10.29.2011

Joe Satch talks Hendrix - Part 1

Joe Satriani talks Hendrix. This is one of the best interviews bar none from one of the worlds best guitarists.



10.25.2011

This is a great interview with one of the best slide guitatists of our time!

10.17.2011

Guitarists Bucketlist

  1. Play a real ’59 Gibson Les Paul Standard.
  2. Join an online guitar forum.
  3. Get into an argument with someone on an online guitar forum.
  4. Get invited upstairs at Gruhn Guitars in Nashville, Tennessee to see the good stuff.
  5. Fire a drummer.
  6. Take a factory tour at C.F. Martin & Co in Nazareth, Pennsylvania.
  7. Have at least two quotes from This is Spinal Tap committed to memory.
  8. Attend Eric Clapton’s Crossroads Festival.
  9. Host a house concert.
  10. Play “Eight Miles High” on a Rickenbacker 12-string.
  11. Perform a song you wrote at an open mic.
  12. Order a custom guitar from an independent luthier.
  13. Pay for a neck reset.
  14. Buy a ukulele in Hawaii.
  15. Have a moment of twang on an original Blackguard Telecaster.
  16. Stick a mirror in your acoustic guitar’s sound hole to look at the bracing.
  17. Attend a NAMM show, the annual trade show for musical instrument manufacturers held in Anaheim, California.
  18. Own a guitar worth more than your daily driver.
  19. Find yourself in a strange neighborhood chasing a Craigslist lead.
  20. See B.B. King perform.
  21. Swear off a particular brand of strings.
  22. Go to the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival in San Francisco, one of the world’s greatest music festivals and it’s completely free.
  23. Film yourself playing and post it on YouTube.
  24. Introduce yourself to one of your guitar heroes after a concert.
  25. Order a flight case to keep your favorite instrument safe and sound.
  26. Teach a kid his/her first three chords.
  27. Install a humidity gauge somewhere in your house.
  28. Change a broken string onstage in the middle of your set.
  29. Walk around Greenwich Village in New York City contemplating Bob Dylan and step into Matt Umanov’s store.
  30. Travel to Paracho, Mexico to see the world’s only community centered around guitar building and order a nylon stringed model to take home.
  31. Play “Wipe Out” through a spring reverb. 
  32. See a show at McCabe’s Guitars in Santa Monica, California.
  33. Play a show at McCabe’s Guitars in Santa Monica, California
  34. Attend a guitar-centric summer camp such as Jorma Kaukonen’s Fur Peace Ranch or the Puget Sound Guitar Workshop.
  35. Listen to Leo Kottke tell a joke between songs at one of his concerts.
  36. Take a class at the Old Town School of Folk Music in Chicago.
  37. Take a long roadtrip listening to Ry Cooder’s Paris, Texas soundtrack.
  38. Hoard a stash of tone woods for a custom guitar that you haven’t fully decided upon yet.
  39. Hold a blacklight up to a vintage guitar to see if it’s had any finish work done.
  40. Install a boutique set of pickups by yourself – will do that too, soon enough!
  41. Buy a cheap acoustic guitar specifically for outdoor jams and barbeques.
  42. Strum a pre-war Martin herringbone.
  43. Play a Carter Family tune on an old 16″ Gibson L-5 like Maybelle’s.
  44. Buy a pick that costs more than $20.
  45. Lend a piece of expensive gear to a musician far more proficient than you.
  46. Play through a tape echo.
  47. Attend a multi-day bluegrass festival like MerleFest or Telluride; partake in too much music and other stuff.
  48. Carry more than $5000 in cash to a vintage guitar show, just in case something catches your eye.
  49. Play a little Robert Johnson on a 1920′s or ’30′s Gibson L-00 or L-1.
  50. Talk about vintage Martin guitars with expert Richard Johnston of Gryphon Stringed Instruments in Palo Alto, California.
  51. Play Django Reinhardt’s “Minor Swing” on a Selmer-style guitar.
  52. Peruse the halls of the Montreal Guitar Show, a giant showcase of the world’s best lutherie held every July during the Montreal Jazz Festival.
  53. Burn yourself on a hot vacuum tube.
  54. Busk.
  55. Find yourself backstage at a stadium rock concert.
  56. Play a Collings at Quincy’s Guitars in Austin, Texas.
  57. Learn how to Travis pick.
  58. Visit the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, Tennessee.
  59. Refuse to buy an otherwise great guitar because you don’t like the way the neck feels.
  60. Have Westwood Music‘s Fred Walecki captivate you for at least an hour with storytelling and guitars.
