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The Gibson Classic Interview: They Might Be Giants' Dan Miller

Gibson.com is pleased to present “The Gibson Classic Interview,” where we open our archives and share with you interviews we’ve done over the years with some of the world’s biggest artists. This week, we revisit Courtney Grimes' 2005 interview with Dan Miller of college radio kings, They Might Be Giants.

They Might Be Giants (TMBG). Named after a ‘60s movie with George C. Scott, the underground pop/rock/hint-of-polka group continues to “Flood” the hearts of millions. The group’s core duo, John Flansburgh and John Linnell (The Johns), began their friendship in junior high, but didn’t begin to work together musically until 1981 in Brooklyn.

During the ‘80s, the Johns released their first two albums, their self-titled They Might Be Giants (1985) and Lincoln (1988), which garnered attention from most of the country, and led the Giants to a constant touring schedule (with a guitar and a four-track recorder) as well as their first national TV spot on “The Late Show with David Letterman.” By 1990, the Johns signed with Elektra Records and put out their third album, Flood, with the contributions of several guest musicians. Along with the release of Flood, came another flood – They Might Be Giants were becoming alternative college radio superstars, and soon thereafter, expanded their sound to include a full band.

In the meantime, Gibson rocker Dan Miller was flooding stages as well in North Carolina with Lincoln, a band of his own. Lincoln was asked to open for TBMG and after Dan left Lincoln, the Giants asked him to join them. Dan came onboard in 1997, just in time to help propel the Giants to “the hardest working men in show business” status and celebrate the group’s 20th Anniversary in 2002.

Dan, who has just returned from a “Giant” trip to L.A., chats in an online interview about who he’s dating, Devry applications, and his career highlight involving a two-year-old.

How was L.A.?

L.A. was a total gas. Every time we head out there, something exciting and very L.A. happens. We seem to lead very ordinary (thanks the stars) life here in NYC, but for some reason, when we head out west we live these lives that belong to someone else.
We did this taping for MusicChoice at the House of Blues on Sunset. Since I don’t have cable, can someone Tivo it for me? The gig was going along great when the lighting board blew a gasket. As any budding A/V aide knows, lighting is a crucial part of television, without it we would have no idea which Olsen twin was which. So, the show stops dead in its tracks while the crew figures out how to proceed. I’m not sure what the solution was, but I think using a dimmer switch had a lot to do with it. Eventually the show gets up and running again and we had a grand old time. I think it came out very great. 

The next evening we did an in-store at Amoeba Music. There were so many people that they had to close the doors, which for a record store can’t be a good thing.  For me, that was the highlight of the trip. We’ve been doing some family music recently and it’s great to see parents and their kids boppin’ along while standing in the “New Age Heavy Metal” section of the store. At one point I looked down and a two-year-old was giving me the thumbs up – a career highlight.

How did you come onboard with the band?

The bass player (Danny Weinkauf) and I were in a band called Lincoln. For about 18 months, on and off, we opened for TMBG. I quit the band in Winston-Salem, NC in a scene that can be replicated by watching the hotel outtakes from “The Song Remains the Same.” I believe the hotel still has a lien on my house. I hitched home and was sitting on the sofa filling out applications for the Devry Institute when the phone rang. It was Flans (John Flansburgh) asking me if I wanted to go on tour with the Giants. When I awoke from hitting my head on the ceiling I started learning the tunes.

A Quick aside for historical reason:

I head down to the rehearsal space for my first time playing with the band. For this tour the band had expanded to include horns and the like. I walked into the room, as nervous as could be, and began what has to be the worst audition in the history of music. My nerves were shredded and I couldn’t play a right note to save my life. I think the horn players thought that I’d walked into the wrong room. We took a break and figured if I hurried I could get those Devry applications out that night. As I sat dejected in the corner the Johns came up to me and basically said, hey man, this isn’t an audition, you already have the gig - just relax. The results of those kind words were that I relaxed and played way better for the remaining time. It was a moment of great generosity from the Johns and I remain appreciative to this day.

We went on the road a week or two later and that’s that. I think it was about eight (Good God!!) years ago. It’s been one sweet ride since then.

What is your favorite TMBG song?

It’s hard to have a consistent favorite. I enjoy playing certain songs at certain times. There is acoustic solo in front of “Istanbul (Not Constantinople)” that I really enjoy doing. It’s a chance to work into the show some things that I’ve been working on in private study. The only criterion is that at some point I state the melody to show the crowd where we’re heading. If the tune is going well the band will join in and it becomes this spontaneous composition. When the stars align and I’ve done my finger exercises I think it’s one of the high points of the show as neither we nor the crowd know how it’s going to end up. Occasionally it’s a train wreck, but there is learning in those times, too.

Overall, the songs I enjoy playing are the songs where I can learn something from each performance. One of the great things about TMBG is that we’re all free to try different things on different nights. I have a real problem with repetition, as I get bored quickly. Obviously, you always try to stay inside the music, but beyond that you can try out different things.

And a favorite non-TMBG song?

There’s a lot of music I really dig listening to. Growing up on XTC and the whole British thing, I am glad that their influence is coming back around with this new crop of bands. Beyond that I suspect that I have pretty ordinary tastes in music – I don’t really focus on guitary music, a lot of that is really just an excuse to play your Guitar Center licks. I think musicianship goes behind songwriting and energy – if it’s a good song then I’m on board. I only notice great playing if it comes with a good song. I can’t seem to focus on musicianship if I don’t like the tune.

Tell me about your Gibsons.

I have a few. The one I’m playing a lot these days is the Les Paul Deluxe. I read somewhere that the mini-humbuckers were the replacement for the P-90 - an attempt to pull back on the “my god – who’s buzzing like crazy” that the P’s can have sometimes. True to the word, I find the Deluxe tight, punchy and nicely heavy in the mid-range, like a P-90 but without the sound engineer throwing something at me.

I just did a session where I was playing it. The engineer was planning all these plug-ins and do-dads to help the sound along, but when he heard the tone he just hit record and away we went. The amp was cranked and the guitar really sailed on its own.

I also have an early ‘80s 335. This was my first foray into the world that is Gibson and it’s been a steady friend for many a year. I love the slightly wider neck that allows me to reach stuff that my genetically fat fingers say otherwise. Our tech Robbie has done some very minor enhancements to it so that it feels super comfortable and solid as a rock. I don’t think the neck has moved for ten years.

One big must for a traveling musician is the reliability of your guitars. The last thing you need when you’re on tour is to show up at the gig and have to do a reset or re-intonate the guitar. It’s a real vibe killer that I have had to deal with many times on lesser instruments. Both of these Gibsons have shown to be all-weather friends.

Which one is your favorite?

I’m dating the Deluxe these days.

Do you think it’s been harder, having a more underground following than a mainstream radio fan base?

I think it’s been a total hidden blessing to be an underground band. Although, I do feel that we have peeked our heads above ground occasionally over the years. Survival in the music industry is essentially a myth. Take 10,000 budding musicians, whittle that down to the 2,000 who get to make records, whittle that down to the 20 that actually sell and then whittle that down to the two who can still afford to make music five years down the road.

I think what TMBG have been part of is creating a new way of thinking about what defines success for a band. As the band moves forward I’m constantly amazed at the variety of projects we take on. Everyone knows that the conditions are changing and musicians have to adapt to the new climate. What used to be the charts is now the list of the most popular p2p downloads. The Giants’ natural instincts are to make creative music, regardless of the format or outlet. This may be defined as ‘underground’ but my guess is that this will, or already has, become the mainstream way for working bands. Long live the Underground!

TMBG has been around for over 20 years. In your opinion, how do you keep gaining the attention of young audiences, while keeping the older ones?

This is a question that I’ve been asking myself for many years. It seems like we’re cloning our audience every five or six years. How it happens is a mystery to me, but God bless it. One reason may be what I was talking about earlier. Another, as I pat myself on the back, is the live show. For me, certain things about live music should remain a constant – if you can’t connect to the audience in your own special way, then you need to re-think your show. The Johns are exceptionally good at connecting to the people who come to see the show. Give us a good night without the technical snafus (not that often) and we’ll give you a live experience you’re not likely to find elsewhere.

Another small point is that TMBG is the kind of music you have to seek out and that makes it special. When I was growing up the music that I had to hunt for, the stuff that was not played all over the radio, was the stuff I was, and still am, into most. Music makes up a big part of who I am. Whatever illusions I live under, I don’t want the ‘me’ to be the most popular thing out there.

If you could offer one piece of advice to up-and-coming guitarists, what would it be?

This may sound like a joke, but I know it would work. If you figure out every part Jimmy Page laid down in Led Zeppelin, including leads and rhythm, you will be one the best guitarists in the world. He covers so many styles and still found a way to bring himself into it. The more I listen (and attempt to figure out), the more respect I have. If you manage to do this, let me know, ‘cause you can show me some things. I once read an interview with Elliot Easton and he claimed that every day he figured out at least one new thing. That makes sense to me. Oh yeah – write great songs!!


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Black Country Communion Implore Fans to Shoot Them

With their new album, 2, in stores now and a world tour underway, Black Country Communion have reached out to their fans with a unique offer. The supergroup, featuring Gibson guitar powerhouse Joe Bonamassa, vocalist/bassist Glenn Hughes (Deep Purple, Black Sabbath), drummer Jason Bonham (Led Zeppelin) and keyboardist Derek Sherinian (Dream Theater), have invited their fans to shoot video of the group on their current tour and post it on the band’s website. The video entries with the most views will be rewarded with prizes, including an Epiphone Les Paul Special II.

