The first guitar I was ever allowed to touch was a genuine American sunburst Fender Stratocaster – perhaps, to use an adjective that always makes me feel slightly ill, the most iconic electric guitar in the known universe: it was the shape we all drew when defacing school text-books. It belonged to an Armenian friend who lived on Downside in Wimbledon. His father, a businessman pal of the Shah of Iran, who used to leave his bullet-proof vest lying around the house between trips, would drag him in to play “Summertime” whenever relatives or business acquaintances were over. (His older brother was a replacement bass player for the Yardbirds and one of his friends would stand in for lead singer Keith Relf whenever he was ill - a frequent occurrence, apparently).
My pal also owned an impressive collection of DC comics and the Eddie Cochran Memorial Album. But it was the guitar that truly fascinated me. I wasn’t allowed to play the hallowed object – I wouldn’t have known what to do in any case – but I was allowed to fondle it occasionally (all guitar writing ends up drenched in sexual innuendo). I remember being surprised by how heavy it was, and by how “right” it felt when held in the traditional position (oh God, it’s getting worse!). One day, I thought, one day…
Having had a go on the worst electric guitar I have ever encountered, belonging to an acquaintance at school, my next guitar epiphany came via a gold-sprinkled Gretsch White Falcon hanging in the window of Sound City on Shaftesbury Avenue in 1968 or thereabouts. This still strikes me as one of the most beautiful objects I have ever seen, and I still intend to own one before I die. Of course, I was far too scared to actually enter the shop and ask if I could handle it – gazing at it on numerous occasions through the window was reward enough.
I eventually got round to buying a guitar in 1969 – a truly abysmal Spanish acoustic costing £10 from a shop in Putney. The “action” (the space between the strings and the fretboard) was about an inch. It sounded – in my hands at least – truly awful. I learned the standard Chuck Berry twelve-bar double-stop rhythm method… and that was about it. When I got to college and attended a few sessions of the weekly “Folk Club” I was awed by how many of my fellow undergraduates were able to coax such great sounds from an instrument which had utterly defeated me. Not for the first time – and certainly not the last – I felt inadequate.
Yamaki was a Japanese guitar marque which ceased exporting to the West in 1978, and folded soon afterwards. Their guitars were pretty well regarded and I’ve always been very fond of mine.
I send off for some Hal Leonard guitar books – note-for-note transcriptions of Elvis Presley and Chuck Berry recordings – and I’m away. Now I have something to do before dinner. And after. And in the early hours, if I can’t sleep (until the woman who lives downstairs complains). How my wife stands my endless, ham-fisted attempts to recreate Scotty Moore’s guitar part from “Mystery Train” and the solo from “Johnny B. Goode” is beyond me. She is a saint.
We move house and I begin to lose interest in the guitar. But then our son is born and – perhaps panicking at the prospect of being a middle-aged father, I find myself back in the same guitar shop. I have read lots of magazines and suspect that what I want is a Fender Telecaster (same price as its younger brother, the Stratocaster, as well as tinnier and more piercing, it’s the default choice of Hot Country musicians, and I intend to be the Hot Country picker sans pareilwithin a few months). Froggie tells me he doesn’t stock Telecasters because there’s no call for them (some people are just natural born salesmen), so I end up in Ealing buying a black US Telecaster for about £450 (no traditional blondes in stock), a 15 Watt Fender practice amp – and I’m up and running again. There’s less pain involved for Mrs. G and the neighbours this time, because you can plug headphones into the amp and just get on your own nerves.
Realising that the “reverb” function on my amp won’t in fact provide the vast amounts of echo I crave, I buy a Boss Digital Delay effects pedal. I plug this in and play “Mystery Train” – and I am, to my own ears, Scotty Moore himself. I start laughing with delight and can barely stop (this is either a peak experience or a sign of hysteria).
Two years’ later, once more finding myself in a musical cul-de-sac, unable to improve my playing no matter how much practice I put in, I buy a Zoom GFX-8 effects processor, a fiendishly complicated machine which allows me to create practically every guitar sound known to man, turning my Telecaster into a Stratocaster or a Les Paul at will (I’ve tried a friend’s SG in the meantime, but it flummoxes me – huge sound, but it weighs a ton, the fretboard has the characteristics of a skid-pad, and, after years playing a Fender, it hangs all wrong – now, thanks to Zoom, I can recreate the sound of this classic stadium rock guitar without having to play one of the damn things).
Meanwhile, following advice in a guitar magazine, I ditch my Super Slinky strings (they’re less punishing on the fingers and they make bending easier, but the top strings sound weedy on a Tele, and you need to be a talented guitarist to get the bends right – and I’m not talented) and replace them with far heavier strings. The magazine’s right – I sound beefier and more accurate instantly.
Five years’ later and I’ve practically given up playing. I’m stuck in a rut, and actually getting worse. I can do some decent rockabilly stuff, I’ve learned how to Travis Pick (the thumb picks out the bass notes on alternatingstrings while your fingers play the melody on the higher strings, making it sound as if two guitars are involved), I can do the standard blues stuff – but I can’t get through a song without my fingers ending up in knots. I have several dozen guitar tablature books and endless transcriptions cut out of magazines – but I’ve reached a dead end.
My seven-year old son shows an interest in the guitar and we find a guitar teacher, a nice gangly young chap who lives nearby and who turns out to have studied music at Cambridge. From the next room, I listen to him teaching my son a few things on my old Yamaki – and I realise I also need this young man in my life.
After we’ve agreed terms for teaching my son, I ask if he’ll consider teaching me as well (separate lessons!). He asks me to play something: ridiculously, I start with Jerry Reed’s complex classic “The Claw” – and, humiliatingly, break down after 20 seconds. He asks me to play the opening to REM’s “Everybody Hurts”, and as I slowly pick out the simple, stately arpeggios, I realise what’s wrong with me - I’m getting worse because I have no technique whatsoever: I’ve never learned the basics, meaning that everything I do is a clumsy work-round. I need to be able to pluck each string cleanly, with equal force, and in time – and be able to place the right finger on the right string. I’ve been playing for years and I’m deeply ignorant and absolutely rubbish.
Two years later, my teacher wins his campaign to force me to buy what he calls a “proper” guitar. He has turned up with a variety of acoustics over the preceding 24 months – but it’s his own Taylor that really impresses me. It has a built-in pick-up so it can be amplified, but he recommends going the traditional acoustic route (on the basis, I suspect, that I’m unlikely to be giving concerts anytime soon). I head for Denmark Street, London’s guitar mecca, and try out about 30 different models – Gretsches, Gibsons, Martins, the lot – but there’s a particular Taylor 314 which sounds and feels better than any of them. I hand the gentleman behind the counter at Rose-Morris a cheque for £1350 and carry my purchase home as if it’s a new-born baby.
It’s a perfect country guitar, brilliant for finger-picking (my favourite style): it’s simultaneously loud and bright and warm. If I pick it up after a few weeks’ absence, I’m always surprised by just how tasty it sounds and how pleasing it is to the touch – it’s like driving a car with a leather steering wheel after years of clutching plastic, or getting an iMac after years of tussling with PCs. It just feels right.
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