Bluegrass Meets Soul
“The music I grew up on is not the music I ended up playing. It was the same as the Kentucky bluegrass, except Kentucky made more of it, commercialised it. [My home state of] Missouri had the same music, and I did get to work with some of those guys. Tom Brumley played steel guitar and he used to date my cousin, so when his band would play at fairs and all, they’d drag me along and I’d get to hear them when I was a little bitty kid. When we lived in West Plains, we went to one concert that had some of the old Grand Ole Opry people on it, like the Carters, Rod Brasfield and Minnie Pearl.”
Silver Tones
“My uncle didn’t play guitar, but he had one and so I used to get that out and pluck it a little bit. Not really play it, but just pull the strings like a rubber band and make it vibrate. I was about seven or eight years old, I guess. Later I bought a Silvertone from Sears and Roebuck, an old country and western flat-top, and my dad said, ‘If you learn how to play that I’ll get you a good guitar.’ And he did. He bought a used electric guitar and I remember getting it and holding it. There’s a picture of me standing up and playing it. My mom took the picture and there’s a Christmas tree behind me – we’d just got it, so it was undecorated. That picture has been blown up and it’s in the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame.”
Origins Of The MG’s
This story is from the July 2021 edition of Guitarist.
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This story is from the July 2021 edition of Guitarist.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
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