The contest is currently underway. All entries must be in by August 31. For more information, visit the Black Country Communion website.

06/18/11 Sayreville, NJ Starland Ballroom U.S.A.06/19/11 Washington, D.C. 9:30 Club U.S.A. 06/23/11 Vitoria Azkena Rock Festival Spain06/25/11 Sursee Summer Sound Fest Switzerland06/28/11 Vigevano Castle Sforzesco Festival Italy06/30/11 Stuttgart Killersberg Germany07/01/11 Offenbach Stadthalle Offenbach Germany07/02/11 Liepzig Parkbuhne Germany07/04/11 Munich Zenith Germany07/05/11 Berlin Zitadelle Germany07/06/11 Hamburg Stadtpark Germany07/09/11 Antwerp Openlucht Theatre Belguim07/10/11 Weert Bospop Festival Netherlands07/12/11 Copenhagen KB-Hallen Denmark07/14/11 Bonn Museumsplatz Germany07/16/11 Vienna Vienna Opera House Austria07/17/11 Loket Loket Amphitheatre Czech Republic07/19/11 Paris Bataclan France07/21/11 Dublin Vicar Street Ireland07/23/11 Llandudno Cymru Arena United Kingdom07/24/11 London High Voltage Festival United Kingdom07/26/11 Leeds O2 Academy United Kingdom07/27/11 Newcastle O2 Academy United Kingdom07/29/11 Glasgow O2 Academy Scotland07/30/11 Manchester O2 Academy United Kingdom08/02/11 Stockholm Cirkus Sweden08/05/11 Notodden Notodden Blues Festival Norway

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Live Wire: Music on Television June 20 - June 26

Just because MTV doesn’t play music anymore doesn’t mean there’s not tons of live music on television these days. Consider our weekly feature “Live Wire,” your guide to performances, concerts and rock star appearances on the tube. All times are EST.

Monday, June 20

The Late Show with David Letterman (11:35 p.m., CBS): Eddie Vedder

The Tonight Show with Jay Leno (11:35 p.m., NBC): Bono & The Edge

Lopez Tonight (12 a.m., TBS): Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings

Jimmy Kimmel Live (12:05 a.m., ABC): Panic! At The Disco

Tuesday, June 21

The Late Show with David Letterman (11:35 p.m., CBS): Drive By Truckers

The Tonight Show with Jay Leno (11:35 p.m., NBC): Marc Anthony

Jimmy Kimmel Live (12:05 a.m., ABC): Pitbull

Wednesday, June 22

Conan (11 p.m., TBS): Alison Krauss

The Late Show with David Letterman (11:35 p.m., CBS): Beady Eye

The Tonight Show with Jay Leno (11:35 p.m., NBC): Raphael Saadiq

Lopez Tonight (12 a.m., TBS): Marc Anthony

Thursday, June 23

Conan (11 p.m., TBS): My Morning Jacket

The Late Show with David Letterman (11:35 p.m., CBS): Noah and the Whale

The Tonight Show with Jay Leno (11:35 p.m., NBC): Justin Timberlake

Lopez Tonight (12 a.m., TBS): Pitbull

Jimmy Kimmel Live (12:05 a.m., ABC): Jill Scott

Friday, June 24

The Tonight Show with Jay Leno (11:35 p.m., NBC): Plain White T’s

Saturday, June 25

Saturday Night Live (11:30 p.m., NBC): Elton John, Leon Russell

Austin City Limits (check local listings, PBS):

Sunday, June 26

Hoppus on Music (8 p.m., Fuse): Rihanna Takeover


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This Day in Music: June 18th

Brought to you by ThisDayinMusic.com

Born on this day:
1942, Paul McCartney, The Beatles, Wings
1942, Carl Radle, bass, Derek and the Dominoes
1957, Tom Bailey, vocals, keyboards, The Thompson Twins
1971, Nathan Morris, Boyz II Men

1974, Peter Hoorelbeke drummer with U.S. band Rare Earth was arrested after a concert for throwing his drumsticks into the crowd.

1976, Abba gave a special live performance in Stockholm for Sweden's King Carl XVI Gustaf and Silvia Sommerlath on the eve of their wedding.

1977, Fleetwood Mac went to #1 on the U.S. singles chart with “Dreams,” the group's first and only U.S. #1, it made #24 in the UK.

1983, Swiss band Yello released the first three- dimensional picture disc, complete with 3-D glasses.

1988, “Doctorin' the Tardis” by The Timelords was at #1 on the U.K. singles chart. The Timelords were Scottish duo Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty, who formed KLF. The song was a mash-up of the Doctor Who theme music, Gary Glitter's “Rock and Roll (Part Two)”with sections from “Blockbuster!” by Sweet.

1993, A&M Records chairman Jerry Moss and vice-chairman Herb Alpert announced they were leaving the company they founded more than 30 years earlier. They had sold A&M in 1990 to Polygram for $500 million. Moss and Alpert started the label in the garage of Alpert's Los Angeles home in 1962. The label was the home to such acts as The Police, Bryan Adams, Joan Baez, Flying Burrito Brothers, The Carpenters, Joe Cocker, Supertramp and Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass.

1997, during a North American tour, U2 played the first of two nights at Oakland Coliseum, San Francisco supported by Oasis.

2003, Pop Idol creator Simon Fuller became the first British music manager since The Beatles’ Brian Epstein to hold the top three positions in the U.S. singles chart. Fuller, who steered the Spice Girls and S Club 7 to success, was in charge of bestselling artists Clay Aiken and Ruben Studdard, together with the American Idol 2 Final 10.

2008, A Los Angeles hotel filed a lawsuit against Phil Spector for failing to pay more than $100,000 (?61,000), in outstanding bills for lawyers and expert witnesses in his murder trial. The Westin Bonaventure Hotel claimed that by the time Spector's trial ended with a hung jury, the defendants owed the hotel more than $104,000 (?63,400).


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This Day in Music: June 19th

Brought to you by ThisDayinMusic.com

Born on this day:
1936, Tommy Devito, The Four Seasons
1948, Nick Drake U.K. singer, songwriter
1951, Ann Wilson, vocals, Heart
1963, Paula Abdul, singer, dancer, judge on American Idol

1965, The Who, Manfred Mann, Long John Baldry, The Birds, Solomon Burke, Zoot Money and Marianne Faithfull all appeared at Uxbridge Blues Festival, England.

1965, The Four Tops went to #1 on the US singles chart with “I Can't Help Myself.” Lead singer Levi Stubbs had not been satisfied with the recording session and was promised that he could do it again the following day, but no other session ever took place. The track that became a hit was just the second take of the song.

1968, The Rolling Stones scored their seventh U.K. #1 single when “Jumpin' Jack Flash” hit the top of the charts.

1969, The Doors appeared at the PNE Garden Auditorium, Vancouver, Canada.

1974, The Jackson Five played two shows at the Apollo, Glasgow, Scotland.

1974, The Delinquents a band featuring Mick Jones (later of The Clash) made their debut at the Students union bar, Queen Elizabeth College, Kensington. For more on this, see This Day in Music Spotlight.

1980, U.S. singer Donna Summer became the first act to be signed by David Geffen to his new Geffen record label.

1987, Guns N' Roses made their U.K. live debut at a sold out Marquee Club in London.

1990, Prince played the first of 12 sold-out nights at Wembley Arena in London, England on his current Nude European tour.

1992, The Greenpeace Stop Sellafield, campaign concert took place at G-Mex in Manchester, England with U2, Big Audio Dynamite II, Public Enemy and Kraftwerk.

2000, Eminem was immortalized in animation, with a new cartoon series, hosted on a new web site. 26 weekly webisodes were broadcast on the site, featuring Eminem providing all the voices.


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Saturday, June 18, 2011

Guitar Success System - The Only Guitar Course You'll Ever Need!

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Arcade Fire Make Florence a Crying Machine

Florence Welch, the charismatic voice of Florence and the Machine, recently admitted that meeting Arcade Fire took a toll on her tear ducts. In a video interview with Nylon Magazine TV, Welch copped to being star-struck when she met the Grammy-winning band.

“I love Arcade Fire so much,” she gushed. “Ever since Funeral. I'd love to work with them.”

She may have scuttled her chances of impressing her heroes, though, when she met the group’s frontman.

"I met Win Butler and I was so star-struck that I cried,” she laughed. “It was so embarrassing, ’cause I saw them play at the O2 [Arena] and then we went back to their after-party area and then they all came in. I was trying to talk to him and I just kind of [teared up]. And it was such a disaster. I was so star-struck that I cried, yes. It was a big, big moment for me… and I played it really cool."

Florence and the Machine are currently recording with producer Paul Epworth (Adele, Cee-Lo Green) in London.


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Kirbys Acoustic Classic Rock And Country Tutorials

Learn your favorite songs on the acoustic guitar with my step-by-step video tutorials. Tutorials cover Springsteen, Chesney, Ccr, Urban, Eagles, Beatles, Strait, Kiss, McGraw and many more. More than 800 and new tutorials added weekly.


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Garth Brooks and Leon Russell Headline Songwriters Hall Inductions

The Songwriters Hall of Fame got a big dose of country last night with the induction of Garth Brooks. The Yukon, Oklahoma native, who rose to stardom in the late ’80s/early ’90s on the strength of such hits as “If Tomorrow Never Comes,” “Unanswered Prayers” and “The Thunder Rolls,” was inducted by Billy Joel, who wrote the hit, “Shameless,” for Brooks’ 1991 album, Ropin’ the Wind.

