Ricky Skaggs Highways & Heartaches And The Glaser Mandocaster - podcast episode cover

Ricky Skaggs Highways & Heartaches And The Glaser Mandocaster

Oct 02, 202425 minEp. 211
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

Ricky Skaggs released Highways & Heartaches in September 1982, and the album quickly moved to the number 1 spot on the Country Album chart, and spawned 3 number 1 singles. Besides being a well polished example of Ricky's Bluegrass/Country hybrid style, it also spearheaded the neo-traditionalist movement that brought an end to the more pop oriented "Urban Cowboy" era. The album featured Ricky's crack road band, and a couple of cuts with studio heavy hitters Lloyd Green and Joe Osborn. Besides the incendiary Telecaster playing of Ray Flacke, Skaggs himself burned on the albums closer, "One Way Rider," using a unique instrument built by Joe Glaser, a 5-string, bender equipped, Mandocaster. Today we look at the impact of the album, and we look at the Glaser built Mandocaster.

Follow me on Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/askzac/

To Support the Channel:
Patreon  https://www.patreon.com/AskZac
Tip jar:  https://paypal.me/AskZac
Venmo @AskZac 
Or check out my store for merch  - https://my-store-be0243.creator-spring.com/

#askzac #rickyskaggs #zacchilds

Texas Toast
The #1 Country Music Podcast in Texas!

