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Steel Guitar Rag for No Particular Reason

It’s late, and I was having difficulties working out a tricky riff for a new tune. So, I took a detour into the 30’s with a very short version of Steel Guitar Rag played on my Silver Strat through my Blackface Princeton, a few overdrive pedals, and my beloved Echoplex!
I guess, enjoy?

Zack

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Most Spun Record of the week July-1-2009

It’s Wednesday again, and you people know what that means (YOU PEOPLE?!?!?- Who are you calling “You People?”)… It’s time for the most spun record of the week. And the winner with a close “You Only Live Twice” runner-up is… Alvino Rey and His Orchestra “A Drowsy Old Riff.” I read the back of the album, and learned so many cool things about Alvino. This particular record is a pressing from the 1970’s, but it’s a compilation of recordings from the 1940’s with Alvino Rey at the standard electric guitar as well as his “Console Guitar” (nowadays they are called “pedal steel” guitars). He was one of the first to use an electric guitar prototype pickup that he acquired from The Gibson Company in 1935. I read that he was too humble to make the claim that he played the first electric guitar (everyone thinks it was Les Paul). By 1939, he formed his own big band, and later gained further fame with The Kings Sisters.

"A Drowsy Old Riff"

What kept me coming back to this record was the best version I have ever heard of “In The Hall of The Mountain King.” (I’ll try to put up an Mp3 to hear later, but I wanted to get this post up today since it is indeed Wednesday). His “console guitar” has such an interesting tone throughout the recordings. At times you think he’s improvising a really odd riff or passage on his standard electric or his console slide guitar, but the horns mimic him verbatim which reveals that it was all brilliantly preconceived. This is highly impressive to me because these call and responses are displayed so naturally that they feel improvised. His orchestra is so tight and well-rehearsed, and another talent to be noted is the piano player who sprinkles the most dexterous little ear candy through the entire album in the most tastefully skilled manner.

I learned about Alvino Rey through hearing a record I obtained a few years ago called “Other Worlds Other Sounds” by Esquivel. esquivel-owosI did research to find out who the steel guitar player was, and since I latched onto his name, I have been finding Alvino Rey records all across the country as I travel and play shows and visit record shops in between. I only paid 3 bucks for “A Drowsy Riff” of a gem! I hope you find yourself a copy to enjoy over the weekend! 

Tell me what you have been into this week! Leave a comment! (it’s free and environmentally friendly- or just mentally friendly!)

  -Zack-

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And Away We Go

I made this song using a drum and bass loop that I discovered on an old LP. How rare it is to find 4 measures of drums and bass soloed out on an old record- let alone with such a deep pocket groove! (The artist and title of the album shall remain disclosed for now).

The lyrics are as follows:

“And Away We Go”

We are not who we think
So let’s have another drink
And Away We Go
Listen to the radio
Sittin’ on the patio

We all came here to fly
So let’s have another try
And Away We Go
Smokin’ like a Navaho
Floatin’ like a UFO

I will not shake my hips
Til we’re on another trip
And Away We Go
Better than fellatio
Underneath the mistletoe

We are not who we are
So let’s crack another jar
And Away We Go
Thinner than the audio
Comin’ from the stereo

Thinner Thinner
Thinner Thinner
Thinner Thinner
Thinner Thinner

We are not who we think
So let’s have another drink
And Away We Go
Listen to the radio
Sittin’ on the patio

We all came here to fly
So let’s have another try
And Away We Go
Smokin’ like a Navaho
Floatin’ like a UFO

I will not shake my hips
Til we’re on another trip
And Away We Go
Better than fellatio
Underneath the mistletoe

We are not who we are
So let’s crack another jar
And Away We Go
Thinner than the audio
Comin’ from the stereo

words and music ©2009 Zack Wiesinger Music ASCAP

Enjoy! As Always, comments are welcomed with thoughts and discussions about the posts!

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My Most Played Record or Side of a Record of the Week Debut June 17

I’m starting a new series of posts on my blog. I’m gonna try hard to do it every Wednesday, but if I miss one, I either forgot, or didn’t have access to my laptop, or internet is down or… Excuses. Excuses. Anyways, every Wednesday, I’d like to share with you the record or side of a record that got the most spins for me that week. I choose Wednesday, because it’s Hump Day, and it’s gives you enough time to try to find yourself a copy to enjoy over the weekend! This is my analog version of Last.fm. I’ll either take a picture of the album or pull one off the internet as long as it is the same exact cover that I have.

This week’s most played record is a tough one. I listened to about 30 sides of albums just the other day as I was doing a fictional writing exercise. Just blank paper, a stack of records, and a pen. I let the music dictate the different moods and twists in the story. As you could imagine over the course of 30 different records, the gears shift quite frequently, thus rendering the story a confused pile of words and thoughts, but it was a fun endeavor nonetheless. I recommend giving it a try. Maybe you’ll have better luck. I didn’t really repeat one side in that writing session, but for the past few weeks, Traffic’s Mr. Fantasy Side 2 has been getting a lot of spins at my place.
Traffic Mr. Fantasy
I found out that the producer Jimmy Miller and engineer Eddie Kramer, who did this record, also worked with The Rolling Stones and Beatles and Led Zeppelin among many other greats. So, the production value is definitely high quality. I think the three main things compelling me to keep playing this side are Steve Winwood’s soulful vocals, the song “Berkshire Poppies,” and the overall wide range of great grooves with catchy melodies and instrumentation. Maybe that’s slightly more than three reasons, but you get the point. Side one is also highly listenable, but I’m partial to side two! Good luck finding yourself a copy!

