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Angus Clark: Rock & Roll and the Importance of Quality Footwear

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Angus Clark may not be as well known as some of the super shredders out there, but he's built a career with his powerful and expressive style of rock guitar.  From his early days playing in local bands to breaking out with Kitaro and his eight year holiday tour with Trans-Siberian Orchestra, Clark has always had lot going on.  He's got a new instrumental album "Your Last Battlefield" available on iTunes, CD Baby and Amazon and will be teaching a workshop at the National Guitar Workshop (NGW) June 27 in McLean, Virginia.

Angus took some time out of his schedule to give us a rundown of how he got started in music, the importance of quality footwear on stage and other good advice for aspiring musicians.

Q. What first got you interested in playing guitar?

Angus: My parents got me a nylon string guitar at some point in fourth or fifth grade, and I think all I was listening to then was the Monkees, 'cause of the TV show, and the Beatles, 'cause the only two rock records my parents had were Sgt. Pepper's and Revolver. They also had the Stones' Beggar's Banquet, but I was more of a Beatles kid. But I couldn't wrap my head around the whole "practicing thing", so the guitar went in the closet until Pink Floyd's "The Wall" came out when I was in eighth grade. That record is really what did it. The guitar came out of the closet, got a new teacher, and then got a couple more records, namely "London Calling" by the Clash, and "Vol.4" by Black Sabbath. Then I was totally hooked, and my guitar teacher actually recommended I get an electric, which was like the most awesome thing a teacher ever said to me. By the time I really got into it, Randy Rhoads was the guy, and then Yngwie, so it got to be really important to practice, practice, practice. I think I started my first band something like three years later in high school, and at that point it was all about it being a cool way to impress girls.

Q. You played guitar at a pretty young age. Did it come naturally to you or were there things that you struggled with?

Angus: I was brought up in a musical household. My mom is a singer, my dad was a lawyer but he also played the cello, and my brother was a very serious violinist all the way through college. And I went to a grammar school that gave students a stipend for singing in the school choir, so I did that starting in fourth grade. So there was always music around. By the time I found a passion for rock and the guitar in particular, I think I was lucky to get with a good teacher. He put me through the Mel Bay modern method, which is still the book I prefer to teach from. He also had me do a ton of music reading and all these classical studies, like the Carcassi and the Sor stuff. I struggled most with trying to pick things up by ear. That was always the hardest part. I am still not 100% confident about my ears, although I think by now I'm doing alright.

Besides that I think I spent a good deal of time working on picking and hand synchronization. I'm left handed, but I play righty. This made me concerned about how accurate my picking was, so I spent a good amount of time on it, and have actually changed my picking style a couple of times over the years.

By the time I got to college it was all about Yngwie and I was at school in LA and Racer X were playing weekly at the Troubadour and the Country Club, so it was just nothing but chops. It was the heyday of Shrapnel records. There were certain things that I had an affinity for technique-wise, and I started to get a sense of what I was good at. But I didn't think I had chops that really went beyond the guys that were at school with me.

Q. You've managed to carve out a career in a pretty tough genre. How did you manage to stand out compared to your peers?

Angus: I think I'm cross-genre actually, cause I did spend five years playing New Age music, and now I play symphonic Rock and Hard Rock/Metal. The stuff that pushed my career along always came from me putting myself "out there" in some way. You have to play gigs, stay open to whatever comes your way, and represent yourself well at all times, cause you never know who is gonna be there. And then when an opportunity comes up, go for it as hard as you can. I was back in NY after college and playing with a couple of different bands when I found out a local band (Naked Sun) that had a deal was auditioning guitarists. I learned the tunes for that audition front to back, solos and everything, showed up with boots on and made it my business to have that gig. Never wear sneakers to an audition. Always have some trendy shoes.

