See if you can spot this one…

Paul Hackett, November 28, 2007

This is the second installment in my look at Unplugged albums from the early nineties. Around that time a lot of bands were eager to jump on the acoustic bandwagon because it freed them from the pressure of coming up with new material. I would argue though, that some of the more resilient albums from this genre are the ones that offered fans something they hadn’t heard before.

Eric Clapton - Unplugged (1992)

Eric Clapton UnpluggedIt’s no exaggeration to say that Eric Clapton’s Unplugged is the one album most responsible for starting the unplugged phenomenon. Who would have expected that nearly thirty years into his career Clapton would score his biggest hit? In 1989 he released the incredibly popular retrospective Crossroads, which was soon followed by one of his better studio albums in years, Journeyman. At a time when it would be understandable for anyone to rest on their laurels, a personal tragedy led Clapton to his greatest success with the mournful Tears in Heaven. Originally part of the film soundtrack Rush, the live MTV performance would do a lot to change the popular music scene for a few years.

Clapton’s Unplugged remains one of MTV’s finest Unplugged performances, partly because it contrasts so heavily with the slickly produced studio albums that had defined the artist’s work in recent years. The performance offers a relaxed run through of some popular Clapton tunes, that also takes the time to pay tribute to a few of the blues greats.

The reworking of Layla takes one of the most familiar songs in Clapton’s catalog and gives it a whole new sound. Likewise, the stripped down versions of Before You Accuse Me and Old Love also give fresh nuances to familiar songs. While most people will remember the heartfelt performance of Tears in Heaven most of all, this set of songs is the real deal. It set a standard for what all other Unplugged albums should aspire to: a great live performance recorded for posterity.

Q magazine ranked it number 71 on its list of the 100 Greatest British Albums Ever, while Allmusic.com says Unplugged contains “some of the most genuine, heartfelt music the guitarist has ever committed to tape.”

Revisiting Unplugged Albums

Paul Hackett, November 21, 2007

Back in the early nineties, “unplugged” albums seemingly took over both MTV and the radio at the same time. For some bands, the new trend was nothing more than an opportunity to market old material as if it were new. There was no need to come up with new songs as the format consisted mainly of recording stripped down versions of earlier hits. With just about everyone jumping on the bandwagon, audiences soon tired of what often amounted to a bevy of uninspired live recordings. Yet among these dregs there are still to be found a few quintessential unplugged albums. Over the next few posts, I’m going to write about my unplugged picks - the gems I think make a nice addition to any guitarist’s library.

Paul McCartney Unplugged - The Official Bootleg (Live On MTV Unplugged) - 1991

Paul McCartney UnpluggedPaul McCartney’s solo career has had both its highs and lows. His “official bootleg” stands out musically as a real high point. The MTV performance was recorded in January of 1991 and was released as an album the same year. This was back before it was the norm to go on MTV Unplugged for the sake of putting out an album. The Official Bootleg was originally released in a limited edition and it charted in both the U.S. and U.K..

It stands out as a solid unplugged release because it gets a few important things right. Rather than simply relying on faithful sounding acoustic versions, it offers up interpretations of songs that might have otherwise been forgotten. The set includes a few songs McCartney had never performed live, including Here, There and Everywhere, And I Love Her and That Would Be Something. There are also a few well chosen cover songs such as Ain’t No Sunshine and Good Rockin’ Tonight, which tell us a lot about the artist by their very selection.

By not editing out the stage chatter and audience interaction, we are left with a warm atmosphere that captures the intimacy that the unplugged format is all about. Some stand out tracks are Every Night, And I Love Her and Blackbird.

Allmusic.com calls Paul McCartney Unplugged “one of the most enjoyable records in McCartney’s catalog.”

David Gilmour Signature Guitar Strings

Paul Hackett, October 29, 2007

Best known as the guitarist, vocalist and writer for Pink Floyd, David Gilmour now has his own line of signature guitar strings. From his official website davidgilmour.com:

David Gilmour Signature SeriesDavid Gilmour plays GHS ‘Boomers’ guitar strings, an association that started in 1979 when working on The Wall, but he uses non-standard gauges that until now were not available in sets.

Well, the wait is over for Gilmour guitarphiles, because GHS are to issue two sets in boxes designed by Steve Knee, using photos taken by Polly Samson.

Both sets use the strings actually used by David on his Gibson Les Paul and Fender Stratocaster.

Check this out, fact fans: Fender Stratocaster – 0.10, 0.12, 0.16, 0.28, 0.38, 0.48; and Gibson Les Paul – 0.105, 0.13, 0.17, 0.30, 0.40, 0.50.

Boomers seem to withstand the extreme bending that David subjects them to, so they are obviously worth checking out.

The strings are expected to hit the U.S. market some time after Thanksgiving. This is good news for Floyd fans that need one of everything and guitarists trying to get the Gilmour sound just right.

Scary Stories For Halloween

Paul Hackett, October 27, 2007

We’ve had these for a few years now, but it’s always nice to share scary music stories around Halloween.