Listen on: Apple Podcasts   Spotify

Support the show

Transcript

0:14

well hello friends and welcome to ask


0:16

Zach today we're going to talk about one


0:18

of the most important country albums of


0:21

all time it went number one on the


0:24

country charts it spearheaded the


0:28

neotraditional movement of the early


0:30

1980s coming out of the Urban


0:33

Cowboy


0:35

period it's Ricky Skaggs album highways


0:38

and heartaches released in September of


0:41

1982 and it had three number one hits


0:46

and a number two it's Fourth single


0:50

uh an amazing record and we're going to


0:53

talk about the making of it and the


0:55

significance of it and we're going to


0:56

talk about the instrument that Ricky is


1:00

is holding on the inside of the


1:02

album which is a Glazer Mando caster


1:06

which is a five string electric mandolin


1:09

with a bender on it oh my goodness this


1:12

this thing's crazy and and I have to


1:14

thank of course my friend that let me


1:15

borrow it but this was a instrument


1:18

specifically made by Joe Glazer for


1:21

Ricky to use and he solos like crazy on


1:24

it on one of the tracks so that's


1:26

today's topic Ricky Skaggs highways and


1:29

Har heartaches first off I need to thank


1:32

my patreon members if you'd like to join


1:35

them in supporting me there's a link in


1:36

the description also there is tip jar


1:39

information and there is merch you know


1:41

t-shirts and coffee mugs and such also I


1:44

always appreciate it if you just hit the


1:46

thumbs up all right let's dive


1:50

in so first off we need to do give you


1:53

kind of the nickel version of the Ricky


1:55

skagg story of course he grew up in


1:57

Kentucky was a bluegrass G played with


2:00

quite a few different you know bigname


2:03

bands and he kind of started moving


2:07

toward a hybrid of country and kind of


2:12

rockabilly Bluegrass and such with a


2:14

band he had called Boon Creek that


2:16

featured Jerry Douglas on Doo and for a


2:19

short time had Vince Gil also in the


2:21

band um he then went on to play with Emy


2:27

L Harris and the hot band he was brought


2:29

in to Place Rodney crra so this was kind


2:32

of like the mark 1. A1 or whatever you


2:38

want to call it version of the hot band


2:40

where James Burton had left and had been


2:43

replaced by Albert Lee and then of


2:45

course Rodney crra an original hot band


2:48

member had left and was being replaced


2:50

by Ricky So Ricky had a huge effect on


2:54

the hot band and the hot band had a huge


2:56

effect on Ricky So Ricky uh of course


3:00

brought the Bluegrass instrumentation


3:03

and kind of the


3:05

tunes and his Harmony singing and and


3:08

his in instrumental prowess great fiddle


3:11

playing mandolin playing acoustic guitar


3:14

work and the hot band taught him about


3:18

electric instruments using amplifiers


3:21

mik you know everything being miked up


3:24

um you're getting to play with one of


3:26

the best bands on the planet these were


3:29

guys that played both on the records and


3:31

toured with Emy and so you had you know


3:33

John wear on drums Emy Gordy Jr on bass


3:37

Glendy Harden on piano you know Albert


3:39

Lee playing guitar Hank DeVito on steel


3:42

and all those guys were they were all


3:46

very obsessed with music and they were


3:48

all sharing Tunes with each other and


3:49

they were making up little you know I


3:52

guess what you'd call mixtapes and such


3:54

and uh and they were you know passing


3:56

stuff around and and and having fun with


3:59

it


4:00

Well Ricky decides to make a solo record


4:03

and he does and it was for the Sugar


4:06

Hill label and it was called sweet


4:08

Temptation and it has some uh some help


4:11

from some of the hot band guys and it's


4:14

a great album has Albert Lee also has


4:16

buddy emons guesting on steel on a


4:18

number of cuts and it's kind of an


4:20

interesting album in that it kind of the


4:22

tunes tend to be either Bluegrass or


4:26

country he hasn't really gotten into his


4:29

hybrid music yet that we're going to get


4:33

to uh he decides to make a second album


4:37

he has a I guess he has a two deal um


4:40

you know two record deal with Sugar Hill


4:43

and he starts making the second one with


4:46

the hot band and so you know you've got


4:49

Albert Lee and John wear again all these


4:52

cats you know playing on this album with


4:55

him and he's on a flight and he's


4:58

listening to Ruffs and he happens to be


5:00

bumped up to first class and he's


5:03

sitting next to a guy that ends up being


5:05

a big wig at A&M records and Ricky you


5:09

know puts his headphones on the other


5:10

guy's you know head well because he asks


5:12

he wants to hear it


5:15

and he says you really need to uh you


5:17

know go to Nashville you need to get on


5:19

a major label uh he ends up meeting with


5:23

a couple of labels that pass but they


5:25

send him to Rick Blackburn with epic you


5:28

know which was part of CBS records which


5:30

later became part of


5:32

Sony and they sign him and it's all


5:36

based on these tracks that Ricky cut


5:39

with the hot band unfortunately they're


5:43

owned by Sugar Hill and so without there


5:46

being negotiations and money Changing


5:49

Hands uh they can't release the tracks