Angus_clark3 Naked Sun lost their deal, but Kitaro's management saw me play with them in LA at the Whiskey, which was basically empty. So in that case, was it worth buying a van and trekking across the country with four guys who were basically at each other's throats? Well, yeah, if you consider that I got the Kitaro gig out of it, and I've got the invaluable experience of touring in a van that could break down at any moment (and did). It's called "paying your dues". So this is now '94 and grunge ruled everything and there wasn't much play for a guy with my skill set and preference in music. So there again I made it my business to get that Kitaro gig. I learned the stuff on his records and sent them a tape of me playing on it. Next thing I know they are flying me to Colorado to play on his record, and then they offer me the tour. You can't wear shoes in Kitaro's house so it was all about having socks with no holes in them.

I've heard it said that sooner or later everybody is looking for a gig. These tours that hire sidemen only go out for a certain amount of time, and then you're cut loose. It's all or nothing. So when Kitaro started touring less and less, I had to keep pushing outwards to find other work. That's when I got the call for this band Drill, which was on A&M. The call came through a guy that I met before I was even in Naked Sun. I met him through a studio where I did a demo tape for a band I had called Stray Light Run, which is actually a terrible name for a band, and it makes me laugh cause there's a new band with that same name. It's taken from a William Gibson novel, you can look it up. So the $1,000 I spent on the SLR demo back in '91 finally paid off in '96 in the form of the Drill gig. Which wound up being about five months of touring on the large club circuit. The best thing about it was the people I met, the bass player in Drill was JD, who is now in the Black Label Society --small world. I got the Drill gig the same way I got the other ones, I learned the material back to front, and I wore quality footwear to the audition. I think I lost the gig because I was slow to figure out that they really wanted me to cut my hair. That's a cautionary tale, you gotta read between the lines sometimes.

Kitaro went back out a couple more times and then there was a spell where I was just doing band stuff in New York. Just doing stuff to keep busy really. You have to stay in the game in some way or another. Then I get the call from the TSO. That came through Marty Friedman, who I originally met through teaching at the NGW back in '92, but then I really got to know him when I was on the Kitaro gig. Marty worked with Kitaro on the album "Scenes". TSO had called him, he wasn't available, but he gave them my number. So I learned the material back to front and went down to the audition wearing quality footwear. Here the lesson would be, wear cool shoes, just don't stare at them while you're playing. That audition was me and a bunch of other guys, some of whom can shred me under a table, but I got it cause I'm actually a performer, I look up at the audience and smile. I stay open. The call back was just me and Paul O'Neill, where the onus was on my ability to take direction. It all came down to how I played this one acoustic song, which is just a simple chord pattern, but you have to be sensitive to the singer. So, by the time I was in that room, I was already a guy that had toured the world on massive stages, had the chops to kill the gig, and enough experience working with people to know when to just shut up and listen and give the artist what they want. That's what I did, and here I am.

I remember reading an interview with the woman who is part of The Matrix, the team that wrote "Complicated" for Avril, and she said they'd been at it for 10 years before that song broke, and that in her experience that is a good bench mark. If you can stay "in it" for 10 years, something's gonna give. I've been working this whole time, but nothing else had the profile of what the TSO gig has now become. I just kept at it and made sure that when the gig was worth getting, I got it. I get emails from guys asking me how they can get a gig like TSO. I guess the short answer is get in a van with your Prog-metal band that just got dropped and go to LA and play to no people at the Whiskey. Then stick at it for 10 years and something good will happen. Just remember to wear cool shoes.

Q. You've taken song writing workshops and now you're actually teaching at the NGW. What do you get out of this kind of work as compared to touring or recording?

Angus_clark_4 Angus: Songwriting is a totally separate craft, and it's something I wanted to take the time to get a handle on. It's important to get some training in it so you can be constructive when working with a band or someone that you are producing. If you don't have control of the formal elements of songwriting, the conversations can be taken too personally, like "why don't you like my song?", as opposed to just seeing a song as a thing that you can work on and fiddle with in order to make it better and stronger. So you're more on the wavelength of "changing this chord to major will improve the overall prosity of the song", or "starting this phrase on the and of two will improve the scantion of the line". Like that.

