The Vince Gill Interview - podcast episode cover

The Vince Gill Interview

Aug 20, 20241 hr 30 minEp. 207
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Episode description

Vince Gill is at the top of his game. He recently completed a 4-night run at the Ryman where he played a three-and-a-half hour show each night, still singing & playing the songs in the same keys, or higher. Gill is some kind of superhero, as artists half his age could barely do this. Today we sit down with Vince, as he shares stories about some of his favorite guitars and a life well lived.

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Transcript

 this episode of ask Zack is a collaboration with


0:18

trone well hello friends and welcome to the trone lounge today we are in the


0:23

studio of Vince Gill probably one of the most uh celebrated and awardwinning


0:29

musicians of our time I just collude with the Russians it's the only reason I got any of that


0:35

stuff that's the only reason well we're we're going to talk we're going to talk guitars today and we're going to have a


0:41

good time cool and if we don't have a good time then we're going to quit then it's our fault yeah it's our fault so uh


0:48

of course we're going to talk about guitars but I have to talk about you know your you're singing your voice because that's kind of what got your


0:54

foot in the door so when was it that you know people started saying that because


0:59

of course people you know little kids can perform and no matter what they think they're cute but when was it that you started really getting noticed for


1:05

your voice well it was later you know it took it took me a long time to gather


1:10

the courage to sing really yeah I didn't mind playing the guitar cuz I could keep my head down and I could hide yeah but


1:16

once I I started to try to sing that was I was much more bashful than I ever knew


1:23

and and then I realized I could sing okay you know and and the more I did it


1:29

um the better I got at it and that's kind of what I knew if I was going to


1:34

have a shot at doing anything it would be my voice you know there's a bunch of guitar Slingers out there that can all


1:41

play me under the table and I knew that from day one but um but that voice I


1:46

knew I could it would it would just be you know a lot of the Bluegrass gigs that I got early in my teenage years I


1:54

played whatever was left over in the band I play Mand in one band because I didn't have one I play banjo I play guitar and just depending on what they


2:00

needed but they always wanted the singer you know so yeah and and then as I you


2:06

know was playing with a bunch of different bands Pure Prairie League and few other


2:12

folks like that I was a sid man for a while and still do that you know and sessions and things but um when I


2:18

decided I was going to try to be an artist and find my way into the country music world it's not a it's not a long


2:26

list of guitar Heroes you know that that are shredded and players and all that there's a handful that can really go but


2:33

I knew that my ticket would be singing and songs you know yeah and was some


2:39

decent songs to her to show up then everything kind of did what it


2:44

did what did you do with um to hone your voice I mean were there guys that you


2:51

worked with that really kind of gave you a hard time or really pushed you as far as your singing or like producers that


2:56

you worked with yeah early on you know it was I I think it's interesting I


3:01

think most people assume that you were at your best when when you had the most success and I don't believe that I think


3:08

I'm a better singer now than I was when I had all my hits and um my ears tell me


3:14

that and that's all I've ever listened to anyway yeah you know it's what what my ears told me to do and not to do and


3:20

I guess some great advice when I was just first starting to make my my first records 40 some years ago and it was


3:27

sweet emry Gordy who you know I was singing something it's a real traditional country song and he got on


3:33

the talk back he goes hey I don't mean this rudely but we already have a George


3:38

Jones and you're not him you know and it was great advice it stung yeah you know


3:43

but I I get it okay he said just find a way to sing like you yeah you you've


3:49

done a lot of session singing you've done so much Harmon and PE so much stuff


3:54

that people aren't even aware of yeah and and part of it is that uh and what this hits on what you said before to be


4:01

a good Harmony singer you have to be a bit of a mimic because you you have to be able to blend with the other vocalist


4:09

so so I guess that kind of plays into you know you you were kind of like okay this is a kind of a George Jones song


4:15

I'm going to sing like George Jones yeah yeah I mean it um it's to me it's a


4:21

harder job being a sid man or being a session singer session player because you have to do what you do that fits