“You talk about songwriters,” Brooks gushed to the Associated Press. “[Joel is] one of the greatest songwriters of all time. And he's taken a day out of his life to do this. I feel very lucky.”

Joining Brooks at the New York City gala was fellow 2011 inductee Leon Russell, who performed “Superstar” with Dwight Yoakam. Other inductees included Allen Toussant, Billy Steinberg, Tom Kelly, John Bettis and the duo of Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil, who co-wrote the Righteous Brothers’ classic, “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’,” with Phil Spector, as well as hits by The Animals, The Crystals and Paul Revere & the Raiders.

Regarding “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’,” presenter Bill Medley of the aforementioned Righteous Brothers said, “We were just lucky that they wrote that song for us.”


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Report: Google’s Les Paul Doodle Cost Businesses $268.4 Million

A report by Extreme Tech estimated that last week’s Google “doodle,” featuring a playable stringed logo in honor of the late Les Paul, cost businesses ?166 million ($268.4 million) in lost productivity. The doodle was released on what would have been the guitar great’s 96th birthday, June 9. It proved so popular that the search engine site left the doodle up on its landing page for a second day.

The report, released in the Daily Mail, claims that workers spent a total of 10.7 million hours playing with the doodle, on which they were able to record what they played and email that recording to their friends. During the two-day stretch, 740 million visitors spent an average of 26 seconds on the page.

Les Paul passed away in 2009 at the age of 94.


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311’s Nick Hexum Delivers Baby

311 frontman Nick Hexum recently avoided a 911, as he was forced to deliver his daughter, Maxine, without any medical supervision.

In spite of having planned for a midwife to deliver their second child, the alternative rocker was pushed to step up to the role when wife Nikki abruptly went into labor.

At one point, things got scary, when the baby girl became stuck in the birth canal.

“After Max’s head popped out, the delivery stalled for the next couple of contractions. The baby’s head was blue and the umbilical cord was wrapped around her neck,” he told People.

Thankfully, Hexum, 41, was sharp enough to draw on the memory of the couple’s older daughter Echo’s birth 21 months earlier, and he quickly started to wheedle the newborn out.

“I knew from observing and listening the first time around that sometimes the baby’s shoulder would get caught and they would have to reach in there and break its collar bone to free her,” he said. “I reached my fingers in there and felt the shoulders and rotated the baby back and forth.”

He jiggled her around and finally “heard a ‘wahhh!’ It was an amazing moment,” he said.

Ten minutes later, the midwife finally reached the house to cut Maxine's cord. Mom and baby are doing just fine.

311 will release their 10th studio album, “Universal Pulse,” on July 19 and tour with Sublime this summer.


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Mötley Crüe to Tour Down Under

McManus Entertainment has just announced that Motley Crue will be heading to Australia in September. MelodicRock.com is reporting that Motley Crue, with all four original members – Vince Neil, Nikki Sixx, Mick Mars and Tommy Lee – will take Poison frontman Bret Michaels along on their Australian ride, as well as Australian rock legend Doc Neeson.

“The amount of emails I have received from fans begging to put on a show like this has been overwhelming,” promoter Andrew McManus said. “The fans spoke, we listened, and it’s going to rock! To have all these guys on the one bill is huge. Australia, get ready to rock!”

Motley Crue, Poison and New York Dolls are in the middle of a massive North American tour that will swing through Phoenix tomorrow, Las Vegas on Saturday and all over the Midwest and East Coast for the remainder of June and July.

Motley Crue /Bret Michaels Australian tour dates:

Brisbane, Riverstage – September 21

Sydney, Sidney Entertainment Centre – September 23

Melbourne, Rod Laver Arena – September 24


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‘No Brown M&Ms’: Top Ten Tour Riders of the Stars

Life on the road is hard. You're away from your loved ones, your neighborhood and all your stuff! When you're far from home for so long, little familiarities backstage can be the only link to home and normal life that you have, so bands can be forgiven for requesting the occasional unusual or specific comfort item - anything to bring some sanity to those weeks or months away. Backstage riders – the contract document that spells out a band’s backstage requirements – are notorious for diva-like demands, but when you get to the heart of it, most rider requests are just about making the artist feel a little more at home.

10. Ted Nugent
Ted Nugent's 2002 rider stipulates that the tour is very environmentally conscious, and as such, no Styrofoam or polystyrene cups, plates or containers are to be used. Catering requirements include one box of MAN SIZED KLEENEX (yes, it’s written in uppercase in the rider for emphasis), and although the Nuge requests a carving knife, carving fork and cutting board for roasted chicken, that chicken is to be supplied by the concert booker rather than caught by Ted's own bare hands.

9. John Mayer Trio
Aside from requesting a wide variety of oral hygiene products and a box of children's breakfast cereal (one probably being related to the other), the 2005 John Mayer Trio tour rider clearly sets out Mayer's audience audio taping policy: let the audience have at it! Tapers are allowed to record the entire performance as long as they're not obstructing the view of other concertgoers (and even if they are, they are asked nicely to lower their tripod microphones or move to another area). The rider also advises that there is no barricade for the show, as the crowd is “very well behaved,” and suggests where to deposit small gifts and notes left by fans. Awww.

8. David Bowie
David Bowie's backstage food requirements appear quite minimal (although one imagines the elegant Mr. Bowie dining in the finest of gourmet establishments around town and looking super-cool while doing so, rather than tucking into a sweaty tray of deli meets backstage). It seems his main stipulation is a 12-cup Mr. Coffee machine. Temperatures are to be kept at a chilly 14-18 degrees Celsius in dressing rooms, which are to be stocked with rugs, sofas and dimmable lighting.

7. Black Sabbath
On the 2001 Ozzfest tour, Ozzy Osbourne kept a semblance of home life around him in amongst the excitement of a reunited Black Sabbath, via a dedicated Osbourne Family dressing room in addition to his own. The family room was stocked with candy bars, ice cream, veggie soup and various beverages and, more importantly for family man Ozzy, little Osbournes.

6. Metallica
The reigning kings of thrash metal insisted in 2004 that bacon be available at every meal and throughout the day. Interestingly, although Metallica are famous for jamming and writing in their tuning room prior to performances, their tuning room requirements are quite humble: four padded folding chairs with no arms, and three separate electrical outlets. Not even so much as a dimmable desk lamp in terms of ambience.

5. Bret Michaels
The Poison front man's rider from his 2010 solo Roses & Thorns tour reiterated that his name was to be spelled “Bret Michaels” on promotional materials, not Brett (or, presumably, Bert Miracles, a common nickname among fans on certain online message boards). The rider also points out Mr. Michaels' views on soft drinks, stating in no uncertain terms that that Sprite “is no substitute for Mountain Dew.”

4. Rush
In the Beyond The Lighted Stage documentary, the members of Rush talk of their excitement when they first realized they could order alcoholic beverages to be provided backstage by the promoter. Guitarist Alex Lifeson is even pictured posing proudly with a case of Heineken. Lifeson's love of a Heiney must have waned over the years, because by 1990 the rider specifically stated “absolutely no Heineken,” while outlining a selection of fine liquors to provide for the band.

3. Foo Fighters
Foo Fighters riders are notoriously entertaining to read. The band once famously requested a variety of 'stinky cheeses.' They also request Gatorade in 'wacky colors,’ and their taste in DVDs is relatively broad - with the exception of no Jamie Kennedy, Martin Lawrence or sports movies. A vegetarian soup of the day is requested because "meaty soups make roadies fart." Moreover, the Foo Fighters rider sums up the importance of the document in maintaining a sense of continuity for the band: "The silly items like gum and candy bars make a difference to these boys that are far from their families and friends."

2. Iggy Pop
For an Iggy And The Stooges tour, requirements included a monitor engineer who is "not afraid of death," as well as instructions from backline/stage manager Jos Grain for camera crews filming the show as unobtrusively as possible: "At a wet festival somewhere I once saw a guitarist being followed all over the stage by a cameraman and sidekick all covered, in bright fluorescent plastic sheeting, including the camera It looked like he was being stalked by a demented pantomime horse! I personally thought it looked absolutely terrible, and I speak as someone who believes that most rock and roll bands would be improved by the introduction of a pantomime horse." Grain goes on to warn that "Iggy adores breaking cameras, so really it's best not to get too close to him. Of course, I will be on hand to try and prevent him from destroying your equipment; unfortunately, there is only one person I can think of who likes to break cameras more than he does, and that's me."

1. Van Halen
By far and away the most legendary concert rider requirement was Van Halen's 1982 request for a bowl of M&Ms with the brown ones removed. Far from a mere flaunting of ego, this was actually a clever trick planted within the rider to raise a red flag if the staging requirements had been ignored by local crew. As David Lee Roth explained in his autobiography Crazy From The Heat, if brown M&Ms were found in the backstage area, it would be a good bet that some important technical aspect of the contract had also been overlooked (although a glance at the actual document casts doubt on Dave's story that the M&M requirement was placed amongst the staging schematics - it was actually within the catering menu between the pretzels and the Reese's Peanut Butter Cups).

More riders can be seen at thesmokinggun.com


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Susan Tedeschi Recalls Childhood Conversation with Johnny Cash

Susan Tedeschi has revealed that, as a child, she had a brief conversation with Johnny Cash that remains one of her most cherished memories. “I was 10 years old,” said the singer-guitarist, “and I was auditioning for Annie, on Broadway. My grandmother and I were staying at the New York Hilton, and The Bee Gees happened to be staying there, as well. I ran through the turnstile and right into this gentleman who was dressed all in black.”