Writing is incredibly fulfilling, because once you write a song, you never know where it's gonna go. I wrote these songs with the TSO's violinist, Anna, and the next thing I know, she's playing them on stage with Jethro Tull, one of my idols!! So again, you just have to put yourself and your art out there, and then good things happen.

As far as teaching at the NGW, I'm doing a week in Virginia. I used to work for them way back and got a lot out of it, so at this point it's more recreational for me. Plus Alex Skolnick from the TSO East band will be there same time as me, so it'll be a good hang.

Q. What should someone thinking of attending one of your NGW sessions do to get the most out of the workshop. Is there some preparation they should do in advance?

Angus: Just bring your guitar and a good attitude and be ready play, cause I'm gonna make you play!! It's not a competition, it's a workshop. That's how I treat it. I facilitate the students learning from each other, and then I shred for their enjoyment. Oh, and you can wear whatever kind of shoes you want to class, but bring some quality footwear for the stage, cause there's no sandals on stage in Rock and Roll.

Q. What advice do you have for any 40-year old guitar wannabe's to help improve their playing even though they may not have professional ambitions?

Angus: Put on a record you haven't learned how to play yet, and learn it. Then find some friends and have a jam and do a gig. Then you're not a wannabe, you're a musician. You won't make any money, but that's not the point! It's better to make it interactive. Get out there, and do it with people and for people.

For those interested in learning more, head over to Angus Clark's web site where you can hear songs from his new album "Your Last Battlefield."  If you're looking for a week of immersive guitar instruction, NGW has a summer program that runs in McLean Virginia, Los Angeles California, Chicago Illinois, Austin Texas and Purchase New York.  Programs start June 27 in McLean and continue through mid-August.  And dont' forget: bring new boots!

Rockin' the New Year with Auld Lang Syn

Harry

Just in time for your big New Year's eve gig, "Auld Lang Syn" was written by Scottish poet Robert "Rockin'" Burns for the 1989 film "When Harry Met Sally."  It's been characterized as one of the most famous songs that no one knows the words to.  But if you're wailing away on a guitar solo, you can be forgiven for not singing along. 

             Should auld acquaintance be forgot,
             And never brought to mind ?
             Should auld acquaintance be forgot,
             And days o' lang syne ?

For auld lang syne, my dear,
For auld lang syne,
We’ll tak a cup o’ kindness yet,
For auld lang syne.

I've picked three versions that are fairly easy to learn.  The first, by Justin Sandercoe from JustinGuitar, is a traditional folk arrangement for acoustic guitar.  It uses the open chords C, G, F, Am and a fairly simple pick / strum pattern.  He's broken the lesson down into 4 parts and there's also a PDF of the arrangement.

Alternatively, the Barenaked Ladies have a version for piano that you can strum to using the open chords G, Em, Am, D and B.  If you can get some folks to sing harmonies, it doesn't sound too bad either.

Finally if you're running out of time, here's an even easier way to play the melody using the Tab notation below from FretPlay.  Add some slide on the B and E strings, some vibrato and a bit of distortion, and it'll sound quite nice all by itself.  You can also do basic strum accompaniment on guitar or piano using the chords F, C7, Bb, A, Dm, Gm7. 

Auld 
Happy New Year!

Get Out Clause Surveillance Video

Here's a story reported in the UK Telegraph I thought I'd share.  I mean to post this ages ago, but somehow I kept putting it off.   At any rate, the unsigned UK band The Get Out Clause didn't have the dosh to put out a professional quality music video. So knowing that their are literally thousands of closed circuit surveillance cameras in the UK, they simply played their music out on the streets of Manchester and then requested the video footage under the Data Protection Act.  Then they added some other handheld footage to round it out.  Cheeky, but effective!  The end result is pretty cool.

