Canadian Musician - May / June 2020 | Page 50

It’s a question that comes around every decade or so: is the electric guitar dead? Back in the ‘90s, electronica bands like The Chemical Brothers seemed poised to drive a nail into the coffin of the instrument. Actually plug- ging a souped-up piece of wood into a tube amplifi- er? How passé! Then hip-hop and pop blew rock and roll off the charts and the guitar was once again, according to some, a relic. Kids weren’t going to rock bars; they were dancing the night away to EDM. The laptop was the new Strat. Why rock when you can make the beat drop? Even the rock charts were bereft of distortion pedals as the indie pop scene made gui- tars no more mandatory than harmoniums. Hell, just google the words “is electric guitar dead” and you’ll find articles claiming the affirmative from out- lets as varied as Rolling Stone to right-wing zealot mainstay The Federalist. But something funny happened on the way to “irrelevance” – kids are still buying beaters, plug- ging them into practice amps, and cranking the gain up to 11. In the year 2020, almost 30 years after power chords were declared as musically rel- evant as lutes, the guitar still lives. Hell, even in the mid- dle of our current cata- clysmic pandemic, retail outlets say their sales are booming as self- isolators make the most of their quarantine by picking up their first real six-string. And you cer- tainly don’t have to look far for livestreams of varying quality depicting an artist in their bedroom or living room with a gui- tar on their lap. Need more proof of the guitar’s continued vitality? Look no further than the Canadian rock scene, which is as strong as ever thanks to players that are as adventurous as they are diverse. Here are five of the country’s finest, explaining what it is they still find exciting about tuning up, plug- ging in, and rocking out. Shifting Gears with DEVIN TOWNSEND Go-To Live Rig: •@ Framus Stormbender Devin @ @ @ Townsend Signature Electric •@ Prestige Guitars Devin Townsend @ @ Empath Signature Acoustic •@ Fishman Fluence Devin Townsend @ Signature Pickup Set •@ Fractal Audio Axe-Fx III Amp Modeler •@ Fractal Audio FM3 Amp Modeler •@ Mesa/Boogie Amps •@ Fender Amps •@ Tyler Amp Works Amps •@ Mooer Ocean Machine Devin @ @ @ Townsend Dual Delay/Reverb @ @ Pedal •@ MXR, Strymon, EarthQuaker Devices, JHS, Maxon, Dunlop & @ @ Diamond Effects •@ Line 6 Wireless •@ Radial Engineering Signal Distribution •@ Planet Waves Cables •@ Planet Waves Straps •@ D’Addario XL Strings (10-52) •@ Dunlop Ultex & Tortex Picks (.88) To call Devin Townsend a guitar hero would be to sell the man short. Over 50 CANADIAN MUSICIAN the course of his almost 30-year-long career, he’s been a musical Justice League unto himself – ripping shred- ding solos as the founder of extreme metal-oriented Strapping Young Lad, diving deep into atmospherics on a series of solo albums, and even tak- ing gigs as an acoustic troubadour. While the casual fan knows him for his freakish technical ability, his sheer range as a musician has led him to transcend being just a guitar player. “I do [still get excited by the guitar] but not in the way I used to. I find I used to be fascinated by the writing process, but now I like the sound of the guitar and I like the sound of bass, but I don’t actually like to play things,” he says. “When I practice, I don’t sit and run scales anymore; I’ll sit and put on the TV and just play the guitar.” Which doesn’t mean he doesn’t get into the nuts and bolts of gear. He long ago attained the achieve-