Showing posts with label Guitarist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guitarist. Show all posts

Thursday, January 12, 2023

Iconic rock guitarist Jeff Beck dead at 78

NEW YORK - Jeff Beck, the influential guitarist who rose to rock and roll stardom with 1960s supergroup the Yardbirds and later had a prolific solo career, has died, his official website said Wednesday. He was 78.

The eight-time Grammy award-winner, a guitar virtuoso and innovator who was also one of the world's great rhythm and blues interpreters, died "peacefully" after a sudden bout of bacterial meningitis.

"On behalf of his family, it is with deep and profound sadness that we share the news of Jeff Beck's passing. After suddenly contracting bacterial meningitis, he peacefully passed away yesterday," a statement on the English-born musician's website said.

"His family ask for privacy while they process this tremendous loss."

Beck's death quickly reverberated around the music world, with tributes pouring in from rock icons like Ozzy Osborne, with whom Beck once collaborated, and Kiss lead singer Gene Simmons, who called Beck's passing "heartbreaking."

"No one played guitar like Jeff," Simmons posted on Twitter. "Please get ahold of the first two Jeff Beck Group albums and behold greatness. RIP."

Musician Paul Young said he was "devastated" to hear the news.

"He was loved by everyone in the know," Young tweeted, calling Beck "the guitarists' guitarist."

Beck had already done pioneering rock recordings by the time he was hired by the Yardbirds in 1965 immediately after the departure of one of the band's star guitarists, Eric Clapton.

Beck helped propel the British avant-garde rock sound with multiple groundbreaking recordings, including the fuzz-filled guitar licks on "Heart Full of Soul."

By 1966 he was paired in the Yardbirds with fellow guitar wizard Jimmy Page, who went on to found the British blues rock sensation Led Zeppelin.

A year later Beck formed his own band, the Jeff Beck Group, which swiftly drew widespread praise. 

In 2015 Rolling Stone magazine placed Beck at number five in its list of the 100 greatest guitarists of all time.

Agence France-Presse

Monday, December 23, 2013

Santana reunites with ex-bandmate, now homeless


OAKLAND, California – A news reporter for a San Francisco television station has reunited rock guitarist Carolos Santana with a former bandmate he hadn’t seen in decades and who now lives on the streets of Oakland.

Reporter Stanley Roberts ran into percussionist Marcus “The Magnificent” Malone while working on a story about illegal dumping last week, KRON-TV in San Francisco reported.

Although he initially was skeptical of the homeless man’s claim that the Santana Blues Band got its start in his mother’s garage in the late 1960s, Roberts checked out the story and confirmed it.

And on Friday, he took Santana for a surprise visit to the camper where Malone has been staying.

“You don’t know how afraid I am to let you see me,” Malone said softly after he and the Rock and Roll Hall of Famer embraced.

“We cherish you,” Santana replied. “It’s an honor to be in your presence.”

Santana has credited Malone with being an important influence on his Afro-Latin sound, according to former Rolling Stone magazine writer Ben Fong-Torres’ book “Not Fade Away: A Backstage Ticket to 20 Years of Rock & Roll.”

Malone played congas on Santana’s eponymous first album, but left the band in 1969 shortly before its seminal performance at Woodstock when he was imprisoned for manslaughter, according to Fong-Torres.

The two men told Roberts they had not seen each other since then. During their meeting on Friday, Santana promised to bring Malone a set of congas and to help him get on his feet.

Since Roberts’ story aired, another original member of the Santana Blues Band, percussionist Rod Harper, and producer Bobby Scott also have expressed interest in reuniting with Malone.

source: entertainment.inquirer.net

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Iommi could play on your track


Queen guitarist Brian May has revealed plans to release an album consisting entirely of riffs written and played by Tony Iommi.

The aim is to allow fans to build their own songs out of the Black Sabbath axeman’s material.

The plan was uncovered via a Kerrang celebrity interview in which Iommi asked May: “When are we going to get to work on that album of riffs together? You know what I’m talking about.”

May replied: “Yes, I do know what he’s talking about and I’m very, very keen. The record was supposed to be a secret – but I guess he’s blown it now.”

He explained that, on a visit to Iommi’s studio, he discovered a huge catalogue of unused material. “I thought it would be great to make a compilation out of them. The idea was to put all these riffs out in some form so people could build their own sings of them. You could make your own music with Tony Iommi on guitar.”

It’s not been confirmed when such an album might appear. Iommi recently completed recording work on Sabbath’s first album with Ozzy Osbourne since 1978, commenting: “It’s different altogether now. We’ve got much more of a thing going than what it was in them days. The new material’s really good – we’ve got some good stuff going.”

source: classicrockmagazine.com

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

KK Downing comes out of retirement…


Former Judas Priest guitarist KK Downing has come out of music industry retirement – but instead of taking the stage the guitarist will be working behind it as a promoter.

The iconic axeman has announced his first two shows, one in Wolverhampton and one in Birmingham, where he’ll showcase rising-star talent.


His aim to is ensure the Black Country – where he war born and where he lives today – remains on the rock and metal map for years to come. His promotion firm will operate under the title The Future Of Heavy Metal, and it’s a collaboration with experienced industry man Dave Coleman.

Downing tells the Shropshire Star: “The Black Country and Birmingham are known as the home of heavy metal. Back in the 70s and 80s the area produced so many good bands from Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin to Judas Priest and even Slade.

“In some ways it’s been difficult for other bands to fill the void. Now it’s time for the next generation to step up to the plate.”