Tedeschi continued: “He says, ‘Slow down, little lady! Where are you going in such a hurry?’ I said, ‘The Bee Gees are pulling up!’ He’s like, ‘Oh, you like The Bee Gees?’ I said, ‘Well, they’re singers and I like singers. I sing, too.’ He says, ‘You do? Me, too.’ I said, ‘Really? What do you sing?’ He said, ‘Well, I sing and play guitar, and write my own songs. Maybe we’ll get to sing together some day.’ I said, ‘Yeah, that would be great!’”

“It was a wonderful little moment,” Tedeschi recalled. “He was wearing an ‘I Love New York’ pin, and he took it off and gave it to me. He said, ‘Here’s something you can remember me by.’ I said, ‘Okay, thank you so much.’ Then he left. Afterwards, all these people came running over, asking me what Johnny Cash had said to me. I had no idea it was him. Later I got to tell Willie Nelson that story, but by then Johnny was really sick, so I never got to meet him again. But I still have the pin he gave me.”


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Former Dream Theater Drummer Mike Portnoy Announces New Band

Not content with being named one of the top drummers of all time by Gibson,com, Dream Theater founding member and drummer for 25 years, Mike Portnoy has given details of his new music project.

The band is called Adrenaline Mob and features Russell Allen from Symphony X on vocals, Mike Orlando from Sonic Stomp and Rich Ward of Fozzy on guitar, alongside bass player Paul DiLeo. The band will make their live debut in New York on Friday, June 24 at The Hiro Ballroom, 16th Street and 9th Avenue.

The Adrenaline Mob are also currently working on a debut album.


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This Day in Music: June 17th

Brought to you by ThisDayinMusic.com

Born on this day:

1930, Cliff Gallup, guitarist, Gene Vincent and His Blue Caps
1946, Barry Manilow, singer, songwriter
1947, Glenn Buxton, guitar, Alice Cooper Band
1947, Paul Young, singer, Sad Cafe

1954, guitarist Danny Cedrone died following a freak accident after he had recorded the lead guitar break on “Rock Around The Clock” with Bill Haley and His Comets. For more on this story, see This Day in Music Spotlight.

1955, after a month of booking gigs in larger venues in Dallas and Houston, Colonel Tom Parker arranged a meeting with Elvis Presley's manager, Bob Neal, resulting in an agreement that saw the Colonel handle Presley's gigs and career strategy from now on.

1965, The Kinks and the Moody Blues made their U.S. concert debut at the Academy of Music in New York City.

1971, Carole King went to #1 on the U.S. album chart with Tapestry for the first of 15 consecutive weeks. The album contained “It's Too Late,” “I Feel the Earth Move,” “Will You Love Me Tomorrow?” and “You've Got a Friend.”

1972, Don McLean had his first U.K. #1 single with “Vincent.” The song was written about the 19th century artist Vincent Van Gogh. The song is played daily at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam.

1977, After Jimmy Helms pulled out of a gig at Shoreditch College, the members of the social committee decided to call upon famous local, Elton John who lived up the road and ask if he would perform. Elton did the gig for two bottles of wine.

1978, Andy Gibb became the first solo artist in the history of the U.S. charts to have his first three releases reach #1, when “Shadow Dancing” hit the top of the chart. Spending seven weeks at #1 it became the best selling single in the U.S. in 1978.

2008, Welsh singer Duffy's single Mercy was named song of the year at the Mojo magazine awards held in London. Best breakthrough act went to The Last Shadow Puppets - the side project of Arctic Monkeys singer Alex Turner. Other acts honored at the reader-voted Mojo Honours included Led Zeppelin, Paul Weller, the Sex Pistols and Genesis. Ska band the Specials were welcomed into the Mojo Hall of Fame and former Creedence Clearwater Revival frontman John Fogerty, won the inspiration award for his contribution to rock music.


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Anniversary Tour for The Damned

British punk originals The Damned will mark their 35th anniversary as a band with a fall U.S. tour followed by a trek around the U.K at the end of the year

The band are set to play complete live versions of both of their classic albums, Damned Damned Damned and The Black Album.

The Damned tour dates:

October
20th – Cambridge, MA, Middle East
22nd – New York, NY, Irving Plaza
23rd – Washington DC, Black Cat
25th – Chicago, IL, Metro/Smart Bar
27th – Seattle, WA, Showbox at The Market
29th – San Francisco, CA, Slims
30th – Los Angeles, CA, House Of Blues
31st – Anaheim, CA, House Of Blues

November
1st – San Diego, CA, House Of Blues
9th –  Bristol, Academy
10th – Birmingham, Academy
11th – Cambridge, Corn Exchange
12th – London, Roundhouse
13th – Brighton, East Wing
14th – Norwich, UEA
15th – Nottingham, Rock City
17th – Newcastle, Academy
18th – Leeds, Academy
19th – Manchester, Academy
20th – Edinburgh, Picture House


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George Clinton Abducted by Aliens

Funk legend George Clinton will give a lecture on outer space at the British Library in London on Saturday, June 18. 

According to Spinner.com the talk is part of the Out of this World exhibition.

Clinton has a long-held fascination with space and aliens. In the '70s, he featured a flying P-Funk Mothership during Funkadelic stage shows.

Clinton told the Guardian newspaper about one of his alien encounters: “One day Bootsy Collins [bass player in Parliament and Funkadelic] and I were in a car. It was 11 in the morning, broad daylight, and we were only a few miles from home. Suddenly a beam of light from a UFO hit us and we couldn't see a thing.

“It felt like only a few moments later when I got to my house, but my daughter said it was late and she was ready for bed. I'm telling you, time disappeared on that journey. We were taken to a weird place.”


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Guitar Hero Duane Eddy Returns with Album and Dates

Guitar legend Duane Eddy will release a brand new album on June 20 in the U.K.

He’s also playing London’s prestigious 100 Club on June 21, as well as Britain’s premier outdoor festival, Glastonbury, on June 26.

This is Eddy’s first album in 24 years and was produced by singer Richard Hawley. Eddy lived in England for the duration of the project and enjoyed his time in Sheffield: “The people there are like the people in Nashville – friendly, sweet and wonderful people.”

He also told Spinner.com that he enjoyed the Yorkshire beer: “I like to have my pint! I like the occasional pint of Guinness, too, but that's a little thick. You can almost chew it! But I love the taste of English ale.”

The king of the twang guitar spoke about how he got that unique sound back in the day: “We didn't have an echo chamber. Before I started we all went down to Salt River and we found a 2000-gallon water tank that echoed. The studio owner bought it and shipped it up to his studio and put it out in his parking lot with a speaker in one end and a mic in another. We ran my guitar and the other instruments through it and it gave us the echo.”


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Thursday, June 16, 2011

Lil Wayne Relates to Nirvana

Hip hop star Lil Wayne has revealed that he was a Nirvana fan when he was a teen.

NME.com reports that rock music fired the young rapper’s  rebellious spirit. He told MTV: "'Smells Like Teen Spirit' was the only rock song that [would] come on and you’d be like, ‘That one is OK, I can deal with that one.’

“I was young and I actually listened to the lyrics. I probably felt at that time I was rebelling and I can associate myself with that. [I could] relate to the things he [vocalist Kurt Cobain] was talking about in the songs. I probably couldn’t, but I thought I could.”

Lil Wayne will be a guest vocalist on Limp Bizkit's next album Gold Cobra.


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Marty Friedman ‘Absolutely Not’ Interested in Megadeth Reunion

Lightning-quick axeman Marty Friedman recently sold all of his prized Megadeth-era guitars to help raise money for Japanese earthquake victims. Friedman, who is now based in Tokyo, told LineaRock.com that he was practicing in his studio when the 8.9-magnitude earthquake hit the country in early March. “I was in the studio with my band in Tokyo,” he recalled. “So the studio was going upside down and everything; it was crazy. It was very, very scary — frightening.”

The guitars aren’t the only thing Friedman has shed from his storied past. The guitarist has also left behind any desire to reform with Dave Mustaine and company, even to take part in the 20th anniversary celebration of the band’s classic Rust in Peace album.

"Absolutely not. The past is the past. I mean, it was a wonderful album and I'm sure [the current lineup of Megadeth is] doing a great job playing it. So many fans want to hear [those songs performed live], that's for sure. Every time I do a guitar clinic, I'm signing that record like it's going out of style and they want me to play stuff from it. I'm so happy about the great impact that that record has and I'm sure they’re making a lot of fans happy doing it, so I support them 1000 percent. But it's not something that I'm really interested in re-doing right now."


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This Day in Music Spotlight: Arise Sir Bob! (Almost)

Special thanks to ThisDayinMusic.com

On June 14, 1986, just under a year after giving the world one of the most stunning charity shows in rock history, Live Aid’s Bob Geldof was named in The Queen’s Birthday Honors List. The Irishman received an honorary Knighthood in recognition of his humanitarian activities.

It was an honorary knighthood, not because pop upstarts don’t merit the full award, but because Geldof is Irish and a full knighthood is only given to citizens of the Commonwealth. Recipients like Geldof are allowed to use the letters KBE (Knight of the British Empire) but cannot use the title, Sir.

Why was Geldof, an ex-pop star in the mid ‘80s, so honored? The answer is simple. The man’s heart and belief, his stubbornness and cunning, and (crucially) his pop star past allowed him to prove on a massive scale that humanity does indeed care and that rock and roll can still change the world.

