Monday, August 31, 2009

I'm goin' home! See my baby! Goin' home! See my wife!



Another mind altering guitarist from the late sixties, may I present Alvin Lee of Ten Years After. Alvin is a blues guitarist from England who rocked my world when I bought their album Ssssh... An amazing work from "Bad Scene"to "Two Time Mama". But he is most remembered for his fantastic virtuosity on "I'm Going Home" off of the Woodstock album. This just blew me away, three chord blues structure, I-IV-V. A to D to E. Couldn't be more simpler than that. But the passion and style, whoa! It's still one of my all time favorite guitar pieces. Check out his work on their other albums, Cricklewood Green, A Space in Time and Watt. I would love to see him live playing that Gibson ES-335 semi-hollow body. Rock on, Alvin! Electric guitars truly rock!

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Sir Lord Baltimore! Check them out, now!


One of the baddest ass guitarist of the early 1970's. Louis Dambra set a new standard of playing long before Frank Marino, Robin Trower, Eddie Van Halen and a host of other shredders going back to the '80's. Check out his phenomenal chops on their debut album Kingdom Come. Sir Lord Baltimore was, to me, the first heavy metal band. Three guys, only three guys created a mind blowing wall of sound.

Their home base was New York City. John Garner was drummer/lead vocalist, Gary Justin on bass and Dambra on all guitars. Listen to Garner a fantastic drummer who also sang lead! Don't know how he did it!

I bought this album back in the early 70's. I don't remember why, but I was probably drawn to the cool cover of a pirate ship made entirely of bones. "Master Heartache", "Kingdom Come", "Hell Hound", "Helium Head", and even the slow harpsichordal "Lake Isle of Innersfree" blew me away. High levels of distortion (even in the bass), multi-track recording and overdubs were way ahead of their time.

Unfortunately they never gained traction along the likes of Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and Alice Cooper. Their second album "Sir Lord Baltimore" was a complete 180 from "Kingdom Come". They added another guitarist and slowed the frenetic pace of the songs. It's OK, but their debut is definitely the bomb! You can sometimes get both on one CD. Check out their website at Sir Lord Baltimore

Even now I'll pick up and play one of their songs. Just overall great heavy metal music! Later gator! Rob

Friday, August 7, 2009

Sticker shock!



OK, it's been awhile since I bought picks or a guitar strap. I went to the local Guitar Center today just to kill time at lunch. I needed a strap of my Messenger guitar which I want to play some Grand Funk songs in the band.

I checked out what I thought were cheaper straps. I bought a leather one for my Les Paul last year at the same GC for about 45 bucks (which I think is still high). The strap I chose was like the ones I bought years ago for about 10-12 bucks. Not now. There was no price on it and an employee named Luis scanned it for me. 23 bucks.

Hmmm. OK, I need it so I put it around my neck and picked up a Mexican Strat to noodle around with. Played through a small Marshall. Since our band had no practice this week, I played the songs on our set list. I got bored after some time, put back the guitar and wandered around checking out their Gibson stock.

Luis found me and I decided to check out. I asked for two sets of Ernie Ball blue label strings and a pack of Fender medium picks. He rang me up and said $42.56 please. Damn! There must be a mistake, the strap was 23 buck, how much was the rest? I scanned the receipt. The strings were $5.49 per set and the picks were $5.99 for 12!

Now bear in mind I'm always surprised by the receipt no matter where I go. Home Depot, the grocery store, doesn't matter. I can't add it up in my head and I always think it should be a lot less.

But here's a case where I remember when strings were a couple of bucks for a set and picks were three for a quarter. But 50 cents a piece? WTF! Maybe I'll check out eBay for cheaper picks! It's not like the picks have changed over the years. The same crappy plastic! Anyway, rant over, I'll have to deal with it. Come on over to Electric Guitars Rock! Got a new page on patch cords.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Whoa! A trip down memory lane.



This was taken back in 1974. Jeff is at the left. I don't know what he's playing. Paul is next on the drums. John is in the middle playing my Messenger Stereo and I am on the far right with my Gibson SG Special.

I'm not sure what Jeff played through, but John and I played through my Univox 100-watt stack which I bought because it was endorsed by Jimmy Page. We practiced in Jeff's back yard. We got complaints from two miles away. We played mostly what was popular at that time. Free, BTO, Grand Funk and Bad Company. What a blast. We never went anywhere but had a great time regardless.