5:53

so they send Ricky into the studio to


5:56

cut a record now Ricky wants to produce


5:59

it because of course he produced sweet


6:01

Temptation and also the tracks he did


6:04

with hot band but the label is a little


6:07

bit hesitant with that but they agree to


6:10

it and so they they bring in a


6:13

producer/engineer named Marshall Morgan


6:16

to help out just as someone that has a


6:19

ton of experience as an engineer and


6:21

also has production experience as a


6:23

producer so just to give you a little


6:25

bit of information about Marshall


6:27

Marshall uh worked for the Eagles he was


6:31

a tech out on the road and also so but


6:33

he also worked with them in the studio


6:35

and learned a lot from watching Eagles


6:38

producers and watching how they cut tape


6:42

and cut tracks and all sorts of


6:44

different aspects of the recording


6:46

process and Marshall learned about


6:50

cutting tape you know which the Eagles


6:52

were notorious for cutting and splicing


6:54

tape and so that's where Marshall Morgan


6:56

learned how to do that so Marshall was


6:59

brought in and they cut Ricky's first


7:03

album for epic called waiting for the


7:06

sun to


7:07

shine and it


7:09

features uh a mix of Studio guys and


7:12

some cats that Ricky had found that he


7:16

wanted to be part of his


7:18

band one of them probably most


7:21

importantly is a wonderful guitar player


7:23

named Ray Flack so Ray Flack was a uh or


7:28

is a British British guitar player and


7:31

Ricky met him in the UK so Reay was


7:37

auditioning he was supposed to


7:39

audition uh for Emy L to potentially


7:42

replace Albert Lee in the hot band


7:44

because Albert was going to leave to you


7:47

know to push his solo record but of


7:50

course Albert ends up instead of you


7:52

know going out on tour to toh promote


7:54

his solo album he goes out on the road


7:57

with Eric Clapton and does world tours


7:59

for the next four or five


8:01

years um yeah so so Emy and the hot band


8:05

show up in the UK they're late and Ray


8:09

is sitting around playing guitar and


8:11

everyone else is madly setting their


8:13

stuff up not paying any attention to Ray


8:15

Flack but Ricky Skaggs pays attention to


8:17

this guy and he realizes that this guy


8:20

is a really really amazing soloist and


8:24

Telly guy and he's the perfect guy for


8:27

Ricky's version of the hot band which


8:29

he's to put


8:30

together so fast forward back to U


8:33

making waiting for the sun to shine well


8:36

Ricky's got Ray Flack intoo as his


8:39

Albert Lee and that's not to in any way


8:44

uh reduce Ray's influence or his playing


8:47

or his importance on this album it was


8:49

just that was the kind of the role he


8:50

was


8:52

playing uh there are great songs on


8:54

there there's don't get above your


8:56

raisin and some other Tunes but the the


8:58

songs that go to number number one are


9:01

you know slower tunes and so they're


9:03

crying my heart out over you and I don't


9:06

care uh which are great songs but


9:09

they're not really picking songs they're


9:12

not really this Bluegrass hybrid thing


9:14

yet you kind of get a taste of it with


9:16

don't get above your raisin and and some


9:17

of the other Tunes off the album but


9:20

we're not there yet so it at this


9:24

point there's a sense that maybe they


9:28

were trying to negotiate to use those


9:30

hot band tracks that Sugar Hill owned


9:33

but instead they go in again and cut


9:35

another record and so this album ends up


9:37

being highways and heartaches again


9:40

Marshall Morgan is mixing and recording


9:43

it and Ricky is producing it and you


9:47

have a interesting mix of his live


9:52

band on certain tracks and then certain


9:55

tracks have Studio cats so his live band


9:58

at the time had Mickey Merritt on piano


10:00

had Ray Flack on guitar you know you had


10:04

uh Rodney price on drums you had Jesse


10:08

Chambers on Bas Bruce boutton on steel


10:11

and you had U you know Bobby Hicks


10:13

playing


10:16

fiddle and then on the more Studio


10:20

player track tracks you would have Jerry


10:23

crun playing drums and you'd have the


10:25

amazing Wrecking Crew base player Joe


10:28

Osborne


10:29

and so it's here we need to just kind of


10:32

give credit for the amazing influence


10:35

that Joe Osborne had on Ricky skags base


10:39

sound the the you know kind of the the


10:42

sound that you hear on the Skaggs


10:44

records through the years and the way


10:46

his following B bass players live and in


10:48

the studio kind of do things and Ricky


10:51

kind of tends to become a fan of guys


10:54

that use a jazz base with flat wound


10:56

strings and play with a flat pick and so


10:59

that was the way Joe Osborne played and


11:00

that's the way Jesse Chambers played and


11:03

you know the ensuing bass players that


11:05

played Electric in his


11:08

band uh you know you have uh so yeah so


11:11

there's tracks that have the live band


11:13

interestingly enough the tracks that


11:16

feature the live band end up being the


11:18

majority of the number one hits on there


11:21

which you know is just funny because


11:22

those those Tunes were harder to cut


11:25

because as good as those Live players


11:27