Geldof left Ireland after college and worked as a music journalist in Canada before punk inspired him make his own music with the band, The Boomtown Rats. The Rats, more melodic and mainstream than many of their punk contemporaries, scored two #1 hits, “Rat Trap” and “I Don’t Like Mondays,” as well as a slew of top ten hits. Geldof was a sizeable pop star, especially in the U.K., until the mid ‘80s, when the band’s demise was in full swing.

Settling into life as an ex-pop star, Geldof was watching the TV news one night at the end of 1984. Shaken to his core by the suffering in Ethiopia, he went into action. As he recalled to Mojo’s Danny Ecclestone: “So I thought, ‘What can I do?’ I have a platform. I can write tunes but the Rats are not having hits. It's embarrassing - if I write a tune and the Rats do it, it'll look like we're trying to exploit the situation. Meanwhile [his then wife] Paula [Yates] bumps into [Ultravox singer] Midge [Ure] on [TV music show] The Tube - he's having hits. So we decide to write a song together. In the taxi over to see my mate I write the words to “Do They Know It's Christmas” and the chords: the basic C, F, G thing. Then of course it was clear I had to gather some people together. Through The Tube we'd got to be mates with Duran [Duran], so I rang [Simon] Le Bon. I saw [Spandau Ballet guitarist] Gary Kemp in an antiques shop at the end of the King's Road. Sting shares my birthday. Called Sting. So by lunchtime I had a band and most of the words.

Then there was this little kid who came to see the Rats in Dublin - he turned out to be Bono.”

Geldof kicked off the Band Aid charity with the all-star Christmas hit “Do They Know It's Christmas" and raised some $8 million for famine relief in Africa. Aware that a single was not enough, he badgered top U.K. promoter Harvey Goldsmith into helping him put on the biggest, most ambitious pop concert ever staged. Live Aid, with its dual concerts in London and Philadelphia, raised over $48 million.

Looking back on his motives, and where the spark to attempt such a project came from, Geldof recognizes that he always believed in rock and roll as a means to change, telling Mojo: “I go back to when I was 11. I wasn't interested in sports. The personal conditions of my life were awful. And into this non-world comes rock'n'roll, this liberated racket, which completely defines and articulates what I was thinking. A couple of years later I started an anti-apartheid thing with my mate Mick Foley. I was 13. I was reading Steinbeck, Studs Terkel, Woody Guthrie - so I was led to poverty by popular culture in a way. At 15 I couldn't be arsed going home, so I wandered around Dublin all night with a crowd called the Simon Community, making soup and serving it to homeless people and hookers. That was me. So when you get to Live Aid it's not that mad that I would reach for the one thing that I could always rely on - rock'n'roll.”


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McCartney & Lennon Really Did Almost Reunite

Paul McCartney has confirmed that he and John Lennon almost reunited on American TV in the ‘70s.

The Daily Express reports that McCartney was visiting his Beatle buddy in New York when Lennon said they should take up an offer to appear on the TV show,  Saturday Night Live.

McCartney told Access Hollywood: “He said, 'we should go down, just you and me... we'll say, 'there's only two of us, we'll make half the money...' and for a second...”

The reunion, however, failed to happen. "It would have been work and we were having a night off and so we elected to not go... It was a nice idea. We nearly did it."
McCartney also told Quiteus.com that he’s interested in working with Damon Albarn of Blur and Gorillaz fame: "We have kind of talked. Nothing serious, but I like what they do. I have run into Damon at things and we have talked. It's got near a couple of times but we never had the time, I suppose."


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Clarence Clemons in Stable Condition

Bruce Springsteen’s long time saxophone player Clarence Clemons is in stable condition, according to medical reports.

Springsteen fan site, backstreets.com, reports that Clemons is “responsive. His eyes are welling up when we're talking to him. He was paralyzed on his left side, but now he's squeezing with his left hand.”

Clemons underwent two surgeries in Florida on June 13 after suffering a massive stroke. At 69, he is the oldest member of Springsteen’s famed E Street Band and has been with the “Boss” since they formed the band together in 1972.


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Original Coasters Singer Carl Gardner is Dead

Carl Gardner, the original lead singer with The Coasters, has died. He passed in Port St. Lucie, Florida on Sunday June 12. He was 83 and had been suffering from congestive heart failure and vascular dementia.

One of the great vocal groups of the ’50s, The Coasters were one of the first black groups to crossover to mainstream chart success. It was Gardner’s voice on their best-known songs like “Yakety Yak,” “Poison Ivy” and “Searchin.”

Gardner retired in 1985 with his son Carl, Jr. taking over as the lead singer of The Coasters.


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Red Hot Chili Peppers Release New Album Tracklisting

The tracklisting for Red Hot Chili Peppers’ 10th album, I’m With You has been announced.

According to NME.com, the record will be released August 29 and was produced by Rick Rubin. Earlier reports have suggested that the album would be titled, Dr. Johnny Skinz's Disproportionately Rambunctious Polar Express Machine-head.

I’m With You tracklisting:
“Monarchy of Roses”
“Factory of Faith”
“Brendan”s Death Song”
“Ethiopia”
“Annie Wants a Baby”
“Look Around”
“The Adventures of Rain Dance Maggie”
“Did I Let You Know”
“Goodbye Hooray”
“Happiness Loves Company”
“Police Station”
“Even You Brutus?”
“Meet Me at the Corner”


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This Day in Music: June 14th

Brought to you by ThisDayinMusic.com.

Born on this day:

1936, Renaldo “Obie” Benson, singer, The Four Tops
1945, Rod Argent, keyboards, The Zombies, Argent
1949, Jim Lea, bass, piano, violin, Slade
1949, Alan White, drummer, Yes
1961, Boy George, singer, Culture Club
1963, Chris Degarmo, Queensryche

1953, Elvis Presley graduated from IC Hulmes High School in Memphis. His graduation photo shows him with a split curl in the middle of his forehead, which would later become his trademark.

1967, The Doors appeared at Steve Paul's Scene in New York City. Jimi Hendrix was in the audience.

1970, Derek and the Dominoes played their first gig when they appeared at London's Lyceum.

1972, Led Zeppelin played the first of two nights at the Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, New York.

1980, Billy Joel started a six-week run at #1 on the U.S. album chart with Glass Houses, his second #1 album in the U.S.

1986, Three fans died during an Ozzy Osbourne gig at the Long Beach Arena in California after falling from a balcony.

1987, Madonna played the first date on her Who's That Girl World Tour at the Osaka Stadium in Osaka, Japan. The tour became the highest-grossing tour ever with over $20 million.

1991, Nirvana appeared at The Palladium in Hollywood, California.

1994, Composer Henry Mancini died at the age of 70. Mancini wrote the music to “Moon River,” which was originally sung in the movie Breakfast at Tiffany's by Audrey Hepburn. He also scored the 1969 U.S. #1 single “Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet.” Mancini recorded over 90 albums and contributed music to over 100 movies, including “Theme from The Pink Panther.”

1995, Irish guitarist Rory Gallagher died after a chest infection set in following a liver transplant.

2000, Noel Gallagher from Oasis was voted #1 in Melody Maker's annual “Uncoolest People in Rock” survey. Marilyn Manson came second while Robbie Williams was voted third.

2002, Mick Jagger was knighted in the Queen's Birthday Honours.


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Roxy Music’s Bryan Ferry Honored by Queen

Brian Ferry has been honored by The Queen with a CBE in this year’s Queen's Birthday Honors List in recognition of his service to the British Music Industry.

Ferry told the BBC: “I would like to thank those who have given me the award, and all the musicians and others behind the scenes who have helped me throughout my career.”

Bryan Ferry will tour the United States for the first time in ten years this fall after completing a run of European festival dates promoting his latest album Olympia.


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How To Play Surf Guitar

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Top 10 Stories of the Week in Music News

It’s been another exciting week in the crazy world of rock and roll. Wild man of rock, Alice Cooper, said kids these days were afraid to rock. Slash tweeted that he was starting work on his next album and one-time Jam man Paul Weller brought out his own clothing line on Liam Gallagher’s Pretty Green label. Ozzy’s son Jack said he now respects his father, while reunited ‘60s legends Buffalo Springfield played Bonnaroo and talked about more projects. Google put up a fabulous Les Paul birthday doodle and Judas Priest said retiring was not in the cards. Finally, a rock festival in Belgium banned meat for a day in honor of Morrissey. Now that’s rock and roll!

1. Buffalo Springfield Says Bonnaroo Isn’t ‘Last Time Around’

2. Jack Osbourne Says Ozzy is ‘a Man Who I Respect’

3. Slash to Start Work on New Album Next Week

4. Google Celebrates Les Paul’s Birthday

5. Paul Weller Clothing Collection Coming Soon

6. Lynyrd Skynyrd Theme Restaurant to Open in Las Vegas

7. Aerosmith Going into the Studio Next Month

8. Meatless Festival for Morrissey

9. Alice Cooper: Kids are ‘Afraid to Rock’

10. Judas Priest’s Glenn Tipton: ‘We Don’t Plan on Retiring’


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This Day in Music: June 15th

Born on this day:

1941, Harry Nilsson, US singer, songwriter
1946, Noddy Holder, guitar, vocals, Slade
1976, Gary Lightbody, guitar, vocals, Snow Patrol
1985, Nadine Coyle, Girls Aloud

1958, The first teenage all-music show Oh Boy was broadcast for the first time in the U.K.

1963, Kyu Sakamoto started a three week run at No.1 on the U.S. singles chart with “Sukiyaki” the first-ever Japanese song to do so.