4:28

what you're doing you know can't just go free wheel it all the time you know right and and so I always felt like when


4:36

I was young that's what I dreamt of being not a star yeah you know I said I want to be the guy that's on the back of


4:42

the record covers that that plays and sings on people's records and and that's what I really aspired to do and and even


4:50

though I I had a great run of success I still I love the process of of being a


4:55

contributor yeah you know it's a very I use this word all the time nauseum sometime but it's a very Democratic


5:01

process yeah the way you make a record and the way you gather with people and serve a song is what kind of supposed to


5:08

do not care about who gets all the attention or who gets to be the loudest or whatever you know show off and if you


5:14

just do what's necessary you don't get noticed it'll it'll help what you're doing it'll make it better and so that's


5:20

all I've I've continued to do cuz I I love the process you know I still do it


5:26

all the time here and I know that there's a bunch of Records out there that people wouldn't have any idea that it's me yeah you know I think it was


5:34

like a Aaron tippen record or something there was some something that that you would sing and it was like I I had to


5:40

really listen hard and it was realizing that you were just blending in with his vocal sing and that was that was a those


5:46

were hard sessions because his voice was very nasly and kind of piercing and mine


5:52

isn't you know and so I had to affect my voice in a way that would work with his


5:58

you know and that's you know the phrasing all that kind of stuff it's really hard to do you know it's a


6:04

challenge and I love I love the challenge you know and I I love you know I remember when I first started singing


6:11

on Conway Twitty's records um his wife D pulled me aside she said now look he's real particular


6:17

about his Harmony singing I said I'll bet you a dollar that he thinks I'm his brother when we're done you know cuz I


6:24

I'll have it I'll have it seamless I'll have it tight I'll have it you know just the way it's supposed to be that's what


6:30

I I always wanted to be Phil Everly or I always wanted to be Don Rich when I was a kid that's what I loved and and if you


6:37

can take what you do and enhance somebody else and make it blend and there's a there's a thing that happens


6:44

when singers sing together when it's just right uh it it has a I'm not sure the


6:51

right word you know a buzz there's there's a buzz that happens it's like a guitar if one String's a little sharp


6:58

and one String's a little flat they beat against each other you know and when great Harmony singing is really really


7:04

good man it's it's seamless and it doesn't it doesn't doesn't waver I get one of the points I want to


7:11

make people have this tendency to think that people are just born with this talent and then they just you know they


7:17

just take it forward but you put in a lot of hard work into doing this into being able to blend you know we're just


7:24

talking about your vocals now but just that that you know really listening and really working hard at it


7:30

yeah and it's you know it what what what the listener doesn't get to hear is how


7:37

many times you screw it up yeah before you get it right whether it's a solo whether it's a vocal whether it's


7:42

whatever you do we were having me and Rodney Crow were having a conversation with Fred Foster one time and we were


7:49

telling Fred said man you guys were way better you know the way you did it you just it was all live you know you just


7:54

that was Roy or or Roy orberson records were live and just you just did it you


8:00

know and we're overdubbing and fixing and splicing and and Fred laughed he said well you might think that but the


8:06

next time you listen to he named one of Roy's great hits he said you have to understand Roy's voice didn't open up


8:12

until the 47th take he said between take 47 and take 53


8:18

we took those passes and cut the record together out of those passes where his


8:23

voice was the very best that it that it was yeah on the session and it's it's


8:28

the same process you know just a little bit backwards now what they're able to do with technology after the fact is


8:35

astounding yeah you know if you use technology for the right reason you're not taking the soul out of something you


8:42

know people all the time they kind of about autotune and this and that I go the singer is either interesting or


8:48

they're not and all that's doing is making them more in tune yeah it's not making them more interesting yeah you


8:54

know doesn't give their boys more character so it's either there it isn't you know that's that's the deal for me


9:02

with singers that you know sing the phone book and all that but there's something about their voice that doesn't speak to me and a lesser singer that


9:09

can't sing the phone book but there's something about their voice that's compelling to me I'd rather I'd rather