His first tips are local outfits Hostile, Left Unscarred and Under Blackened Skies, alongside French band Moray Firth.

He surprised fans when he bowed out of Priest in 2011, to be replaced by Richie Faulkner. The band’s original singer, Al Atkins, recently said he’d thought Downing might make a few guest appearances with his former colleagues, but added: “That’s not to be, so I’ve been told.”

source: classicrockmagazine.com

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Ministry guitarist Mike Scaccia dead at 47


Guitarist Mike Scaccia, known for his work with Ministry, Rigor Mortis and the Revolting Cocks, has died after suffering a seizure on stage. He was 47.

He was performing at the Rail Club in Fort Worth, Texas, last night with Rigor Mortis, and collapsed during the show. He was taken to hospital while a band member is reported to have told fans: “It doesn’t look good.” He died soon afterwards.

Vocalist Bruce Corbitt, who’d put on the event to celebrate his 50th birthday, posted on Facebook: “My brother is gone! The only reason I am who I am is because of this man. If it wasn’t for him I wouldn’t even be in a band. RIP Mike – the greatest guitar player I ever knew. I’m proud to say that I was always Mike Scaccia’s biggest fan, and always will be.”

The guitarist co-formed Rigor Mortis in 1983 and they released their acclaimed debut self-titled album six years later. He was invited to join Ministry as a touring member by mainman Al Jourgensen in 1990. The tour went so well that he joined the industrial metal pioneers permanently. Scaccia appeared on Ministry’s Psalm 69 and Filth Pig albums before leaving the band.

He reformed Rigor Mortis in 2003 and went back to Ministry around the same time, where he’d remained since. He’d also performed with RevCo in recent years.

Earlier this year Scaccia discussed his relationship with Jourgensen, telling Westword: “We’ve had our ups and downs together. We’ve lived through a really very long and intense heroin addiction together. We’ve survived it – we got out of it. We’re like brothers, and we have fought like brothers in the past. About four years ago, we decided no more of that dumb shit. We’re best friends, man; let’s write music together. I don’t even think we’ve had an argument for four years now.”

In the same interview he said he was looking forward to completing a new Rigor Mortis album. He was also involved in the Dusters, Blohole, Lard, the League of Blind Woman and Buck Satan and the 666 Shooters. Gibson  employed him to run guitar clinics across the world.

source: classicrockmagazine.com

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Hawkwind’s Huw Lloyd Langton dies


Hawkwind have announced that former member Huw Lloyd Langton has died after a cancer battle. He was 61.

The guitarist joined the band in 1970, appearing on their self-titled first album. He returned for a second stint in 1979 and remained for nine years, ultimately appearing on ten of their records.

He’d been a member of Widowmaker and played as part of Leo Sayer’s band. He’d continued working with Dave Brock – the pair recently performed a charity concert for the Devon Air Ambulance Trust. He also made regular guest appearances with Hawkwind, or performed support slots.

He fronted his own band, the Lloyd Langton Group, which released nine albums. He also played session guitar for the Meads of Asphodel.

The band say in a statement: “Our great friend and fellow musician Huw Lloyd Langton has sadly lost his long battle with cancer. He passed away peacefully last night (Thursday) at home, with his wife Marion by his side.

“Huw had been bravely fighting cancer for a couple of years, but was determined not to let the battle affect his day to day life. He continued to play his guitar, laugh, joke and share the great love he had in his heart, with all who knew him.

“As he wished, he was at home when the time came.

“Huw was one of the great guitarists with an individual style and character. He is gone but never forgotten by any of us. He will live on in our music and in our hearts.

“A book of condolence has been opened.”

source: classicrockmagazine.com

Monday, September 10, 2012

Are flamenco guitarists rock stars?


Flamenco is one of my passions, so I was excited to interview Adolfo Toyoda Timuat, an internationally renowned flamenco guitarist with major cred: he’s performed at Carnegie Hall, accompanied the young Joaquin Cortes as a student dancer, and is the name behind the classical Adolfo guitars.

As a relative newbie, however, I was surprised to find out that Adolfo is half-Filipino (I’d gathered from his name that the other half was Japanese), and has taught most of the handful of flamenco guitarists working in the country today.

“Flamenco guitar is — I cannot say rock — but the concept is like that, like Camaron de la Isla (a flamenco singer who worked with Paco de Lucia and Tomatito),” Adolfo says. “The guitar sounds like a wild instrument compared to a classical sound. It’s more a percussive sound — we think the guitar is a drum.”

Based in Madrid, Spain, for 25 years now, Timuat comes home to the Philippines about once or twice a year to perform. This year his alma mater, Far Eastern University (where he studied Civil Engineering), has made him part of its 2012-2013 cultural season, with a special concert on Sept. 12 at the FEU Auditorium.

FLAMENCA NEGRA

Adolfo takes a guitar called Flamenca Negra out of its case. It’s a beauty, built of German spruce and rare Brazilian rosewood, with nylon strings and a bright, vibrant sound. Handcrafted for over 200 hours and varnished to a high sheen, one of these babies costs about 3,600 euros, though Adolfo says you can get a good-quality acoustic for about 500.



“I have a shop in Cebu and one in Madrid,” he says. “My maestro was Arcangel Fernandez, the world’s greatest guitar builder who also used to play. I have a lot of respect for him.”

Born in Okinawa to a Japanese mother and a Filipino father who worked at the US base there, Adolfo moved to the Philippines at age six. As a youth he fell in love with flamenco music when his father brought home a turntable and some records from Sevilla, Spain.