1967, Guitarist Peter Green quit the John Mayall Band. Green went on to form Fleetwood Mac. For more on this, see This Day in Music Spotlight.

1974, Elvis Presley played the first night of an 18 date U.S. tour by playing four shows at the Tarrant County Center, Fort Worth, Texas.

1982, Pete Farndon bass player with The Pretenders was fired from the group, he went on to form a group with Topper Headon from The Clash. Farndon was found dead in his bath on April 14, 1983.

1985, Dire Straits started a nine-week run at #1 on the U.S. album chart with, Brothers in Arms

1989, Nirvana's debut album Bleach was released in the U.S.

1996, US jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald died in Beverly Hills, California, aged 79. Already blinded by the effects of diabetes, Fitzgerald had both her legs amputated in 1993. Winner of 13 Grammy Awards, the 1956 Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Cole Porter Songboo was the first of eight Songbook sets. Appeared in the TV commercial for Memorex, where she sang a note that shattered a glass while being recorded on a Memorex cassette tape. The tape was played back and the recording also broke the glass, asking "Is it live, or is it Memorex?"

2002, A rare autographed copy of The Beatles’ album Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band sold at auction for ?34,000 ($57,800), more than five times the estimated price.

2005, Coldplay went straight to #1 on the U.S. album chart with their third album X&Y having already entered at #1 in the U.K. The last time a British artist had a simultaneous U.S. and U.K. #1 was in November 2000 with 1, a compilation of hits by The Beatles. The last studio album to reach number one on both sides of the Atlantic was Radiohead's Kid A in October 2000. X&Y went on to top over 30 global charts.


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Play Guitar With BandJammer: 6 Guitar Packages in 1

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Paul McCartney ‘Not a Popular Bunny’

Coming up on his 69th birthday and busily preparing for his wedding to girlfriend Nancy Shevell, Paul McCartney has also been looking back at the Beatles breakup.

According to the Huffington Post, McCartney realizes he was “not a popular bunny” with his Beatle cohorts at the time of the split. The terse “press statement” questionnaire he delivered containing news of his debut solo album, McCartney, was probably a mistake in retrospect.

"It's possible to read all sorts of other things into it, read all sorts of motives of mine into it, which is I think what happened," McCartney said. “For me, it was simply a way to answer some questions I might have been asked if I had done interviews.”

Looking back, he just wanted to get his new music released: “I've been accused of not thinking things through enough. I get enthusiastic about something and say I'd like to do it, so let's do it. And that's mainly a good thing, because you get things done. It can occasionally create difficulties because you don't think of the implications. And to me, I hadn't thought of the implications. I was just putting out an album of some stuff that I liked.

“If I had been entirely honest, I just would have said that John has folded the group. But I'm not sure that would have gone down well, either.”

Paul McCartney handled all the musician chores on his McCartney album, something he sees becoming the norm in 2011. “It's easier in retrospect to look back and say I was doing something that laid the ground rules for people to follow. When you think about it, that's how an awful lot of records get made now – people are in their bedrooms or their garages – because the equipment's better. So I was actually starting a bit of a trend, without knowing it or really intending to.”


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Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Lindsey Buckingham’s New Album Coming Soon

Fleetwood Mac’s Lindsey Buckingham will release his sixth solo album in September. 

According to NME.com, the veteran rocker is working on his first album since 2008’s Gift of Screws.

The new album is entitled Seeds We Sow and will be released September 5. Buckingham  has written all the material, as well as engineering and producing the record himself.

The first single from the new album will be “In Our Own Time.”

Buckingham says of his new record: “This might be the best work I've ever done. I think it's an excellent representation of what I do. It shows a certain maturity and musicianship, and I just feel like I have a lot of tools in my musical vocabulary from which to draw that are again the product of the choices I’ve made. It’s on my own terms. This is very much from the inside out and I hope I never stop doing that.”


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Monday, June 6, 2011

This Day in Music Spotlight: Punk Hero Dies in Paris

Special thanks to ThisDayinMusic.com.

It was June 5, 1990 and Stiv Bators, a cult hero from the New York punk scene was wandering the streets of Paris. For an outrageous rock and roll talent talent, known for his full-throttle performances that included self-mutilation, Iggy and Sid Vicious-style, his end was eerily unremarkable.

A little intoxicated as he strolled, Bators was hit by a car. Nothing too serious it seemed, or maybe his threshold for pain simply disguised the extent of his injuries. He casually mentioned the accident to his girlfriend Caroline t but said he didn’t need medical treatment. Later in the evening, however, Stiv Bators began to have problems breathing. His girlfriend called for an ambulance but it was too late. Bators died from a blood clot and internal bleeding.

Which is where rock and roll legend and myth come into play. Stiv Bators was a massive Jim Morrison fan and had just visited the Doors enigma’s grave in the Pre Lachaise Cemetery. Some say that Bators had told his girlfriend that he’d like his ashes scattered over Jim Morrison’s grave in Paris and that she complied with his wishes. However, film director John Waters, who directed Bators in the movie, Polyester, claims in the director’s commentary on the DVD that Stiv Bators’ girlfriend instead snorted his ashes.

Bators had exploded on the New York punk scene in the Dead Boys alongside Cheetah Chrome, Jimmy Vero, Johnny Blitz and Jeff Magnum when they opened for Brit punks The Damned at CBGB in April 1977. Signed by Seymour Stein to Sire Records (Stein had previously signed The Ramones), they released Young Loud and Snotty, an outrageously powerful slice of NYC punk, but the album failed to sell. As the label tried to move the band ever pop-wards, the Dead Boys split.

After some solo adventures, Bators found his greatest success when he moved to England and formed Lords of the New Church with The Damned’s Brian James, Sham 69’s Dave Tregunna and Barracudas’ drummer Nicky Turner. The band released three albums and an EP, but it was Bators’ post-Iggy stage antics that draw the band their cult following. One night, Bators almost hanged himself on his microphone cord and was recorded as clinically dead for two minutes.

The band broke up acrimoniously and Bators spent the latter part of the ’80s wandering from project to project and then moved to France.

Charles Young of Musician magazine talked to Dee Dee Ramone about Bators’ last few months in Paris. Dee Dee had gone to Paris to work with Bators on material for a supposed comeback. He was getting his health together, said Dee Dee.  

“I wanted to play punk rock where you have to be tougher than the kids,” he said. “We’d play for hours. His eyes would roll back and he’d chant, ‘Hate! Hate! Die, mother****!’  Finally he told me, ‘You’re right, Dee Dee. Music should be three chords and a grudge.’ Then he wrote ‘Helter Skelter’ on the mirror with a lipstick.”

Bators lived for rock and roll. A maverick and an outsider, he cared little for fame or fortune. He was a rebel until the day he died. As Dead Boys’ guitarist Cheetah Chrome said of his former partner in punk, “If there is an ice machine in heaven, Stiv is p****ng in it.”


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This Day in Music: June 5th

Brought to you by ThisDayinMusic.com

Born on this day:

1946, Freddie Stone, guitar, Sly and The Family Stone
1947, Tom Evans, bass, vocals, Badfinger
1956, Richard Butler, vocals, Psychedelic Furs
1971, Mark Wahlberg, Marky Mark, New Kids On The Block

1959, Bob Zimmerman graduated from high school in Hibbing, Minnesota. Zimmerman was known as a greaser to classmates in the remote rural community, because of his long sideburns and leather jacket.

1964, The Rolling Stones played their first-ever live date in the U.S. when they appeared at the Swing Auditorium, San Bernardino, California.

1968, The Jimi Hendrix Experience appeared on the Dusty Springfield TV show filmed on ATV, in London, England.

1971, Grand Funk Railroad smashed the record held by The Beatles when they sold out New York's Shea Stadium in 72 hours.

1976, The Who, The Sensational Alex Harvey Band, Little Feat, Outlaws and Streetwalkers appeared at Celtic Football Club, Glasgow, Scotland. Tickets cost ?4 ($7).

1977, Alice Cooper's boa constrictor, a co-star of his live act suffered a fatal bite from a rat it was being fed for breakfast. Cooper held auditions for a replacement and a snake named “Angel” got the gig.

1979, blues legend Muddy Waters (aged 64), married Marva Jean Brooks on her 25th birthday.

1983, during a 48-date North American tour U2 played at Red Rocks Amphitheater near Denver. The show was recorded and released as U2 Live At Red Rocks: Under A Blood Red Sky.

1990, American punk rock singer Stiv Bators of the Dead Boys and The Lords of the New Church died after being hit by a taxi in Paris, France. For more on this, see This Day in Music.

1993, Country singer Conway Twitty died from an abdominal aortic aneurysm. He had the 1958 U.S. & U.K. #1 single “It's Only Make Believe.” Until 2000, he held the record for the most #1 singles of any country act, with 45. He lived in Hendersonville, Tennessee, just north of Nashville, where he built a country music entertainment complex called Twitty City.

1993, Mariah Carey married the President of Sony Music, Tommy Mottola in Manhattan, guest's included Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, Barbra Streisand and Ozzy Osbourne. (The couple separated in 1997).

2007, Sir Paul McCartney released his 21st solo album, Memory Almost Full on the new Hear Music Starbucks label. It was later announced that all copies sold through U.K. Starbucks would not be eligible for the U.K. charts as the 533 stores were not registered with the Official Chart Company. The album was being played non-stop in more than 10,000 Starbucks outlets across 29 countries.


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Guitar - What Guitar Should I Buy?


If you have come to the conclusion that you want to play guitar the next step will be to choose a guitar to buy. There is a variety of instruments out there at different prices. Let's look at your choices.