9:14

hear that you know still that way did your parents support you when I


9:20

mean Ian because your dad was a a lawyer and and a judge and so were they


9:28

dismissive at all of you wanting to do music for a living not one day not one


9:33

conversation my father was a frustrated banjo player yeah you know not very good I thought he was Earl Scruggs but turns


9:40

out he wasn't very good at all but Mom played the harmonica a little bit so they all loved music there was always


9:45

records played at my house and and I heard my mom I tell this story at


9:50

nauseum too most of my stories everybody's heard but all the it's all you got the stories you got you know


9:56

yeah and my mom was getting interviewed after I'd had a nice of success and she


10:01

said did it bother you that your son didn't uh take a more traditional route


10:06

with his life and go get an education and a real job and da D and she smiled said no I didn't I didn't really care


10:12

much about having a rich kid yeah she said but I sure wanted to have a happy kid yeah you know and that music made


10:17

him happy yeah and that's kind of how I roll as a dad you know I want my kids to


10:22

be joyful I want to love their life and you know some people look at a


10:28

musician's life and think it's it's bad and it's hard and it's all you know all that stuff I go what what's wrong with


10:35

my life you know why would you want your kids to do what you did I go what I did was a blast yeah you know and very few


10:42

people get to do something they love for their living you know and I was lucky I


10:47

got to still doing it were you a good student terrible awful I'll tell you good I I


10:55

had algebra in ninth grade and math didn't make any sense to me I could barely balance a


11:02

checkbook and so I take algebra in ninth grade and I flunk every paper every


11:10

daily paper every test like I don't just kind of flunk it I'm getting 16s 19s I


11:17

don't get 48s and 51s or anything 12s and 11s and I get my report card at the


11:25

end of the year and it said D minus which meant I passed you know and I went


11:30

to the teacher and I go what'd you give me a D minus for I didn't even come close he goes yeah no kidding he goes I


11:36

don't care you tried he said this will never make sense to you he said I don't


11:42

want you to ever have to see this again that's why I passed you wow he said you just keep playing your guitar and don't


11:48

worry about Algebra I mean yeah he had a much bigger view rather than perspective


11:54

yeah it was pretty cool how did you you you were a blueg grasser mhm and and


12:00

what made you switch into playing electric music what inspired you to get into electric music well I had played


12:05

electric prior the Bluegrass uh you had that 335 red 335 that my dad mom and dad


12:12

got me when I was 10 and I was playing rock all the rock and roll songs of the day and playing Rocky Mountain Way in my


12:19

bedroom and all the little garage bands and everything we had our the handful of songs we knew and I was turn up loud and


12:27

all that stuff and then I got I got turned on by Bluegrass by a friend of


12:33

mine named Bobby Clark who's a really fine mandolin player from Oklahoma City and we grew up two blocks apart and I


12:39

never knew he was a musician and I went over to his dad's house one day I'd broken a string on my dad's bjo and


12:45

didn't know how to fix it I knew if I I'd catch hell if I didn't fix it you


12:51

know so Bobby's dead Charlie fixed it for me and said do you you play music don't You and I said yeah couple garage


12:57

bands and we play dances at school you ever played any blueg grass I said no not a not a note and he put an acoustic


13:04

guitar in my hand and he said my son Bobby's a really good musician and and


13:09

uh we started you know I started playing and said hey we we just lost our lead singer would you want to join our band


13:16

and I said man I don't know anything about this music but it came pretty easily MH and I just loved it you know I


13:22

loved the the process I think great Bluegrass rocks as hard as the Rolling Stones well


13:28

and also that in the middle yeah and also that was an ERA when bluegrass was really doing interesting things you had


13:34

you had Sam Bush with new grass Revival and you had JD Crow and you had the new South and you had all these bands that


13:40

were really bringing a new energy s seen country gentlemen and I was playing all these Bluegrass festivals last couple


13:47

years of high school and I met all those people I met Ricky I met Marty Stewart I met Marco Conor when he was 12 and it