Listening to the Sevillanas and rumbas issuing from the speakers, the 13-year-old thought, “That’s the kind of music I want to play on guitar.”

At 15 he started performing in folk houses. At 18 he got serious about making a name for himself, doing the rounds of hotels like Silahis and bars like Tia Maria, “so lutong-luto na kamay ko,” he laughs.

PLAYING CARNEGIE HALL

But it wasn’t until he was 29 that his career really took off. American actor Anthony Zerbe (who’s probably most famous for the ’70s flick Omega Man) was in Manila filming a movie when he saw one of Adolfo’s students, Ramon de la Cruz, play in the hotel he was billeted in. A guitar aficionado, Zerbe told Ramon how great he was. Ramon replied, “You haven’t heard my teacher yet.”

De La Cruz accompanied Zerbe to Adolfo’s house — twice — since the first time Timuat was out performing in Baguio. Adolfo played for them, with Zerbe recording the impromptu performance on cassette. “He asked if I wanted to come to New York,” Adolfo recalls. “I was young so I thought he was pulling my leg.”

But Zerbe was serious; he’d submitted the cassette to the judging panel that auditioned potential Carnegie Hall performers, and Timuat passed.


Zerbe sent Adolfo a letter with a contract from Carnegie Hall, and the 29-year-old guitarist found himself playing a one-and-a-half-hour concert in front of a New York City audience — solo.

“Madre mia,” says the 50-something Adolfo now. “And those were paying tickets, not gratis, so I had to really make good or else. It was my most memorable performance because I played so badly,” he laughs. “Well, technically I played very well and they all liked it, but looking at it now, it was awful.”

The mileage he gained from that performance earned him another show at Lincoln Center and a United Nations-Juilliard scholarship that became his ticket to Spain. “That was one of the turning points. I had to perform for the director of Amadeus (Milos Forman) and the dean of Juilliard … they talked and said, ‘Okay, you’re going to Spain to study.’”

SPANISH LOVE AFFAIR

That yearlong scholarship sparked another love affair with Spain that for Adolfo has lasted to this day. He eventually got a master’s in Classical Guitar from the Real Conservatorio Superior de Musica de Madrid, and the title of Luthier of Stringed Instruments from Castilla-La Mancha in Spain, which comes with an actual license to build concert classical and flamenco guitars.

For four years he would accompany dancers at Amor De Dios, the best flamenco school in Spain, including Joaquin Cortes before Cortes became a star. He also played alongside top flamenco guitarist Rafael Riqueni, and taught guitar at the British school Runnymede to students like David Beckham’s children (when Beckham was with Real Madrid), and the czar of Russia.

I ask him if it was hard to break into Spain’s flamenco scene and he replies, “If you’re Spanish, you have to be up there, really. In my case I think they saw me as a novelty, a curiosity, so you have to prove that you’re good, because no foreigner really plays in Spain.”

GUITAR SCHOOL

Today Timuat regularly performs around the world, but what’s ironic is that he is more appreciated abroad than here. He dreams of putting up a Philippine Institute of Guitar but it looks like the Malaysians are beating us to it: they want Adolfo to spearhead an Asian Institute of Guitar in Kuching, which will branch out to other countries in the region, and include a guitar-building facility. “I cannot wait anymore because I’ve already shifted all the wood to Cebu, good for 3,000 guitars,” Adolfo says. “It cost me 40,000 euros and I cannot let it rot over there.”

It’s a shame that we’re losing the talents of one of our finest guitarists to another country, but such is the state of support for the arts in the Philippines.

Timuat remains philosophical about it all, though, telling me about the humility of the guitar masters he’s had the privilege of meeting, like John Williams (the classical guitarist, not the film composer). “The great Arcangel told John Williams, ‘I still don’t know how to build guitars.’ John said, ‘Maestro, don’t worry. We don’t know how to play them either.”

source: philstar.com






Monday, July 2, 2012

Jimi Hendrix: "I Don't Want to Be a Clown Anymore"



This story is from the November 15th, 1969 issue of Rolling Stone.

Records, film, press and gossip are collectively ambitious in creating the image of a rock superstar. With Jimi Hendrix – as with Janis Joplin, Mick Jagger and Jim Morrison – mythology is particularly lavish.

Unfortunately, it is also often irreversible–even when it's ill-founded or after the performer himself has gone through changes.

Several weeks ago, Life magazine described Jimi as "a rock demigod" and devoted several color pages to kaleidoscopic projection of his face. Well, why not? The fisheye lens shot on his first album cover shows him in arrogant distortion: on the second album, he becomes Buddha. Lest anyone forget, Leacock-Pennebaker's Monterey Pop has immortalized his pyromaniacal affair with the guitar. Rock-media bedroom talk makes him King Stud of the groupies. Stories circulate that he is rude to audiences, stands up writers, hangs up photographers, that he doesn't talk.

What Jimi's really all about – and where his music is going – is an altogether different thing.

For most of the summer and early fall, Jimi rented a big Georgian-style home in Liberty, New York – one of Woodstock's verdant "suburbs" – for the purpose of housing an eclectic family of musicians: Black Memphis blues guitarists; "new music" and jazz avantgardists; "Experience" member Mitch Mitchell; and – closest to Jimi and most influential – Juma Lewis, a multi-talented ex-progressive jazzman who is now the leader of Woodstock's Aboriginal Music Society.

