In honor of its 30th anniversary, my very first recorded album, ACOUSTIC GUITAR, released in 1979, is now available for download.
ACOUSTIC GUITAR contains ten original tunes and was a self-produced and self-financed project. There were only a thousand (vinyl) copies pressed. It has been out of print for decades.
A lot has happened between then and now (including the digital revolution and the invention of the cd)...but listening to it again I have to say, without intending any self-praise, that there is some very good stuff on my first record.
It was reviewed by GUITAR PLAYER MAGAZINE at the time, calling it "exceptionally fine...composional diversity and guitaristic brilliance".
I was very into 6 and 12-string fingerpicking back then...and influenced by Leo Kottke, John Fahey, and Jorma Kaukonen...but the album also contains jazz and classical-influenced compositions, as well as the roots of my later percussive sound.
A few facts:
-- I recorded the album with two acoustic guitars, a Martin D-28 six-string and a Martin D-28 12-string, at a studio in South Glastonbury (near Hartford), Connecticut.
-- Most of the tunes on the album were written while I was living on the corner of Bush and Steiner Streets in San Francisco between 1974 and 1977.
-- I had originally intended to make the album a mix of solo and ensemble material. Financial constraints made me change to a solo format. The album does, however, contain a duet with guitarist Jeff Pevar...an up-tempo jazz tune called "It's Not Just Your Face".
-- Out of the ten tunes on the record, five were named after women...and three of those were named Barbara: one a Barbara, one a Barbara whom I had nick-named "Boo Boo", and one a Barbara who had changed her name to "Jesse" before I knew her.
-- The tune "Bush Street Beehive" was written when I was living on Bush Street in San Francisco. The melodic idea for the second part of the tune was borrowed from a Larry Coryell tune.
-- The chromatically ascending bassline in the tune "Kristy" was inspired by Jimi Hendrix.
ACOUSTIC GUITAR marked the beginning of my recording career. It is a snapshot of who I was in 1979 at age twenty-four. It also offers clues to what I was to become as a guitarist and composer. Through the next thirty years and fifteen albums my music and playing have evolved much...but this record still sounds good to me.
Wednesday, 2 September 2009
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