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My Music’s “Audible Roots”

The commenter “riffraf vash? yes” asked me a question that inspired this post. “Where do you think your music’s audible roots come from?” I replied that it would take a little more explaining than just a simple comment back. So, here’s a roughly estimated timeline of my musical influences.

The beginnings of my influences began before I even picked up a guitar. My dad, Bootleg Kenny, would play vinyl records around the house and mix-tape cassettes in the car all the time as I grew up. Hearing nothing but LPs of artists like Frank Zappa, Stevie Wonder, The Beatles, and mix-tapes of The Dr. Demento Show, music was constantly flowing through the air and seeping its way into my subconscious at an early age.

When I began taking guitar lessons around age ten or so, my teacher, ‘Smokin’ Joe’ Rossi suggested I learn the Blues “because it’s the root of Rock and everything else.” He taught me the Blues progression, scale, and various riffs and licks. This is when I began actually studying music. I first got into Stevie Ray Vaughan and Jimi Hendrix like any other young guitar player should. Soon after, I was learning about the older legends from which these legends learned including B.B.King, Albert Collins, Muddy Waters, John Lee Hooker, Albert King, Freddie King,

My girlfriend picked me up a vinyl copy of this last Christmas on original black KING label!

and many more. The more I learned, the more I could do live. This was freeing, but when a tune with a different chord progression showed up, I would struggle. So, I had to study beyond Blues a bit.

 

As I continued finding out about more and more guitar players of the past, a fellow guitarist gave me a mix-CD of mostly early instrumental Country and early Jazz guitar players. The ones that stuck out most at the time for me were Country-Jazz duo Jimmy Bryant (electric guitar) and Speedy West (pedal steel guitar), Django Reinhardt, and Wes Montgomery with Jimmy Smith on the Organ. Some tracks were a little too difficult for me to pick up by ear at the time, but this was a pivotal mix-CD for me. So, I began hunting down recordings by these guys mostly to enjoy and listen, but I also studied and learned a few riffs and tunes from these masters. As I saw how my Blues knowledge related to what they did, I had a slightly better understanding of music and improvising with different chord changes. Up until this point I would use a pick most of the time, but sometimes I found myself slipping in a few other available fingers to pluck. Another great guitar teacher of mine, Jimmy Relja, suggested I learn finger picking style. He briefly trained me in the classical style on a nylon string acoustic guitar. Then we moved on to more of the vintage chickin’ pickin’ style. Jimmy was the guy who really reminded me about Chet Atkins. (Chet was on the mix-CD as well, I just was more drawn to the aforementioned players at the time). I ended up taking the technical skills from the brief classical lessons and appling it to the Chet Atkins finger picking style of guitar where you hear the bass line and melody simultaneously.chet-atkins1

Somewhere in between my recorded music discoveries, my sister took me to see what she described as the next guitar legend, John Scofield live at The Byham Theater in Pittsburgh, PA. Scofield’s show was amazing to me. Blues-based riffs that go out a touch into jazz with almost hip-hop/rap grooves and interesting melodies over colorful chord changes all amounted to a new perspective on soloing and improving and embellishing a melody. Upon researching Scofield, I discovered that he too started out more bluesy then spanned over to a fresh style of funky hip jazz.

That just about covers the “guitar side” of my influences from the 1940’s on up to the 2000’s. But for the all-encompassing “music side” of influences which affect the other instruments I play, song writing, and arranging, it mostly stems from 12 inch vinyl records.

Bootleg Kenny’s rich LP collection definitely inspired me to begin my own. As I began avidly collecting vinyl records (I had records since a youth- just in the past few years have I really been cultivating a serious collection), I learned about many other artists and styles of music. Going to record stores, flea markets, house sales, thrift shops, etc., I flip through shelves and crates of albums to find must-have classics, suggested bands or players that people hep me to, or anything that looks interesting based off the artwork and title alone.

Via many means of discovery, the most influential LPs in the “music side” of things are the works of Raymond Scott (1930’s cartoon music), John Barry (James Bond soundtracks), Herb Albert (and the Tiajuana Brass), Les Baxter (late 1950’s exotic lounge), Roy Smeck (‘wizard of the strings’ guitar, lap steel, ukulele, and banjo), Billy Mure (guitar player, but great arranger, too), Henry Mancini (Pink Panther, Peter Gunn), Old Hawaiian Steel Guitar music, most 1960’s Psychedelic, and the list can go for awhile, but if these were the first to pop in my head, then they must be more influential than ones I would have to think harder about.les-baxter-ritual-of-the-savage

So, having dabbled with all the guitarists and random vintage records for years and years, my style of soloing over Blues and different chord changes has morphed into the finger picking cluster f@%k that it is today.