What types of guitars will you find in a guitar shop?

1. The classical guitar. The classical guitar or Spanish guitar has nylon strings which produce a soft and mellow sound suitable for classical guitar music and for accompanying soft songs with finger playing.

Personally I have grown up with the Spanish guitar in my home as my father was a guitar teacher and we had a lot of guitars in our home all of them with nylon strings.

I have played a lot of styles with Spanish guitars like blues and rock music. Yes, it is possible to bend the nylon strings on a classical guitar when you play blues if you get used to it!

2. Steel-strung flat-top guitars. The steel-strung guitar is very good for strumming with a plectrum and for playing solos.

Nowadays I play steel-strung guitars a lot both with right hand fingers and with a pick. I like the crisp sound from the steel-strings. The drawbacks with this types of guitars are that they can be hard to play if the strings have too high action.

3. Electic guitars. An electric guitar has electromagnetic pickups transforming the vibrations from the strings into currents that in an guitar amplifier becomes sounds.

In this type of guitar the direct sound from the guitar is not important which makes it possible to have light gauge strings that are easy to bend. This makes it easier to play blues licks for example.

I usually play on an American Stratocaster because I like the crisp, clean sound and I can play different types of music on it. There are a lot of different types of electric guitars to choose from.

Nowadays you can find inexpensive electric guitars of good quality for example Ibanez or Yamaha guitars that are easy to play. I have a rather inexpensive Ibanez guitar that is very easy to play.

If you are a beginner wanting to start to play guitar my advice would be that you ask an accomplished guitar player to help you choose the right guitar for you. Even two guitars of the same model can differ in playability and tone.

I would also suggest that you buy your guitar in a music shop with experienced musicians and guitarists that can help you find out the best guitar for you.

I would also suggest that you buy an electronic guitar tuner to help you to always have your guitar well tuned. There is no guitar that is nice to play if it is out of tune.








Peter Edvinsson is a musician, composer and music teacher. Visit his site Capotasto Music and download your free sheet music and learn to play guitar resources at http://www.capotastomusic.com


Kaiser Chiefs Let Fans Customize New Album

With little warning, Kaiser Chiefs released their new album, The Future is Medieval, on Friday. The title is something of a misnomer, though. While the album is perhaps a tantalizing glimpse into the future of music marketing, it is hardly medieval.

The revolutionary aspect of the release is that it is completely customizable for fans. For ?7.50, fans signing onto the band’s official website can listen to 20 new tracks by the band, select their 10 favorites, place them in whatever sequence they please and design their own album cover. Participating fans then get their own web page to sell their version of the album. For every copy their page sells, the fans receive ?1.

Lead singer/percussionist Rick Wilson told the NME, "Is it the future of music? We can’t tell you that. If people want to compare it to Radiohead, that's their business. But we hope it might be a catalyst for other people to try similar things. Mix it up a bit.”

The Future is Medieval track choices:

“Back in December”
“Can't Mind My Own Business”
“Child of the Jago”
“Coming up for Air”
“Cousin in the Bronx”
“Dead or in Serious Trouble”
“Fly on the Wall”
“Heard It Break”
“I Dare You”
“If You Will Have Me”
“Little Shocks”
“Long Way from Celebrating”
“Man on Mars”
“My Place is Here”
“Out of Focus”
“Problem Solved”
“Saying Something”
“Starts with Nothing”
“Things Change”


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Guitar Licks Goldmine: 200 Rock Licks

Grammy winning guitarist and acclaimed author Mark Hanson teaches you how to play great fingerpicking blues guitar instrumentals on this DVD. Included are Mark's fun arrangements of Every Night When the Sun Goes Down, Stick With Me Baby, and his extended bluesy guitar solo of the classic Amazing Grace. Also included are Mark's sprightly ragtime composition 'Riff Raff' and a thorough explanation of developing fingerstyle solo techniques through multi-voiced back-up shuffle patterns. As an added bonus, Mark is shown performing his highly regarded arrangement of Water Is Wide. Contains complete music notation and tablature for all the five tunes. Includes individual lesson segments and multiple camera angles and close-ups all to help your learning!

Price: $24.99


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Pat Metheny Covers Beatles and Other Legends on New CD

Grammy-winning guitarist Pat Metheny will release a new album of covers on June 14. The album, titled What’s It All About, comprises the jazz great’s personal interpretations of 10 classic songs, including tracks by The Beatles, Burt Bacharach, Simon & Garfunkel, The Carpenters and more.

Guitar fans will find special interest in Metheny’s sonic choices. He recorded most of the record using an acoustic baritone guitar, with a few notable exceptions. The surf classic, “Pipeline,” is played on an acoustic six-string, and The Beatles’ “And I Love Her” was recorded with a nylon six-string. More exotic, though, is Simon & Garfunkel’s “The Sound of Silence,” which was played on a 42-string (yes, you read that correctly) custom-made “Pikasso” guitar.

“It is a song I have always loved,” Metheny said in a press release. “I am a huge fan of Paul Simon, in general. I had been experimenting with a way to play this piece on the Pikasso for a while. The challenges of keeping everything going on that guitar are significant, and the material needs to lend itself to that axe to make it work. In fact, at the core of that instrument is a six-string guitar that, for years, I have had in the same baritone tuning that I used on One Quiet Night (that is where the bass notes come from). This is one of the few tunes on the record where I stay in one key for the whole tune and the way I have that instrument set up is ideal for that kind of an approach.”

Metheny also talked about the influence of the Fab Four, which inspired him to cover the (mainly) Paul McCartney-penned classic.

“The Beatles were huge for me,” he said. “Without them, I don’t know if I even would have become a musician or a guitar player. When their hits started coming out, I was eight and nine years old and it had a tremendous impact on me. I saw the movie A Hard Day’s Night multiple times when it came out and I always loved that song. It is kind of impossible to imagine doing a record like this without including at least one Beatles song.”


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Live Wire: Music on Television June 6-12

Just because MTV doesn’t play music anymore doesn’t mean there’s not tons of live music on television these days. Consider our weekly feature “Live Wire,” your guide to performances, concerts and rock star appearances on the tube. All times are ET.

Live Wire Spotlight – Zakk Wylde on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (12:05 a.m. Monday, NBC)
Black Label Society frontman and guitar god Zakk Wylde is stopping by Jimmy Fallon’s late night chatfest this week. And Wylde will be doing more that merely performing his latest song; he’ll be sitting in with hip-hop house band The Roots for the entire show. Could be a really interesting night.

Monday, June 6
The Ellen DeGeneres Show (check local listings, syndicated): Mike Posner (rerun)
Conan (11 p.m., TBS): Ice-T, Flogging Molly
The Late Show with David Letterman (11:35 p.m., CBS): Anton Fig (Drum Solo Week)
Lopez Tonight (12 a.m., TBS): LMFAO
Jimmy Kimmel Live (12:05 a.m., ABC): Foster the People (rerun)
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (12:35 a.m., NBC): Zakk Wylde
Last Call with Carson Daly (1:35 a.m., NBC): Sarah Lee Guthrie and Johnny Irion (rerun)

Tuesday, June 7
Conan (11 p.m., TBS): Flavor Flav
The Late Show with David Letterman (11:35 p.m., CBS): Sheila E. (Drum Solo Week)
Jimmy Kimmel Live (12:05 a.m., ABC): Sara Bareilles
Lopez Tonight (12 a.m., TBS): Ice-T, Neon Trees
The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson (12:35 a.m., CBS): The Goldberg Sisters
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (12:35 a.m., NBC): My Morning Jacket
Last Call with Carson Daly (1:35 a.m., NBC): The Knux (rerun)
Tavis Smiley (check local listings, PBS): Ziggy Marley

Wednesday, June 8
Conan (11 p.m., TBS): Death Cab for Cutie
The Late Show with David Letterman (11:35 p.m., CBS): Roy Haynes (Drum Solo Week)
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (12:35 a.m., NBC): Joe Jackson
Last Call with Carson Daly (1:35 a.m., NBC): Nicole Atkins and the Black Sea (rerun)

Thursday, June 9
Live with Regis and Kelly (check local listings, syndicated): Natasha Bedingfield
The Ellen DeGeneres Show (check local listings, syndicated): Alison Krauss and Union Station (rerun)
Conan (11 p.m., TBS): Jessie and the Toy Boys
The Late Show with David Letterman (11:35 p.m., CBS): Neil Peart (Drum Solo Week)
Lopez Tonight (12 a.m., TBS): Barry Manilow
Jimmy Kimmel Live (12:05 a.m., ABC): Friendly Fires
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (12:35 a.m., NBC): Robbie Robertson
Last Call with Carson Daly (1:35 a.m., NBC): Girl Talk, Interpol (rerun)
Tavis Smiley (check local listings, PBS): Barry Manilow

Friday, June 10
Good Morning America (7 a.m., ABC): Jennifer Hudson
The Today Show (7 a.m., NBC): Kenny Chesney
The Ellen DeGeneres Show (check local listings, syndicated): Josh Groban
VH1 Storytellers (11 p.m., VH1): Ray LaMontagne
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon (12:35 a.m., NBC): DJ Quik
Last Call with Carson Daly (1:35 a.m., NBC): Lykke Li (rerun)

Saturday, June 11
Saturday Night Live (11:30 p.m., NBC): The Strokes (rerun)
Austin City Limits (check local listings, PBS): Lyle Lovett and Friends (rerun)

Sunday, June 12
Hoppus on Music (11 p.m., Fuse)


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Sunday, June 5, 2011

Guitar Scale Mastery

Dont waste your time and PPC dollars promoting low-priced guitar products. Why struggle trying to make your Ppc campaigns profitable? New Product,which means fewer affiliates to compete with.