The hilltop compound – replete with wooded acreage and two horses – was intended for a peaceful, productive musical growth period. But hassles did come, sometimes sending Jimi off on sanity-preserving vacations in Algeria and Morocco: local police were anxious to nab "big-time hippies" on anything from dope to speeding; the house was often hectic with hangers-on; pressure mounted from Jimi's commercial reps to stay within the well-hyped image and not go too far afield experimentally.

But with it all, growth, exchange and – finally – unity was achieved among Jimi and the musicians, whose work-in-progress was evidenced in occasional public appearances in the New York area (at the Woodstock/Bethel Festival, Harlem's Apollo Theater, Greenwich Village's Salvation discotheque, and ABC's Dick Cavett show) and has been recorded for Reprise on an LP which will be released in January. The name of the album, Gypsies, Suns and Rainbows, epitomizes the new Hendrix feeling.

With close friends of Jimi, I drove up to Liberty on a quiet September weekend. The melange of musicians and girls had departed. In a few weeks, Jimi himself was to give up the house, woods and horses for less idyllic prospects: a Manhattan loft and a November hearing on the narcotics-possession charge he was slapped with in Toronto, May 3rd.

Photographs have a funny way of betraying his essentially fragile face and body. He is lean. Almost slight. Eating chocolate chip cookies on the living room couch in this big house – furnished straight and comfortable – he seems boyish and vulnerable.

He offers questions with an unjustified fear of his own articulateness that is charming – but occasionally painful. "Do you, uh – where do you live in the city?" "What kind of music do you li— would you care to listen to?" He is self-effacing almost to a fault: "Do you ever go to the Fillmore? No? – that was a silly question, sorry." "I'm sorry, am I mumbling? Tell me when I'm mumbling. Damn ... I always mumble."

It becomes uncomfortable, so one says: "Jimi, don't keep putting yourself down. There's everybody else to do that for you." He attaches to that statement, repeats it slowly, whips out the embossed Moroccan notebook in which he jots lyrics at all hours of day and night, and scribbles something down.

Fingering through his record collection (extensive and catholic; e.g., Marlene Dietrich, David Peel and the Lower East Side, Schoenberg, Wes Montgomery), he pulls out Blind Faith; Crosby, Stills and Nash; and John Wesley Harding. The Dylan plays first. Jimi's face lights: "I love Dylan. I only met him once, about three years ago, back at the Kettle of Fish [a folk-rock era hangout] on MacDougal Street. That was before I went to England. I think both of us were pretty drunk at the time, so he probably doesn't remember it."

In the middle of a track, Jimi gets up, plugs in his guitar, and – with eyes closed and his supple body curved gently over the instrument – pick up on "Frankie Lee and Judas Priest," riding the rest of the song home with a near-religious intensity.

He talks intently to Juma and his girl. He cherishes real friends and will do anything for them. They, in turn, feel protective toward him. "Poor Jimi," one says. "Everyone's trying to hold him up for something. Those busts ... Even the highway patrol exploits him. They know his car: they stop him on the road between New York and Woodstock and harass him. Then they have something to gloat about for the rest of the day. Once a cop stopped me on the highway and started bragging: 'Hey, I just stopped Jimi Hendrix for the second time today.'"

On the bookcase is a photograph of a Fifties Coasters-type R&B group: processed hair, metallic-threaded silk-lapel suits, shiny shoes. The thin kid on the far left in a high-conked pompadour, grinning over an electric guitar: is it – ? "That's okay," Jimi smiles at the impending laughter. "I don't try to cover up the past; I'm not ashamed of it." But he is genuinely humble about the present. For example, he'd been wanting for some time to jam with jazz and "new music" avantgardists, but worried that such musicians didn't take him seriously enough to ever consider playing with him. "Tell me, honestly," he asked a friend, "what do those guys think of me? Do they think I'm jiving?"

We are listening now to the tape of such a session, the previous night's jam: Jimi on electric guitar, avantgarde pianist Michael Ephron on clavichord, Juma on congas and flute. A beautiful fusion of disparate elements, disjunct and unified at alternating seconds. Now chaotic, now coming together. "Cosmic music," they call it. Ego-free music. Not the sort of stuff the waxlords make many bucks off. Not the kind of sound guaranteed to extend the popularity of a rock superstar.

"I don't want to be a clown anymore. I don't want to be a 'rock and roll star,'" Jimi says, emphatically. The forces of contention are never addressed but their pervasiveness has taken its toll on Jimi's stamina and peace of mind. Trying to remain a growing artist when a business empire has nuzzled you to its bosom takes a toughness, a shrewdness. For those who have a hardness of conviction but not of temperament it isn't a question of selling out but of dying, artistically and spiritually. Refusing to die yet ill-equipped to fight dirty, many sensitive but commercially-lionized artists withdrew. I watch Jimi quietly digging the pictures of faraway people and places in a book, The Epic of Man ("South America ... wow, that's a whole different world. Have you ever been there?") and I wonder just where he will be and what he will be doing five years from now.

We crowd into Jimi's metal-fleck silver Stingray ("I want to paint it over – maybe black") for a sunrise drive to the waterfalls. ("I wish I could bring my guitar – and plug it in down there.") The talk is of puppies, daybreak, other innocentia. We climb down the rocks to the icy brook, then suddenly discover the car keys are missing. Everyone shuffles through shoulder pouches and wallets. "Hey, don't worry," Jimi says. "They'll turn up. No use being hassled about it now." Jimi's taking pictures and writing poetry. "I want to write songs about tranquility, about beautiful things," he says.

