember how big MC Hammer once was?). Nevertheless, let us take a stab at predicting the future and name the top ten contenders for the Rock Hall from today’s music world. For the purposes of this exercise, we’re looking at artists on the upswing of their career, either just starting out or still peaking. Enjoy…
Foo Fighters
First off, Dave Grohl will be in the Hall of Fame long before 2035. Nirvana’s up for admission in 2014 and the Foos will be up in 2020. And they should be first ballot HOFers. In the aftermath of Kurt Cobain’s death, Grohl carved out a hard rock legacy unmatched in the last two decades. And yeah, if you’ve caught them live in recent years you know Dave and the boys are still peaking.
Jay-Z
The debate about whether rap has a place in The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has already concluded with the admission of Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five and Run-D.M.C. in the past five years (so get over it!). And if rap has a place, then certainly its biggest stars should expect an invitation — and Jay-Z has been the biggest rapper on the planet for over a decade. Keep an eye out for his lovely wife to make the Hall, as well.
Jack White
Jack White may be one of those guys who get in more than once. The White Stripes are a shoe-in, given their towering influence over indie and rock scenes since the release of White Blood Cells in 2001. But Jack’s other projects — including The Raconteurs, The Dead Weather, some fab solo material and a staggering list of production credits — is too great to ignore.
The Strokes
Nine years later, the shockwaves from The Strokes’ debut, Is This It, are still being felt. Garage and indie guitar rock were suddenly thrust into the spotlight, and have remained a — if not the — dominant creative force in popular music ever since. Would Kings of Leon, Arctic Monkeys or The Yeah Yeah Yeahs have existed without The Strokes? Maybe, but they wouldn’t have gotten played on the radio.
Kanye West
This rapper-singer-producer is one of the most important artists in the industry — just ask him! Seriously, West’s production style has placed him two cuts above the competition. And you know his acceptance speech won’t be dull.
Arcade Fire
This coterie of Montreal musicians under the auspices of Win Butler is perhaps the most interesting thing to happen to rock music since David Bowie. Constantly venturing forward in both songwriting and soundscapes, Arcade Fire may be the band we look back on as the most important of this era.
Kings of Leon
Marrying indie with Southern rock, Kings of Leon have made unapologetic dirty guitar music cool again. And just when you think they’ve peaked, they come along and outdo themselves with an even better album (fingers crossed for Come Around Sundown, to be released next month!). Also, they wrote “Sex on Fire.” Case closed.
Lady Gaga
The musical love child of Elton John and Madonna (both of whom are in the Hall of Fame, by the way), Lady Gaga continues to titillate and tantalize with over-the-top stage shows and music videos. But underneath it all are the piano-playing and songwriting chops destined to make her a multi-decade legend rather than a flavor-of-the-month pop star.
Weezer
These nerd rock heroes may have spawned a lot of bad imitations, but don’t hold it against them (the same can be said for soon-to-be HOFers, Green Day!). Rivers Cuomo continues to be one of the catchiest songwriters on the planet, even if his lyrical topics aren’t standard rock and roll fare. “Buddy Holly,” “Island in the Sun,” “Hash Pipe,” “The World Has Turned and Left Me Here” — these are the songs an entire generation of pimply faced kids will associate with their own coming of age.
Kid Rock
“My name is Kiiiiiiiiiiiiddddd!!!” No one in recent memory has reveled in the sheer awesomeness of rock and roll like Kid Rock. Whether he’s channeling ZZ Top, Run-D.M.C. or a case of PBR, no one brings it like the K.I.D. He’s also one of the few artists who have married rock with hip-hop and somehow remained relevant."
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