Check it out!

GN’R Axeman Bumblefoot Survives Harrowing Car Crash

“I’m not dead yet,” Guns N’ Roses guitarist Ron “Bumblefoot” Thal tweeted from his Twitter account after walking away from a collision that destroyed his Toyota.

NME.com reports that Thal, who first started playing shows with Axl Rose and company in 2006, as well as recording on GN’R’s 2008 album, Chinese Democracy, was in his car when it was hit by another driver, which sent his car careening into a couple of other vehicles.

“SUV just ploughed into me at full speed,” Thal tweeted. “Car is totaled, 2 other cars she smashed me into. Well enough to tweet, means I’m not dead yet.”

Thal, who succeeded six-string legends Slash and Buckethead in Guns N’ Roses, tweeted his thanks to Toyota for its “functional seat belt, air bags & crumple zone, you saved my skull,” while also acknowledging the obvious: “O please, I’m in GNf’R – this is like a walk in the park, lol! B’doom CHA! (That was a joke btw… tapping mic… ‘this thing on?’).”


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Guitar Adjustment (Get All The Right Advice In One Spot)


Guitar Adjustment Made Easy

In this article we will be going over the best ways to make guitar adjustments. Guitar adjustment is an important part of playing guitar. "It is kind of like the untold secret." If your guitar adjustment is not correct you will have a hard time playing and learning guitar comfortably. In fact it will actually set off the sound pitch of your guitar.

Guitar adjustment is a very important part of playing guitar. Do Not Over Look It!

All guitar adjustment instructions should be done in the order of which they are laid out on this page. If guitar adjustment is done in any other order you may spend a lot of time repeating earlier steps.

Guitar adjustment takes time so please do not get in a hurry when doing these guitar adjustments.

So let's get down to it. This guitar adjustment article will cover Fret board conditioning, Bridge Adjustment, Truss rod adjustment, Pick up adjustment, Intonation and Fret Buzz.

Guitar Adjustment - Fret Board Conditioning

How do you know if your fret board needs to be conditioned? If your frets are not shiny, or if you see an oil build up happening, or discoloring on the wood itself it is time to clean and condition your fret board.

You will need to find a guitar friendly fret board conditioner. There is one guitar conditioner that many guitar players use, called Guitar Honey by Gerlitz. Conditioning the fret board can have a great impact on your guitar. It will make it look and feel better as well as make it easier for you to move around on the neck of the guitar.

Step 1. Remove your guitar strings.

Step 2. Apply Your Favorite Fret board conditioner.

Step 3. Wipe down the fret board making sure to go the same direction as the frets on the fret board and re-apply if necessary. You may want to use a soft tooth-brush for the tight spots by the frets.

Step 4. Install new strings or use rubbing alcohol to clean the strings.

Step 5. Install strings and tune.

Do Not use rubbing alcohol on the fret board of your guitar it will take the finish off over time.

Guitar Adjustment - Bridge Adjustment

How do you know if your bridge height adjustment is wrong? If it is hard for you to push down on the string and change notes your guitar bridge maybe out of adjustment. Or if the strings buzz no matter what area you play in.

Please keep in mind that you will want to use the measurement below only to get the adjustment close. You will want to adjust your bridge to fit your playing style and comfort.

To do this you will need to get a gaping tool that measures 3/64 of an inch and an appropriate Allen wrench.

Step1. Starting at the high E string and working your way up to the low E string. Measure this gap at the 12th fret open string. If the gap is to high loosen or drop the highest of your bridge. If the height is to low you will want to tighten or raise the bridge using the adjustment screws.

Step 2. Once You get the adjustments right with the gaping tool you will want to re-tune your guitar and try it out. If it seems like the strings are still to high then you can adjust them to suit your playing style.

Guitar Adjustment - Truss Rod Adjustment

What is a truss rod? If you look up by the head of your guitar right in front of the string nut there is a hole with a bolt in it. Note: Some guitars truss rod adjustment are located on the other end of the neck by the pickups. To make guitar adjustment to the truss rod if it is located on the pick up side of the neck you will need to remove the pick guard on most guitars.

Why Does your guitar Have A Truss Rod? The truss rod on your guitar is their to adjust the bow or Ark in the neck. Your guitar neck should never be completely flat unless your playing with nylon strings. You want your guitar neck to have a little bit of a bow in it to allow for string clearance.

Step 1a. So how do you know if the truss rod on your guitar is out of adjustment? You should be able to hold your finger on the 6th fret of the low E string and play the note without any buzzing sound. If it buzzes this is an indicator that your truss rod is most likely to tight.

Step 1b. Another Great way to test if the truss rod on your guitar needs adjustment is to hold your left hand index finger on the 1st fret of the low E string and your right hand pinky on the highest fret of the neck. Then tap on the 12th fret with the index finger of your right hand. If you hear a buzzing sound that most likely means that the truss rod is to lose.

Ok, so at this point we have a good idea of what the truss rod and neck are doing. So now if your neck is fine you are done. But if either one of the steps above resulted in a buzzing sound then it is time to get the tools out and do some adjusting.

Step 2. tools you may need will include a small Philips screw driver "To remove the truss rod cover" if there is one. An Allen wrench "For fender guitars there are 2 common sizes 3/16 And 3/32 and for Gibson it will be a 5/16.

If the Truss rod adjustment is at the top of the neck and has a cove the first thing to do is remove the cover. Then insert the Allen wrench and either tighten or loosen.

Step 3. When you put your finger on the six fret it buzzed then you would want to loosen it (counter-clockwise). If the guitar made a buzzing sound when you put your finger on the first and last fret then tapped the 12th fret, then the truss rod is to loose. You will need to tighten it (clockwise).

Please always remember you only want to turn the Allen wrench 1/8 of a turn each time. Then re-check the adjustment by using the steps above (Step 1b.).

Step 4. So how do you know if it is right? You should be able to put your index finger on the 1st fret of the E string and your other index finger on the highest fret on the E string. Now you will want to look at the gap or distance between the string and the metal fret at the 6th fret. There you want to see a small gap about 1/64 of a inch or less. You may need to adjust and check several times.

If truss rod does not move Take it to the pros and have them free it up for you.

If you are having problems with the adjustment or it seems like it is so close but you can get it right on you will be better off letting the guitar sit over night and allow the neck to acclimate, then give it another try.

Keep in mind it does take time to get things adjusted right.

Guitar Adjustment - Pickup Adjustment

After you make all the necessary guitar adjustments above you will need to check that your pickups are still adjusted right. If your pickups are to far away from the strings you will not get a very powerful sound. Although if your pickups are to close to the string the magnetic field from the pickups will give off a distorted sound and destroy sustain.

To make these adjustments you will need to hold the string down on the highest fret and check the clearance between the string and the pickup.

For Fender Guitars Adjustment follow the gaping table below.

Pickup Height

Texas specials

Bass side: 8/64"

Treble Side: 6/64"

Vintage Style

Bass Side: 6/64"

Treble Side: 5/64"

Amer/Mex Std

Bass Side: 5/64"

Treble Side: 4/64"

Lace Sensors: As close as desired, allowing for string vibration

For Gibson Guitar Adjustment follow the gaping table below.

Neck Pickup: 3/32" on bass and treble side

Bridge Pickup: 1/16" on bass and treble side

You will want to use a gaping tool to get this close and then adjust it to your personal playing style. If there is too much low end when you strum a chord then you will need to lower the pick up on the top or low E string side. If there is too much treble then you will need to do the same on the bottom end of the guitar or the high e string side.

The guitar adjustment above can be done with a simple Philips screw driver in most cases.

Guitar Adjustment - Intonation

What is intonation? Is making sure that the guitar is in tune with its self. If you tune your guitar perfect and then play a chord it should still sound in tune. But if it sounds like it is out of tune or some of the notes sound sharp or flat then you know you have an intonation adjustment problem.

Tools needed to adjust intonation. Guitar Tuner and screw driver or what ever tool is used for your guitar.

Step 1. Play a harmonic note at the 12th fret on the e-string and check it on the tuner. Then you should be able to play the note of the 12 fret and check it on the tuner. If these two notes show the same on the tuner then the intonation is correct.

If one is higher or lower than the other on the tuner then you will need to make an adjustment.

Step 2. Tune the string using the harmonic.

Step 3. Play the fretted note now and check it on the tune if the fretted note is higher or sharp then you will need to tighten or bring the saddle back away from the pickup. Make only very small adjustment each time.

Step 4. If fretted note is lower you will need to loosen or bring the saddle adjustment toward the pickups. Make only very small adjustments each time.

Step 5. Re-tune open string then repeat step 2 -4.

Step 6. Make sure harmonic note is the same pitch as fretted note, them move on to the next string.

When you are done with intonation guitar adjustment your guitar should sound a lot better. You will want to check what you just did by playing a full chord like E major or G major. If guitar sounds good then you are done if not you will have to keep working with it to get it right.

Just remember that guitar adjustments like this are very important and take time. So please do not get in a hurry when making your guitar adjustments.

Guitar Adjustment - Tips

When making any of the guitar adjustment above always work in a well-lit area and Use the correct tools.

Also be sure that you take your time on the guitar adjustment steps above. If you don't it could result in damage to your guitar. (Such as scratches or broken strings)

Best of luck and have fun playing and I will see you in the next article.








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