Back at the house, he pads around, emptying ashtrays, putting things in order. "I'm like a clucking old grandmother," he smiles. "I've just gotta straighten things out a little." It's 7 a.m. and he has to be at the recording studio in Manhattan at 4 in the afternoon. Everyone's exhausted.

After a few hours of sleep, Jimi floats into the kitchen looking like a fuzzy lamb unmercifully awakened and underfed. He passes up the spread of eggs, pork chops, crescent rolls and tea; breakfast, instead, is a Theragran and a swig of tequila in milk. "Jimi, you never eat ..." Juma's girl worries aloud.

We pile into the car for the two-hour drive into Manhattan. Passing two Afro-haired guys in an Aston-Martin, Jimi turns and flashes a broad grin, extending his fingers in a peace salute. We turn up the radio on Stevie Wonder's "My Cherie Amour"; groove on Neil Diamond, Jackie deShannon, the Turtles. Everything is everything: We're playing with a puppy, grateful for clear skies, clear road, clear AM station. What more could a carload of travelers in an inconspicuous blue Avis ask?

We pull into a roadside stop. No giggly bell-bottomed young girls in sight, Jimi gets out and brings back chocolate milk and ice cream for everyone. Truckers pay no attention. Middle-aged couples glare disdainfully.

The talk is of the session. They'll record at a studio on West 44th Street, then go somewhere else to mix it – maybe Bell Sound of A&R – because Jimi says the recording studio they're going to "has bad equipment ... likes to take advantage of so-called longhair musicians."

Downtown traffic on the West Side highway is light at rush hour. The fortresses of upper Riverside Drive are handsome in the sun, but the air has lost its freshness. Getting off the highway at 45th Street, it's 4:45. The session, costing $200 an hour, was booked to begin at 4:00. But delay couldn't be helped; no hassle. A carful of teenagers alongside us has the radio turned up loud on "If Six Was Nine" – the cut being used as part of advertisment for Easy Rider. I ask Jimi if he's seen the film; he doesn't answer.

Turning around, I find him stretched out on the back seat, legs curled up embryonically, hands clasped under his cheek. Sleeping soundly.

article source: rollingstone.com

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Soundgarden sorry for Sabbath slur


Revitalised grunge-powered outfit Soundgarden are no longer the band who said they wanted to be “Black Sabbath without the parts that suck.”

That’s a statement guitarist Kim Thayall made long before their public meltdown in 1997, when bassist Ben Shephard threw down his instrument and marched off ahead of official confirmation they’d split.



But now singer Chris Cornell tells Classic Rock: “We’re trying to add all the parts that suck back in.”

His comments appear in the current edition of the magazine, dated July 2012, as Cornell talks about the organic nature of their reunion – which came about as they discussed tidying up business arrangements such as merchandise deals and online presence.

Since those first meetings they’ve released new track Live to Rise, and a new album is on the way.

But Cornell insists Soundgarden are remaining flexible about their musical approach, after having suffered for the previously rigid beliefs. “Rock should be about an attitude – about where a person is coming from,” he says. “It could be almost anything.”

And when his band appear before Black Sabbath on the Download main stage tonight, they’ll be showing a little more respect to the metal pioneers than they might have done 15 years ago.

source: classicrockmagazine.com

Friday, June 8, 2012

Former Fleetwood Mac Member Bob Welch Dead at 65


Former Fleetwood Mac member Bob Welch has died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound at the age of 65, the Associated Press reports. Welch was found dead by his wife in their Nashville home today just after noon. According to Nashville police spokesman Don Aaron, the musician had been dealing with health issues recently and left a suicide note.

Welch was a guitarist and vocalist in Fleetwood Mac from 1971 until 1974. He joined the group along with Christine and John McVie, and helped establish a more melodic direction for the band after the departure of guitarist Peter Green. He was the sole guitarist on Heroes Are Hard to Find, which was his last record with the band. Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks joined the group shortly after Welch's exit.

Welch went on to pursue a solo career, with Fleetwood Mac drummer Mick Fleetwood serving as his manager well into the Eighties. He scored a handful of hits, including "Sentimental Lady," a cut featuring backing vocals by Buckingham and Christine McVie, in 1977, and "Ebony Eyes" in 1978.

source: rollingstone.com


Tuesday, May 29, 2012

John Frusciante Preps 'Progressive Synth Pop' Solo Projects


Former Red Hot Chili Peppers guitarist John Frusciante announced in a note posted on his website that he has both a new EP and a full length set for release this year.

Marking Frusciante's first solo releases in three years, the EP, Letur-Lefr, will drop on July 17 in North America (July 4th in Japan), and the album, PBX Funicular Intaglio Zone, has a September 12th street date in Japan and a North American release on September 25th.

"I consider my music to be Progressive Synth Pop," Frusciante wrote, "which says nothing about what it sounds like, but does describe my basic approach. I combine aspects of many styles of music and create my own musical forms by way of electronic instruments."

Noting the differences between the two releases, Frusciante calls Letur "a compilation" consisting of tracks he recorded back in 2010, while PBX was conceived and created as an album. To bridge the gap between the two, Frusciante plans to offer the track "Walls and Doors" as a free download before the album comes out. "This song pointed the way towards PBX but was recorded 7 months earlier," he wrote.

Frusciante played all the instruments, sang and engineered both records, though he points out that Letur-Lefr features a handful of guest vocalists and MCs, while there will be only one guest spot on PBX.