are they're not used to being in the


11:29

studio every day and so it just takes


11:33

longer to do it again not that they


11:34

didn't do a great job it just takes


11:37

longer to cut tracks when you're dealing


11:39

with Road players versus session players


11:42

that are in the studio day in and day


11:45

out so just some of the tunes that are


11:48

off here uh the opening track is


11:50

heartbroke which is a guy Clark tune


11:52

which has an amazing Ray flax solo


11:57

um it uh it ends up going to number


12:01

one um it's a you know and on this I you


12:06

know don't know for sure on all this but


12:07

Marshall Morgan indicated to me


12:10

that many times because Ricky liked to


12:14

splice tape he would get ray Flack to


12:18

take multiple passes at a


12:20

solo and then they would piece it


12:23

together not that any of the solos were


12:25

bad or had any mistakes in it but every


12:28

every attempt was very different and


12:31

they would piece together the best


12:32

pieces from each each one to get the


12:35

most fiery over-the-top guitar solo they


12:38

could get out of Ray and from that I I


12:42

know this is true also because of


12:45

interviewing Ray Flack where he said I


12:48

didn't play that and what it is is that


12:51

again it was like multiple takes of him


12:53

improvising and then you piece it


12:54

together in a way that's like well I


12:56

didn't play those things together so and


12:59

they sounded really good on the album


13:01

but it became frustrating you know for


13:04

Rey because all of a sudden he was


13:06

trying to piece together you know four


13:08

different solos that he played and all


13:10

of a sudden you've got to play something


13:11

where it sounded right but it didn't


13:13

make sense on the guitar to go from one


13:15

lick to another so you get some really


13:18

amazing solos though um let's see what


13:22

else about hartbrook just a a great you


13:25

know kind of you know country tune it


13:27

was also cut by George St great but of


13:29

course you know Skaggs had the hit with


13:31

it the next song in the album is you've


13:33

got a lover which was another single and


13:36

it was the only one that went to only to


13:38

number two so and you've got a lover is


13:41

featuring the studio cats so it's got


13:44

Jerry crw playing drums it's got you


13:46

know Joe Osborne playing bass and uh and


13:49

you have a beautiful beautiful beautiful


13:52

steel guitar solo by the great Lloyd


13:54

Green one of his best solos of all time


13:57

I just I I love what he did on that that


14:00

um then one of the other interesting


14:03

tracks is another one of the singles


14:05

that went number one is called I


14:07

wouldn't change you if I could and on


14:10

that tune it's interesting because Ray


14:12

Flack is not playing on that cut and


14:15

Ricky is playing electric guitar and


14:16

he's using a bender so this is the first


14:19

example of Ricky playing electric B


14:21

Bender telecaster and he plays some


14:24

really nice fills on the tune it's kind


14:26

of a midtempo tune and uh and he he's


14:30

kind of like neck pickup or both pickup


14:32

kind of sound it's more of your you know


14:34

kind of laidback bendry kind of stuff


14:36

that Albert you know was very Adept at


14:39

doing but uh it's actually of course


14:42

Ricky uh then you have can you hear me


14:44

calling which is another you know


14:46

Bluegrass tune where he's again we're


14:48

getting into this hybrid sound where


14:50

they're where they're really kind of


14:52

honing in on it they're really kind of


14:54

you know you've got this you this old


14:55

bluegrass tune that of course you know


14:58

starts off with with you know the the


15:00

the fiddle lick and uh and just has some


15:03

really great picking on it and such uh


15:06

then we get to the the next number one


15:10

song off the album which is Highway 40


15:12

Blues which was of course a Hu a huge


15:14

hit it's a perennial and this is another


15:17

one where you've cemented the hybrid


15:19

sound the country Bluegrass rockabilly


15:22

thing has really been brought into Focus


15:25

here amazing solos by Ricky on acous


15:29

mandolin you have a great you know banjo


15:32

playing by Baya Fleck you have the great


15:34

you know you know steel solo by you know


15:36

Bruce Bouton and great guitar solos by


15:39

uh Ray Flack really wonderful tune great


15:42

you know opening lick Harmony lick


15:44

between the steel and the electric


15:47

guitar the album


15:49

closes with a tune that is just an


15:53

excuse to take a bunch of solos and it's


15:56

a Rodney Crow tune called one way Rider


15:59

and it clocks in at 5 minutes 27 seconds


16:03

long and that's because this is the live


16:06

band The Road Band getting to to stretch


16:10

out and so you get great solos by Ray


16:14

Flack and Bruce boutton and you get


16:18

fiddle solos by Bobby Hicks and such and


16:21

you get some amazing playing by Ricky on


16:28

a glaz laser Mando


16:31

Caster so this was an instrument that


16:35

Joe Glazer specifically made and


16:39

designed for Ricky skags this is an


16:42

emblem of what Ricky was doing this


16:45

instrument is a mix of Bluegrass Country


16:49

and rockabilly you know it's it's a


16:51