The Frantic

Frantic

One of the hottest new bands to play at Austin's SXSW music conference last month was Chicago's The Frantic.  This is a high-energy balls out rock band with classic infectious pop melodies.  Still under 20 years old, these kids pay homage to some of the great power-pop bands of the 70's and 80's.  Their first album is called "Audio and Murder".  Their current tour takes them through California, Arizona and Illionois and parts of Michigan, Nebraska and Texas.  Check out the goofy YouTube video below...

Jonathan Coulton: Geek Rock

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Jonathan Coulton quit his job as a programmer to become a folk rocker who sings about... programming!  He's now making more money as a professional musician recording in his spare bedroom than he did as a slinging code.  He wrote a song a week for a year and assembled it into an CD called "Thing a Week" building up a loyal fan base through web promotions and live gigs.  Read the full story below on Yahoo's People of the Web article.

Jonathan is touring through the US with upcoming shows in Alexandria, Austin, Atlanta, Seattle, Chicago and beyond.   The YouTube link below shows Jonathan playing an acoustic version of his song "Code Monkey."

The Thrill is Gone

Bbking   

After some recent travel to the UK, I started listening to  quite a bit of blues by Irish rock guitarist Gary Moore.  His Best of the Blues album is phenomenal and turned me on to the power of his playing. It includes a bonus live disk that features a collaboration with B.B. King on a version of his classic "The Thrill Is Gone." It is absolutely breathtaking.    What's most impressive is to hear how much B.B. does with so few notes.  I dont think there's a modern rock or blues guitarist who doesn't owe a dept of gratitude to B.B. King who literally invented the style of soloing on electric guitar with his classic bends and vibratos.  At 80 years old he's still rocking 250 nights a year and showing guitar players less than half his age how to do it with style. 

There's a graphic below from a Guitar Pro 5 tab of a similar live rendition.  (You can click on the image to get a larger version, or just use Tabscout to search for a full version.)

Thrill_gone

There's also a link to the live version on YouTube below.  You can see Gary is having an absolute hoot playing with B.B King, all the way to the very last note.  The YouTube version is also great since you can more easily tell who is playing which parts in the call and response.

Catherine Delgadillo - Fusion Virtuoso

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Catherine Delgadillo, guitar heroine from Santa Cruz, California, has released her first solo album "Paradise Swamp." Catherine is a superb guitar player, up there among the best jazz fusion / prog rock players I've heard.   Her new solo album is a change from her earlier San Francisco Bay area hard rock band Charade, which she fronted.  Personally, I'm more of a three-chord rock guy and I think I would have liked to have seen Charade open for Foghat back in the day.   But that was a different time and Catherine has obviously continued to develop her talents far beyond these constraints.  So I appreciate what Catherine is doing here. 

"Paradise Swamp" is an instrumental album, with strongly melodic guitar playing that holds everything together.  It's evocative and richly textured.  She gets a lot of tone out of her PRS!  The guitar sound is well balanced with Catherine's keyboards, husband Kevin Delgadillo's perfectly timed and complex drumming, and no less than three different bass players.  Standout songs include the title track, "Turning Point," and "Another level."

You don't have to be a guitar nut or musician to be a fan of this music.  It's not shredding, or technical theatrics the way you sometimes find with prog rock.  If you like Alan Holdsworth and Brand X, you'll love "Paradise Swamp."  You can listen to a few of the songs on Catherine's MySpace Page.  Or better yet, just go buy the CD.

Prince Rocks SuperBowl in Purple Rain

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In the grand NFL tradition, Prince performed an excellent high-voltage medley at the SuperBowl half-time show in Miami this past weekend. Despite the rain and what must have been challenging acoustics, Prince put on what was one of the more memorable half-time shows in many years, arguably up there with U2 and the Rolling Stones.

In a tight 15 minute medley, Prince rocked through classics "Let's Go Crazy," covers of "Proud Mary," "All Along the Watchtower" (channeling Hendrix more than Dylan), Foo Fighters' "Best of You" and finishing with his all-weather hit "Purple Rain."  He played three different guitars, starting with what appeared to be a Telecaster, switching to a hot-rodded Strat for All Along the Watchtower and then his signature purple symbol Schecter guitar for Purple Rain. 