That’s an overall view of the most influential “audible roots.” You can sign up for Last.FM  to see what I have been listening lately. It’s a web site that tracks what you listen to in iTunes and other media players. I’m still new to Last.FM, and since I have mostly LPs of my favorite new artists and bands, I’ll just list them in this post as well, because it may take awhile for me to play them in my iTunes (because the record player is a higher priority medium of which I enjoy music playback)…Some newer, more modern artists and bands that aren’t necessarily my “roots,” but have some influence or if I’m just a mere fan include Beck, The Raconteurs, Primus, Cake, The White Stripes, Mr. Bungle, Queens of The Stone Age, Muse, Gnarls Barkley, and that’s about it for new groups. 

Questions… Comments… Players, Bands, or Artists you think I should check out?

Don’t be shy “You People!” —Leave a Comment! Thanks!—

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349 views

The Memorial Day Tunes

“New Dreams” was actually recorded earlier in the weekend (on Friday) not on Memorial Day like my previous post said. Sorry about the mix up. So, the three songs from Memorial Day itself are ”Angular Clouds,” ”The Procedure,” and “Let Her In.” I recorded all the parts with real instruments and voice. Here are the rough cuts of them…

“Angular Clouds” is a guitar solo piece on the Televarious (fretless tele). It’s almost too short, but I like it enough to use it on my next record. After I messed around for a few takes, what you hear here is one solo pass with no punch-ins.

 

“The Procedure” is a vocal song with a random 80’s sounding bridge. But I want to hear what the bridge sounds like to you people. Leave a comment if you want! “YOU PEOPLE?!?!?!?!” Who are you calling “YOU PEOPLE?!?!?!?!?”

 

“Let Her In” I’m not even gonna try to describe it. I want to hear “You People’s” thoughts!

 

As always feel free to speak your mind in the comments area! And one more reminder. You can leave Comments on this site using Facebook Connect.

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New Dreams

This is one of five tunes I made on Memorial Day 2009. Three turned out usable. The other two are nice ideas, but remain underdeveloped for the time being. This song is called “New Dreams.” It’s not mixed and mastered properly as of yet, but I still want to share it with you people before it hits the shelves. What do you mean “You People?!?!?!” 

Comments are always welcomed! I enjoy hearing people’s thoughts both positive or negative. Also, you can now leave comments using the Facebook Connect tool on the sidebar.

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412 views

Here’s a New Tune on the Fretless called “Try Again Now”

I used my fretless for the melody and one of the rhythm tracks. I played all the stringed instruments though my 1974 Bassman 50. I love my amp! Also, This might be the debut to the public of my new vintage Zildjian ride/crash cymbal from the late 40’s early 50’s (has a transitional stamp). Here’s the tune in it’s raw, unmastered form. Enjoy!

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305 views

Back to work-

I had a tremendous trip to my homeland for Easter! The Daves and I played several fun shows around town, and I had a great time seeing all the Pittsburgh folk! We even played on the radio for WDVE’s Friday Morning Show. I broke a string on the air! It’s every guitar player’s nightmare, but we recovered quite nicely and it afforded Dake Yarkovsky two bass solos instead of his usual one! Here’s some photos from the DVE Morning Show. Keep an eye out for the recording from the DVE studio. As soon as I get a copy from the engineer, I’ll post it in the Bootlegs section.

Also, I was so happy with the way my de-fretted tele turned out! That’s right! A fretless guitar! Jimmy Relja is the best guitar repairman (Jim’s Guitar Works West Elizabeth, PA 412-384-2518)! I was able to extensively try it out at the Blues Jam in Irwin, PA headed by none other than The Duke, Gil Snyder of The Mystic Knights Band! It’s a little tricky playing chords, but I started to get the hang of it throughout the night and at the shows with The Daves!

So, now I’m back out in Los Angeles recording my next release and starting to form a new band out here. Also, I saw Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Inductee Jeff Beck for the first time the other night at The El Rey Theatre! Wow, he truly is a genius, and I don’t throw that word around lightly! It was an honor to witness such greatness in person! And he was very appreciative of his audience. A class act. I wonder how seeing that show will impact the rest of my album. Who knows? img_0532

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398 views

Neat! I’m in the Tabloids!–oops– I meant Vintage Guitar Magazine May 2009

Zack Wiesinger in Vintage Guitar MagazineMy friend Dave Wronski, of the Slack Tone band, sent me a text saying “Hey Zack, get the new Vintage Guitar Mag… We’re side by side!!!”  By the way, Dave is one of my favorite guitar players, you should definitely check him out. Great tone and awesomely fresh chordal melodies all within the classic surf genre! So, I bought myself a copy of the mag today, and sure enough we were both pictured on top of page 16. The photos were taken at Deke Dickerson’s 6th Annual Guitar Geek Festival. Here’s a pic of me holding up the article. And if you click that pic, it’ll take you to a close-up in order to read the little paragraph. This is fun.

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