PBX marks Frusciante's eleventh studio album and first since The Empyrean, released back in 2009, the same year he amicably left the Chili Peppers. When the Red Hot Chili Peppers were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame this April, Frusciante opted not to attend.

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Donald 'Duck' Dunn, Bass Player for Booker T. and the MGs, Dead at 70



Donald "Duck" Dunn, bass player for the influential studio band Booker T. and the MGs, died this morning at the age of 70.

Dunn was in Japan at the time, playing a series of shows at the Blue Note in Tokyo. Steve Cropper, Dunn's friend and bandmate who was on the same tour in Japan, announced the bassist's passing on his Facebook page:

"Today I lost my best friend, the World has lost the best guy and bass player to ever live. Duck Dunn died in his sleep Sunday morning May 13 in Tokyo Japan after finishing 2 shows at the Blue Note Night Club."

Dunn was born in Memphis, Tennessee in 1941. He met Cropper in high school, where the two formed their first band, the Royal Spades. After changing their name to the Mar-Keys, they scored a hit in 1961 with the song "Last Night." In 1964, Cropper invited Dunn to join Booker T. and the MGs, the house band for Stax Records. While the band had a number of instrumental hits in their own right, including "Green Onions" and "Time is Tight," their backing role for Stax stars like Otis Redding, the Staple Singers and Sam and Dave helped define the sound of Southern soul.

After the MGs split up in 1971, Dunn found work playing as a session musician, recording with Eric Clapton, Levon Helm and Bob Dylan, among others. In 1978, Dunn and Cropper joined Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi as back-up for the Blues Brothers on their album Briefcase Full of Blues and later played themselves in the duo's movies.

As a member of Booker T. and the MGs (who would reunite periodically over the years), Dunn was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1992, and received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Grammys in 2007.

source: rollingstone.com

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Ramone memoir reveals charming, grumpy punk icon

NEW YORK - Johnny Ramone, guitarist for seminal punk band the Ramones, pioneered a fast, no-nonsense sound that made him one of the most influential guitarists of all time.

"Commando: the Autobiography of Johnny Ramone," released nearly 8 years after Ramone, born John Cummings, died of prostate cancer at age 55, reads like a Ramones song: short and to the point, but with plenty of color to keep things interesting.

The book, recently published by Abrams Image, was written from a series of interviews Ramone gave in the final years of his life for the purposes of a memoir.

"He wanted to have his last words because he knew he was dying and he was always kind of a misunderstood character," Ramone's wife, Linda Cummings Ramone, said in an interview.

Linda enlisted author and former Black Flag singer, Henry Rollins, as well as her manager, John Cafiero, to put together the 176-page book, which is peppered with photos and collected memorabilia.

The result is a raw telling of Ramone's life story, from a blue collar New York upbringing playing baseball and roughing up neighborhood kids, to early Ramones gigs with Blondie and The Talking Heads at punk-rock bastion venue CBGBs.

It also sheds light on the ongoing tensions that took place within the band, and his more than 20-year romance with Linda, who once dated his former friend and bandmate Joey Ramone.

"When I left Joey to go with Johnny, it was intense, because nobody wanted the band to break up. The band was always first," Linda said.

"Joey and Johnny didn't talk. Did I have something to do with it? Well, yeah, of course, a bit, but musically Joey and Johnny were growing apart. That was more the tension in the band," she added, citing a 1994 Christmas card shown in the book that Joey sent Johnny, a gesture Linda said showed how those tensions had thawed toward the end.

Other parts of the book detail Ramone's thoughts on his famously brash personality, his sometimes meticulous nature and musical inspirations.

While Ramone described himself in the book as an angry person for much of his life, beginning as "the terror of the neighborhood," he also lets on that his favorite place on earth was Disney World, and when he listened to music, chances were he was listening to Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, or Elvis.

He was also a fastidious saver and was planning for retirement even before the first Ramones show in 1974. Following the band's last performance, in 1996 at the Hollywood Palace, the Ramones were making more money than when they were together, having established fans around the world.

Down-pick

One of those fans was Metallica guitarist Kirk Hammett. He said he first heard the Ramones in 1977 when he was 14 years old and Ramones standards "Sheena is Punk Rocker," "Rockaway Beach," and "Blitzkrieg Bop" all played on the radio within a week.

"I was hooked," he told Reuters, adding that Ramones had an enormous impact on the way he plays guitar.

Hammett first met Ramone in 1986 at a comic book convention and the two later became close friends. He said he asked Ramone why it was he always down-picked, rather than strumming the guitar in a typical up-and-down style. Ramone, who was self-taught, said it was just to keep time.

"I thought to myself, 'Wow, something as simple as that was the basis of his style that went on to create the basis of punk rock and heavy metal'."

Other fans and friends included Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder, seen in 'Commando' wearing the wig Ramone had made when he was receiving radiation treatment, and Lisa Marie Presley, who ensured Ramone was the best man at her wedding to Nicolas Cage.

Presley told Reuters in an interview that Ramone, who had an Elvis-themed room in his house long before she took him to visit Graceland, played a major role in her life.

"He had a paternal thing with me. He was looking out for me," she said in an interview, describing Ramone as "grumpy, but charming."

Much of "Commando" shows Ramone living and breathing his band, which took its name from a pseudonym, Ramon, that Paul McCartney once used.

Even after the band called it quits, it was not until singer Joey Ramone, born Jeff Hyman, died of lymphoma in 2001, that Johnny Ramone, No. 16 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the top 100 greatest guitarists of all time, really knew it was over.

