Guitar Tricks Insider June/July Edition | Page 25

SOUND ADVICE soon after because they all did. I thought this is so hip. I’ve got to have an electric guitar. Of course, some of the people in those days, like Ricky Nelson and Elvis Presley, were all doing that electric thing even though they didn’t really play electric guitars. But their bands were electrified. I wanted to get into that mode. I started doing that when I was pretty young. And then along the time I hit high school, a lot of the guitar players suddenly were acoustic players – Bob Dylan, Peter Paul and Mary, The Kingston Trio, Joan Baez, Doc Watson, Tom Paxton. All these guys were taking center stage for me at that time. I was taking guitar lessons and the lady that gave me guitar lessons had all these records and I would listen to them. And then I started listening to country and blues – particularly Doc Watson, The Rev. Gary Davis, and Lightnin’ Hopkins. Was your ear good enough that you could pick it out? “ “I WILL WATCH TV WITH MY GUITAR AND DO SCALES AND IT WORKS. IT FREES YOUR MIND FROM YOUR HAND AND LETS YOUR HAND DO A LOT OF WORKING ON ITS OWN. WHEN YOU’RE ON STAGE YOU HAVE TO DO THAT ANYWAY.” ” JUNE/JULY I had been really into Chet Atkins, who to me was the master of styles. When I started hearing these people playing acoustic guitar – doing a lot of neat picking – I took that thing that Chet Atkins was and I sort of applied that style to acoustic, which is kind of what those people were doing, too. It’s that sort of Nashville picking or Carter style. I like to sing, too, which was the difference between Chet Atkins and a guy like Doc Watson. I really liked that combination of being able to pick and back yourself on guitar and sing. And so I put the electric guitar away. I just said I don’t want to play electric anymore. I want get back to the roots of guitar. I want to be like Doc Watson. Then I heard Jorma Kaukonen. He used to play around San Jose. I thought, man, this is it. This guy has reached the pinnacle of what I want to do. I want to be a country blues kind of based guitar player and I want to sing this blues. Were you naturally good? When you played did it sound musical or did you work hard to make it flow? I had been playing at that point since I was about eight years old. By the time I was 15 I had been playing seven years, so I had a little bit of ability in that direction. Bill Payne (Little Feat) once told me when he gives lessons to kids he doesn’t discourage them from just plunking around on the piano. Even if they just make noise – if it’s music to them – if they are enjoying it and they feel some feedback from that, I encourage that. I encourage people to invent and try things on their own. Because from that comes the enjoyment of the music that you invented yourself to the point where, once you have confidence in that, then you can learn other styles and other techniques. If you don’t have the confidence or enjoyment of it then you can’t move forward. So I realized of course – that’s my philosophy, too, on the guitar. Naturally you want it to be musical. But that perception of music doesn’t come immediately except probably to a genius like Mozart. Most people have to experiment and make noise a little bit until from that noise you start to recognize music and noise as two distinctly different things. By experimenting, it did come in a natural way. I would tune to an DIGITAL EDITION 25