Head over to the Music Careers website if you don’t believe that most musicians have scary stories to tell. Scary Stories: Frightening Tales From the Front is a collection of anecdotes of horror and humor from working musicians and bands. Be warned, the stories get kind of weirder as you go along.

Happy Halloween everybody!

Guitar Tab vs. Standard Notation

Paul Hackett, October 17, 2007

There are so many great guitar resources on the Internet, that a lot of it can go unnoticed. Taking a cue from our newsletter, I’ve decided to add a new section for all the buried treasure still out there. There are more ways than ever before to learn guitar, and I want to set aside some of this space for those hidden gems. By gems, I really mean the things that I wish were on our site. :-)

The Guitar Beginnings blog has what I think is the definitive piece on the whole guitar tab vs. standard notation debate. Personally, I don’t think there is any debate. Every musician is going to end up using what works best for them. And yet this question comes up a lot. Finally, somebody has written a concise yet comprehensive article that lays out the pros and cons of each. I just wish someone had done it sooner.

Check out our very first Guitar Noise Buried Treasure: Standard Notation vs. Tablature – Do I really need both?

Queensryche Contest

Paul Hackett, September 29, 2007

Queensryche now has a greatest hits album: Sign of the Times - The Best Of Queensryche. This is the Definitive Queensryche Collection with 17 of the band’s best songs. We have 2 copies of the Deluxe Edition to give away. The Deluxe Edition features a Second CD of 15 Unreleased Demos, Live & Bonus Tracks - including a new track Justified featuring original guitarist Chris DeGarmo.

If you have Windows Media Player installed, you can listen to the track Sign of the Times.

To enter this contest, please send us an email and tell us your name.

The contest is open until October 25, 2007 at midnight. Winners will be notified by email and announced in the newsletter. Only one entry per person. Good luck.

Queensryche - Sign of the Times

Update: Contest is closed. Thanks for the entries.

David Hodge profiled for the Record

Paul Hackett, September 15, 2007

It’s always nice to see your name and picture in the paper. Earlier this week, David Hodge was featured in his town’s local paper, The Berkshire Record. You’ll find the original article by Josh O’Gorman Guitar Guru here. Owing to geography, a lot of us only get to know David through his columns, newsletters and active participation in the forums. This particular article profiles David the local guitar teacher and writer.

I’ve reprinted the article below:

David Hodge

EGREMONT- “What’s the difference between a guitarist and a pizza?” asked guitarist David Hodge, posing something between a joke and a riddle.

Hodge paused for a moment before answering, “A pizza can feed a family of four.”

Author, musician and guitar instructor David Hodge has proven wrong the notion that you can’t support yourself while doing something you love.

As a teacher at Berkshire Community College courses and the author of “The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Playing Bass Guitar,” Hodge is in the very enviable position of doing something he loves for a living.

A native of Winthrop, MA, who grew up in New Hampshire, Hodge fled to Northwestern University in Chicago because it was the furthest college from home that had accepted him.

While in Chicago, Hodge taught guitar part-time while working full-time as a media business analyst and a corporate headhunter. Hodge said he differed from other guitar instructors in that most instructors are full time gigging guitarists who instruct to make money when they’re not gigging, while he would rather teach than gig.

It was during his time in Chicago that Hodge began to not just play and instruct guitar, but to write about it as well. Beginning in 1999, Hodge began to write guitar tutorials for the Internet Web site guitarnoise.com.

The Web site is the on-line destination for guitar students wishing to hone their skills, drawing 20,000,000 hits from 2,000,000 unique users every month. The Web site earned high praise from the London newspaper Metro, which voted it the number one tutorial Web site, and Hodge has found his lessons on internet translated into Russian and Chinese.

When asked why he came to the Berkshires, Hodge offers a one-word answer, the simplest and most noble of all, “Love.”

Hodge came to South County on January 1, 2004, to follow his love and his partner Karen Berger. In her youth, Berger had worked at a summer camp just over the border in Connecticut and wanted to return to the area.

For the Hodge, the transition from Chicago to the Berkshires was not just geographical but occupational as well as he abandoned his corporate job to begin instructing full time.

“The idea of teaching full time both appealed to me and frightened me,” Hodge said. “It’s nice to have your career and your hobbies separate,”

Hodge and Berger set up shop teaching music together out of their home, which they call “Andante,” a musical term meaning “at a walking pace.”

Shortly after moving, Hodge was contacted by the editors of Acoustic Guitar Magazine who were creating a new magazine called Play Guitar. The magazine was geared toward new guitar players and the editors, who kept returning to guitarnoise.com for content, decided to cut out the middle man and work with Hodge directly to produce new content.

Berger, in turn, had written “The Pocket Idiot’s Guide to Piano Chords” and those editors were looking for someone to write a book teaching bass.

“I could have picked an easier topic for a first book,” Hodge said of his book, “The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Playing Bass Guitar.” It was quite exhausting to create every single musical lesson, playing all of the musical examples, not to mention the cross-referencing.