Bassist Dee Dee Ramone, born Douglas Colvin, died the following year of a heroin overdose. That was around the time when Johnny Ramone, who was himself battling the cancer that would take his life, was working on what would become "Commando."

Helped by the little black books that he filled throughout his career with the details of every Ramones show - all 2,263 of them - Ramone opened up the past, from punching out Sex Pistols manager Malcolm McLaren, to the challenge of working with gun-totting producer Phil Spector, to touring the world.

"It's exactly how Johnny would want it," said Linda. "It's like a Ramones show. Boom, boom, boom." — Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Richards apologizes to fellow Rolling Stone Jagger

LONDON - Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards has apologized to Mick Jagger for derogatory comments he made about the lead singer in his 2010 memoir "Life", which caused a rift within the band.

In comments reported by Rolling Stone magazine, the two rock'n'roll veterans agreed it was time to move on.

Fans will be relieved to see them burying the hatchet, as the row had threatened to undermine plans to celebrate the Rolling Stones' 50th anniversary this year and to go on another world tour.

"Looking back at any career you are bound to recall both the highs and the lows," Jagger was quoted as saying. "In the 1980s for instance Keith and I were not communicating very well.

"I got very involved with the business side of the Stones, mainly because I felt no one else was interested, but it's plain now from the book that Keith felt excluded, which is a pity. Time I reckon to move on."

Richards added: "Mick's right. He and I have had conversations over the last year of a kind we have not had for an extremely long time and that has been incredibly important to me.

"As far as the book goes, it was my story and it was very raw, as I meant it to be, but I know that some parts of it and some of the publicity really offended Mick and I regret that."

An eagerly anticipated world tour by one of the world's biggest music acts is now not expected to happen until 2013 at the earliest, according to the same magazine.

Some industry sources had put the delay down to the argument between Richards and Jagger, but Rolling Stone said it may be more closely linked to concerns over Richards' health.

"The quality of the guitarist's performances declined after he suffered a head injury on vacation in Fiji in April 2006, midway through the Bigger Bang tour," the magazine said.

As well as the tour, the Rolling Stones have announced the July 12 release of a picture book tracing their rise to global fame. The band debuted at the Marquee Club in London's Oxford Street on the same date in 1962.

There will also be a "groundbreaking" documentary film released in September. — Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Thursday, March 15, 2012

No Rolling Stones tour despite 50th anniversary

NEW YORK — The Rolling Stones are staying put this year, Rolling Stone reported Wednesday, leaving fans to look forward instead to a major documentary marking the rock band’s 50th anniversary.

“Basically, we’re just not ready” for a fresh concert tour, guitarist Keith Richards told the pop culture magazine, adding that 2013 was the group’s “more realistic” target for hitting the road.

Quoting other, unidentified sources, Rolling Stone cited worries about Richards’ health in the wake of a head injury he sustained in Fiji in 2006 as one reason for the band to stay close to home.

“They don’t want to do a full tour,” a concert industry source told the biweekly magazine. “They don’t want to travel, and there are concerns about Keith’s health.”

On their website, the Stones announced Wednesday the upcoming release of “a groundbreaking and eye-opening documentary,” directed by Brett Morgen, covering the history of the band from its founding in London in 1962 to today.

“The film will be showcased in September as part of the Rolling Stones 50th anniversary celebrations,” said the website, without elaboration.

Rolling Stone said the Stones reassembled in a London studio in December to play together for the first time since their Bigger Bang tour ended in 2007—with bassist Bill Wyman sitting in for the first time since he quit in 1992.

“We played a lot of blues and outtakes of ‘Some Girls’ and things like that,” it quoted lead singer Mick Jagger as saying. “It went very well.”

Whether Wyman would join them on the road in 2013 was still not resolved.

“I think he’s up for it,” Richards said. “We talked about it.”

source: japantoday.com

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Guitarist Ronnie Montrose Dead at 64


Ronnie Montrose, who is best known for his fiery guitar work as a member of the band Montrose, died Saturday. It is believed that the cause of death was prostate cancer, which he had been battling for the past few years.

"A few months ago, we held a surprise party for Ronnie Montrose's 64th birthday," a statement said on Montrose's official website. "He gave an impromptu speech, and told us that after a long life, filled with joy and hardship, he didn't take any of our love for granted. He passed today. He'd battled cancer, and staved off old age for long enough. And true to form, he chose his own exit the way he chose his own life. We miss him already, but we're glad to have shared with him while we could."

Born in Denver, Colorado, Montrose got his first break when he was invited to play on Van Morrison's 1971 album, Tupelo Honey. Additional appearances on recordings by Herbie Hancock, Boz Scaggs, and the Edgar Winter Group soon followed before he formed his own band, Montrose, in 1973. In addition to the guitarist, the band consisted of a then-unknown Sammy Hagar on vocals, as well as bassist Bill Church and drummer Denny Carmassi.

The quartet issued one of rock's all-time great debuts that year, their Zeppelin-esque album, Montrose, which spawned such soon-to-be hard rock standards as "Rock the Nation," "Bad Motor Scooter," "Space Station #5," "Rock Candy" and "Make It Last," all of which featured Montrose's tasty guitar playing. Hagar, however, would only remain with the band for one more release (1974's Paper Money) before exiting the group.

Still, the two Hagar/Montrose albums proved influential to subsequent bands, as evidenced by all the rock acts covering Montrose tunes, including Iron Maiden, who covered "I've Got the Fire" and "Space Station #5." Interestingly, Van Halen (the group Hagar would eventually front for two separate stints) would cover the songs "Rock Candy" and "Make It Last" during their early club days.