mandolin but it only has single course


16:54

it doesn't have double courses like a


16:55

regular acoustic mandolin and it has a


16:58

low seed on it also you know of course


17:01

it's solid body and then it's got a


17:04

bender on its second string which of


17:06

course in this case is an A so it's an a


17:08

bender instead of a b


17:09

bender and this is just an amazingly


17:13

cool instrument uh so much of this is


17:16

completely Handmade by Joe because none


17:18

of these things you couldn't order any


17:20

of this stuff the body is you know a


17:23

sandwich of at least two pieces of wood


17:27

you can see this line here


17:29

uh you can see that this is a this is a


17:32

homemade uh you know control plate these


17:34

are homemade knobs you know this has a


17:37

little three-way switch for the two


17:39

pickups you have this bridge is


17:41

completely homemade except for the


17:42

Saddles the Saddles these are like


17:43

Mighty might you know kind of


17:45

Keyhole um Saddles you have you know I'm


17:50

sure this is a homemade you know Bridge


17:52

plate that had to be Chrome plated


17:55

you've got homemade you know five pole


17:58

you know little single coil pickups that


18:00

sound amazing you adjust the height just


18:02

like on a Telly on a little miniaturized


18:05

and on the neck it has these little


18:06

screws back here to adjust the height of


18:08

the neck pickup kind of like an old Dan


18:11

Electro or Jerry


18:12

Jones of course you have the B Bender


18:15

you know of course it's an a bender here


18:17

you have the tuning adjustment and the


18:18

tension adjustment back here you have a


18:21

beautiful Maple body Maple neck uh


18:24

bird's eye it's got a truss rod so I


18:26

mean of course you had to make all these


18:28

things


18:29

uh you've got the Glazer logo on there


18:33

uh with Mando Caster kind of a spaghetti


18:35

type logo double string tree shaller


18:38

machine heads which are you know one of


18:40

the few things on here besides the


18:42

screws that he was able to just buy um


18:45

this is an amazing little


18:48

instrument so right now I'm going to uh


18:52

I'm going to plug plug her in and uh I'm


18:54

going to play a little bit of uh you


18:57

know some single note lines and I'm


18:59

going to give you some Bender you know


19:00

type things and uh and then I'll give


19:04

you um some tracks using uh Echo so in


19:10

Ricky's playing on oneway Rider a lot of


19:12

it is just the straight mandocaster with


19:14

maybe some slapback delay but


19:18

then at at the outro of the tune he


19:21

turns on an Echoplex and uses a dotted


19:23

eighth note


19:25

repeat and he uh he plays some really


19:28

cool lines that you know we're kind of


19:30

used to hearing that stuff from like


19:32

Albert Lee has done it at times as had


19:35

um you know uh you know John Jorgenson


19:39

on uh you know Orange Blossom Special


19:42

the intro to that or price I pay it's


19:44

this dotted eighth repeat where the


19:46

original note is the same volume as the


19:50

uh you know the repeat is the same


19:52

volume as the original note so I'm going


19:53

to play a little bit of that and then


19:55

we'll uh and then we'll come back here


19:59

d


20:36

all right hope you enjoyed that uh again


20:39

this is such a cool little instrument


20:41

and I uh hope to get to talk about these


20:44

more later and again I need to thank uh


20:47

you know darl Cole so thank


20:51

you all right well I hope that you will


20:55

check out highways and heartaches and uh


20:58

also I hope you'll listen to don't cheat


21:00

in our hometown which of course is the


21:02

uh the album that came that finally came


21:05

out uh that had the hot band tracks on


21:08

it so finally they uh you know CBS epic


21:11

made a deal with Sugar Hill and they


21:14

were able to release it and it was a big


21:16

album for Ricky it had Honey Won't you


21:18

open that door and Uncle pen on it and


21:20

so it's interesting cuz on on don't


21:22

cheat in our hometown some of the tunes


21:24

were cut in the 70s with the hot band


21:26

and some were cut in the early 80s with


21:28

his Road Band so you've got like Uncle


21:29

pen that has his Road Band you know Ray


21:32

Flack and then you have you know honey


21:35

won't you open that door that has you


21:36

know the hot band and Albert Lee you


21:38

know playing B Bender guitar and it's a


21:40

really great album also so I hope you'll


21:43

uh listen to some old Ricky skags and


21:45

and just understand you know one it's


21:47

just a great album on its own but then


21:49

when you put it in the context of what


21:50

was going on at the time in country


21:52

music and just how kind of Pop crossover


21:57

kind of heavily you know pop influence


22:00

and you know it was people want to make


22:01

money I mean who cares I mean yeah but I


22:04

mean but you know this album was a big


22:05

deal you know highways and hardex was a


22:07

huge deal it was a number one album had


22:09

three number ones and a number two


22:11

single that's a lot when a when a album


22:13

has that many you know hit singles on it


22:16

it's a big deal so uh go listen to it


22:19

and we'll see you next time bye-bye

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android