While his mind is on a future book - something that merges books that teach scales and notes with books of musical tablature - Hodge is teaching guitar full time, both out of Andante and also teaching five classes at Berkshire Community College.

Hodge teaches children’s classes for youth 6-16 as well as adult classes to students, as he said, “36 to 76.”

“People are looking for something to give them joy,” Hodge said of his students. “Some people paint, some people knit, but playing music is something you can share with others.”

Hodge also hosts an annual event called Riverside Jam for friends and students. Beginning in Westport, Conn., in 2000, the musical showcase has moved between Chicago, Indianapolis and most recently this year was at the bandstand in Great Barrington. “My friends in Chicago ask what it’s like to live out your dream but I didn’t dream this,” Hodge said. “I got up and followed my life to its next step.”

Hodge has similar advice for anyone thinking about learning to play an instrument, no matter how late in life. Currently, he has a 72-year-old student who picked up guitar for the first time two years ago.

“You’re never too old,” Hodge advised. “If you’ve wanted to do this your whole life, then don’t let it be a regret.”

Anyone who has met David personally will tell you that he’s just as nice in person, if not nicer, than he appears to be online. And if you’re lucky enough to have had dinner at his home, you’ll know he’s an even better cook than he is a guitar player.

Ringo Starr Contest

Paul Hackett, September 12, 2007

To celebrate the release of Photograph: The Very Best of Ringo Starr, we are giving two lucky winners an album litho and a copy of the album.

Photograph -The Best Of Ringo Starr

To enter this contest you need to give us a word that rhymes with “Ringo.”

The contest is open until October 13, 2007 at midnight. Winners will be notified by email. Only one entry per person.

Now, what are you waiting for? Get out that rhyming dictionary!

Update: Contest closed. Thanks for the interesting entries.

George Thorogood and the Destroyers Contest

Paul Hackett, September 1, 2007

In celebration of the 25th Anniversary Release of George Thorogood’s legendary “Bad to the Bone” album we are giving away a custom made (by George himself) signed guitar slide along with a copy of “Bad to the Bone: The 25th Anniversary Edition”. These are the exact same slides that George uses on stage. In addition two runners-up will receive copies of the album.

George Thorogood

To enter this contest you must answer the following skill testing question:

What year was “Bad to the Bone” originally released?

The contest is open until September 25, 2007 at midnight. Winners will be selected by random. Please only one entry per person. We will notify the lucky winners by email and announce the results in our newsletter.

In case you’re not excited yet, here’s what the slides we’re giving away look like. Pretty cool, huh?

Guitar Slides 1

Guitar Slides 2

Update: This contest is now closed. Thanks to all those who entered. The winners will be announced soon.

Newsletter Anniversary

Paul Hackett, August 31, 2007

It really just happened by chance that the fiftieth issue of our current newsletter also falls on another anniversary. It was five years ago this week, that I handed over the reins of Guitar Noise News to David. At the time I was probably complaining that I had too much work to do. It was only with careful optimism that I offered David the extra duties. I kind of expected him to react along the lines of “why would I want to do that?” Fortunately for all of us, he was more than happy to take over. I’m sure he would agree that it has been mostly smooth sailing so far.

In the latest issue, David admits to spending a little too much time mulling over the past five years and their sudden disappearance. I wasn’t even aware of the significance of today’s newsletter until I read it for myself. It got me thinking about things too. While the excellence of every newsletter is entirely the result of David’s efforts, sending each issue is still a team effort. While I get to read it before everyone else, David still might struggle to get it to me on time. We aim for the first and fifteenth of every month, but I’m 12 hours ahead and that feels like someone is always moving the deadline forward on us. When everything is ready to go, I feed the completed newsletter into the server.

Today I tried to recall some of the interesting places I’ve been when sending the newsletter. Aside from the places I’ve called home, there have been countless hours spent in Starbucks and Internet cafes throughout China, Hong Kong, Viet Nam, Pakistan and the United States. Once I spent a week living in an RV in Garden Grove, California and sent at least one issue from there. It really has been a fun ride.

Have you been with us on this long strange trip? Sometimes people forget all about the newsletter. If you signed up at some point but aren’t getting it, try checking your junk mail folder and/or signing up again. If you haven’t signed up yet, you’re missing the excellent “Exploring Music With Darrin Koltow” series. You’re also not getting a round-up of what’s going on with our Forum Findings, Event Horizon and links to all the latest lessons and reviews. And who wouldn’t want to get a free personalized message from David a couple times a month?

Even without subscribing you can always read the latest newsletter on the newsletter page. On the same page you can also sign-up and find links to all past issues going all the way back to January 2001. So what are you waiting for?


Guitar Noise Podcast

Anytime. Anywhere.
Subscribe to our free guitar lesson podcast hosted by David Hodge.

Community Forums

Friendly guitar discussion.
Join our community for the fastest response to all your questions.

Blog Feed

Blog RSS Feed
Get the latest blog entries by RSS.

Blog Comments Feed

Blog Comments Feed
Reader comments from the blog.

Guitar Noise Feed

Guitar Noise RSS Feed
Get all the latest updates from this site.