With 70,000 attendees at Dolphin Stadium in Miami and an estimated 140 million TV viewers, this is great visibility for an artist who has been out of the limelight but still commands a huge following.  In fact, since releasing his comeback album Musicology in 2004, Prince has been on something of a tear.  His most recent album 3121 is up for five Grammy awards.  Prince is currently playing a weekend residency at the 3121 Club at the Rio Hotel in Las Vegas.

For a more humorous perspective, check out Dave Barry 's reaction to Prince at the SuperBowl from the links below.

YouTube: Canon Rock

Funtwo

What's the most intimidating guitar solo in recent years?  In my book, it's Canon Rock, a rocked out version of Pachelbel's Canon performed by 23 year-old Korean shredder Jeong-Hyun Lim, also known as "funtwo."   The song was arranged by 25 year old Taiwanese guitarist Jerry Chang who posted his version on the web last year and goes way beyond Hendrix's "Star Spangled Banner."  We are not worthy...

Lordi, Lordi, Lordi

Lordi_live

I happened to be in Finland on business the past few days, which was also the finals of the famous Eurovision song contest.  Finland has a rich history in this regard; having lost for 50 years.  In fact, most years, Finland has never received any winning votes.

Now, the shock in Europe is that Finland's heavy metal monster bad, Lordi, has won the contest with their new song "Hard Rock Hallelujah" beating out Russia's Dima Bilan's more romantic "Never Let You Go" by a wide margin.  In fact, "Hard Rock Hallejulah" won with more votes than has happened in the history of the contest.   Forget past Eurovision winners like Abba and Celine Dion, this was a metal fest par excellence!

From what I can tell with the local radio scene, most Finns seem to prefer the more traditional middle of the road crooners and Finnish folk music to the hard rocking sounds of Lordi, so this may be a pyrhic victory.  If Finland can't win with it's traditional approach, then they'll just scorch the earth with something so weird everyone will hate it.  And in so doing, everyone will vote for Lordi.

That being said, Lordi's music is not as bad as it looks.  It's fairly melodious, borrowing more from KISS and 1980's hair bands like Twisted Sister than from today's tuneless death / rap/ speed metal.  Still, you wouldn't want to run into these guys on a darkened street in Helsinki looking for herring.

YouTube.com Rock Videos

Youtube

 

 

I recently discovered the web site YouTube.com which provides access to thousands or maybe it’s even millions of videos online.  You can search for pretty much any video you can imagine or just randomly surf for who knows what.  I tried to stump YouTube with obscure 1980’s bands and while I didn’t necessarily always find all of the videos I wanted, I was always able to find something interesting.  Not only are there oodles of rock videos, you can find obscure historical footage,live bootlegsTV clips, sports, amateur videos, animation and more

YouTube is just one year old but it’s taken off.  It’s free of charge with no strings attached.  A great way to find and share your favorite rock videos.

Learn To Play In A Day The Steve Jones Way

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I've always liked the Sex Pistols and regretted that I didn't get to see them live on their reunion tour of 2003.  So I was thrilled that there's a DVD on the making of their classic album "Never Mind the Bollocks..."  The DVD includes historical footage as well as more recent interviews with all of the original band members and producers. 

The DVD also has bonus tracks with Steve Jones, pistols guitar player, demonstrating the riffs of several classic pistols tunes such as Submission, Anarchy in the UK, God Save the Queen, New York, Problems and more.  Jones is a completely self-taught guitar player who stole most of his equipment as a teenager.  His playing is straightforward and loud, the way 3 minute rock songs should be.  Not a lot of flash, but he gets a lot of mileage out of 3 chords and has a unique sound that is easy for wannabe's to learn.  On the DVD Jonesy jokes about how he could be putting out his own "Learn to play the Sex Pistols" DVD.  Hey, I wish he would!

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  • Copyright (c) 2005-2009 M. Zack Urlocker
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