Source: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/guitarist-ronnie-montrose-dead-at-64-20120304

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Keith Richards, Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy and More Celebrate Hubert Sumlin in New York


Close to midnight last night at New York's Apollo Theater, Eric Clapton had just finished a thunderous take on classic blues number "Forty Four" when Keith Richards ambled onstage with no introduction. Wearing a dark blazer, long green scarf, fedora and a huge grin, he embraced Clapton and stood center stage to massive applause, delivering a smoky take on Wolf’s "Going Down Slow," a chronicle of a frail man who has savored life’s greatest pleasures. "Man, I've had things that kings and queens will never have," Richards growled. "In fact, they don't even know about them, let alone get ’em. And good times? Mmmm...." He hovered around Clapton and then stood sidestage by the piano while Clapton delivered a throaty verse and then weaved clean-toned solos with young Austin guitarist Gary Clark Jr.

There were many highlights at Howlin for Hubert – a tribute to guitarist Hubert Sumlin, who played in Howlin’ Wolf’s band for decades and passed away on December 4th due to heart failure – but that was the peak. It was Richards’ first major musical appearance since the Rolling Stones last toured five years ago, and he showed little rust. After "Going Down Slow," he sat down and played metallic 12-string slide while singing "Little Red Rooster," and then strapped on a Gibson electric guitar to sing and trade licks with Clapton on "Spoonful." "It’s good to be back," Richards said, peering up to the balcony before breaking into a cackle. "Goddamn, it’s good to be back."

The entire show, which featured all-stars including Buddy Guy, Billy Gibbons, Warren Haynes, Jimmie Vaughan, Derek Trucks, Doyle Bramhall II and Elvis Costello – plus overlooked legends like Wolf’s former bandmates, harmonica player James Cotton, guitarist Jody Williams and saxophonist Eddie Shaw – was one for the history books. The event originated while Sumlin was still alive as a celebration to mark his 80th birthday. It stayed that way; Guest after guest recounted Sumlin’s unfaltering positivity and passion for his instrument. At one point, Toni Ann Mamary, Sumlin’s longtime manager and companion, tearfully recalled Sumlin tellling her, "I’m gonna be there. I don’t care if I play – I’m going to be there." She added, "Can you feel him?"

The night began with a film featuring classic Sumlin performance footage and a recent interview with him, where Sumlin humorously described how he found his own piercing signature sound after Wolf strongly urged him to lose the guitar pick. The stage lights then revealed two massive portraits of Sumlin behind the stage. His sunburst Stratocaster sat on a stand at center stage, with his trademark feathered cap hanging off of it. Clapton emerged – with short, slicked-back hair and wearing a blazer – with Cotton, Sumlin’s old musical partner. Clapton kicked the night off howling an acoustic, stomping "Key to the Highway," complemented by Cotton’s razor-sharp harp fills....

source: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/keith-richards-eric-clapton-buddy-guy-and-more-celebrate-hubert-sumlin-in-new-york-20120225

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Black Sabbath Guitarist Tony Iommi Diagnosed With Lymphoma


Tony Iommi, guitarist for pioneering British heavy metal band Black Sabbath, has been diagnosed with lymphoma, the band announced Monday.

In a statement to Fox411.com, a rep for Iommi, 63, said the guitarist was in the early stages of the disease and working with his doctors to establish a treatment plan.

He "remains upbeat" and is "determined to make a full and successful recovery," the statement said. "His bandmates would like everyone to send positive vibes to the guitarist at this time.

The news comes just weeks after the original members of Black Sabbath -- Iommi, singer Ozzy Osbourne, bassist Geezer Butler and drummer Bill Ward -- announced they were reuniting for a new album and tour. The original lineup last recorded an album in 1978.

The band has been writing and recording the album in Los Angeles with producer Rick Rubin, but will go to the UK to continue working with Iommi, the statement said. The album is still scheduled for release in the fall, but the status of the reunion tour was not immediately known.

source: http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2012/01/09/black-sabbath-guitarist-tony-iommi-diagnosed-with-lymphoma/

Friday, July 15, 2011

RIP Michael "Wurzel" Burston- Motörhead

Former Motörhead guitarist Michael "Wurzel" Burston died July 9 in London at the age of 61 of ventricular fibrillation caused by heart disease.

Tim Butcher, longtime bass technician for Motörhead frontman Ian "Lemmy" Kilmister said the news Saturday on Facebook page.

Michael "Würzel" Burston joined the legendary British rock band Motörhead in 1984. He had nine albums between 1985-1995 and performed with the band for 11 years. One of the best songs of Motörhead with Wurzel, "Killed by Death". When he left the band, "Würzel" was never replaced until he reunited with the band and performed live shows.

RIP Michael "Wurzel" Burston- Motörhead

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Jimi Hendrix


40 years ago, September 18, 1970 Jimi Hendrix died at the age of 27 in London. A documentary of Jimi Hendrix life has been released and it has got scenes of the guitar legend playing his favorite music for Little Richard. A number of his legendary making performances are also included in the documentary. It is Narrated by rock icon Slash, this documentary about respected and admired guitarist Jimi Hendrix features some of the famous rock musicians, and it also includes reminiscence of his Family and friends.


The life story of Jimi Hendrix will be recognized and marked whenever one of Jimi's songs are played or reproduced. There is only one Hendrix, an icon and truly one of the most respected guitarists in the music industry.