  61. Drop your guitar and then realize it’s not the end of the world.
  62. Learn the middle and end of “Stairway to Heaven.”
  63. Grow your fingernails out.
  64. Capture a Les Paul Monday at the Iridium in New York City (bonus points if you actually saw Les Paul play when you could).
  65. Try to play a harp guitar.
  66. Adjust a truss rod without any outside help.
  67. Attend a show at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee.
  68. Play a vintage Weissenborn.
  69. Force your family to visit Buffalo Brothers and take a Taylor Guitars factory tour on your San Diego vacation.
  70. Own Harry Smith’s Anthology of American Folk Music, the influential boxed set of early blues and old-time music.
  71. Build your own cigar box guitar.
  72. Find your inner bluesman by taking a pilgrimage to the Crossroads Monument in Clarksdale, Mississippi, where Highways 61 and 49 meet.
  73. Attempt to play “Dueling Banjos” on a 5-string banjo.
  74. Learn an open tuning.
  75. Buy a 12-string guitar.
  76. Go to Elderly Instruments in East Lansing, Michigan and ask to see the Tone Balls.
  77. Collect a vintage set of strings for the cool packaging, even though you have no intention of ever using them.
  78. Buy a short-scale or parlor guitar specifically for travelling.
  79. Find yourself on the Staten Island Ferry holding an instrument you just purchased fromMandolin Brothers.
  80. Play James Taylor’s “Fire and Rain” on an Olson guitar.
  81. Scratch and sniff a piece of Brazilian rosewood.
  82. Go to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, Ohio.
  83. Conduct a photo shoot with your current guitar quiver.
  84. Own at least one guitar made in Kalamazoo, Michigan.
  85. Own at least one guitar made in Fullerton, California.
  86. Visit the Cavern Club in Liverpool.
  87. Learn a song written by a musician who is fifteen years younger than you.
  88. Learn a song written by a musician who died before you were born.
  89. Restring your guitar in “Nashville” tuning.
  90. Play “Little Wing” on a Strat loud enough to upset the neighbors.
  91. Go look at the Stradivarius guitar at the National Music Museum at the University of South Dakota in Vermillion.
  92. Catch a set by Telecaster whiz Redd Volkaert at Austin’s Continental Club.
  93. Regret that you sold a great guitar when you were younger and needed the cash.
  94. Learn the difference between a Duolian and a Triolian.
  95. Contemplate buying a guitar made the year you were born.
  96. Own an effects pedal not carried by Guitar Center.
  97. Miss a day of work because you were up too late playing.
  98. Write a song for your significant other.
  99. Subscribe to the Fretboard Journal.
  100. Order a custom guitar and amplifier to create your own unique sound.

10.16.2011

Blues Masters iPad App


Cherry Lane publishing has jumped into the iPad app business with an awesome Blues Master application created by G-Men Productions. There are two versions: the Free Blues Masters app which includes a dozen licks from 8 top-notch blues players (Stevie Ray Vaughan, BB King, Albert King, Eric Clapton among others) and the $9.99 paid version that includes 16 artists and over 100 licks.
 
Of all the guitar applications I've seen, this one has the highest production value. Cherry Lane has really done a great job using the iPad interface to showcase the artists and then show off the licks. You get the lick with a backing track, video (in some cases) and a tablature that animates. Well, not exactly Guitar Pro style animation, but it does a pretty good job showing you where you are when the lick is being played. Since all the licks are in the key of G you can mix and match to put together some interesting styles.

The free application is a great introduction to the full-blown app and it's useful in its own right. Even if you're just starting out with the blues, you'll find some useful licks here that you can easily put into practice.

My only beef (and it's really quite minor) is that for beginning players it would be useful to provide some basic information about the key (G), and what Pentatonic shapes are being used. It would also be nice to have some options to transpose the licks into other keys. Still, that's not much of a knock on a great application.

As much as I love the TrueFire 50 Licks series of iPad applications, Cherry Lane has just raised the bar.