13:55

was it was crazy that that music bonded me to so many people that I


14:00

still have great relationships with to this day and I don't think I would be


14:06

the harmony singer I am I don't think I'd be the musician I am or the songwriter I am without a little dose of


14:13

Bluegrass in those early years yeah so what was it that got you into electric music again after the Bluegrass phase it


14:19

was just a a fluke thing you know I was still I'd moved out to California when I


14:25

was 19 and I still loved play electrically


14:30

and was a Steely Dan fan all those kinds of records that I loved and and moving


14:35

to California it was all out there you know I remember I went to see Larry Carlton play when I first moved there


14:40

and I had my 335 and I went to Santa Monica Civic and her didn't play and just lifechanging way he bent those


14:47

strings and how Soulful he played and and I took my guitar to the shop and I


14:54

said I need one of those top tail pieces that's what I was going to ask you I was like I heard you I was like is that when


14:59

you put the stop TI on exactly right you know and so I you know I'd go into the clubs and hey you want to sit in I said


15:06

yeah and then they go let's Play something country or something Blu grassy go I want to I want to bend strings and play some of this other


15:13

stuff some of this fusy Jazzy kind of things and and then uh a friend of mine


15:18

called me one day and said hey I'm going to go audition for Pure prayer League you want to go I said yeah I'll go with


15:24

you I said I opened for them when I was in high school yeah it' be fun to see them again and


15:29

so we went to this thing and and uh introduced myself they said aren't you


15:34

the kid from Oklahoma that plays all the different instruments and I said yeah I said would you be interested in this gig


15:40

we need a lead singer and guitar player and I said no I'm playing with this guy named Byron Burl great field player and


15:46

um I said I'm not really looking for he they said well come back and jam with us tomorrow I said okay so I got to take my


15:54

my little red 335 and an amp down there and fired it all the way up dimed it and


16:01

having a blast I said this is kind of fun and I said H I'll I'll come out I'll go out with you for a while see made a


16:08

few records and had a couple of hits and it was a great experience you know I got to see the music business for real yeah


16:15

got to see the touring business for real and buses and uh it was a great great uh


16:21

great learning experience for me and that's kind of when I got the bug to maybe think about being my own artist


16:27

and yeah doing my songs things like that with pure per League were you a sid man


16:33

or were you did you have like an ownership stake there wasn't much to own


16:39

yeah you know they just out there playing college gigs and they didn't sell a lot of Records there was no there


16:45

was no big upside to being a partner or anything you know yeah um and they you


16:50

know I had just started writing songs when I joined them in 78 and they said do you do you write


16:55

songs and I said yeah I got a few you know and I had written seven songs total


17:01

and they cut five of them and they were all awful they were horrible songs I


17:06

listened back to him now go oh my God but you had to write those you can't even pass algebra and you think you're


17:12

writing songs now but um anyway that got me started writing songs and little by


17:17

little they got better and better and better and whatever but um those were fun days you know I never I never cared


17:25

what role I played in music I didn't have to be the front guy I didn't have to be talking in between songs I didn't


17:31

have to be the league guitar player I didn't have to none of it mattered you know I just liked being a part of the


17:36

process and when I when I started playing with with the Eagles and that's


17:41

my favorite comment Don made about me was they asked him they said why'd you get the country guy to be in your band


17:48

he goes he knows how to be in a band yeah you know that was a great compliment cuz you do know you you you


17:55

know your spot yeah you know how to be a Harmony singer you know how to be a a a sid Man guitar player you know how to


18:01

how to do that gig we were playing I you love this story and he Don's playing percussion we're playing Rocky Mountain


18:06

Way and I'm over there going I'm it's like I'm in my bedroom you know I'm playing with Joe and we're playing Rocky


18:12

Mountain Way and I'm just throttling these power cords for Joe just ripping them you know and Don's looking at me


18:17

all puzzled and whatnot and I finally I looked at him I go what and he said I


18:23

thought you were a blueg grasser I said I am yeah said but I kind


18:28

of like this too this isn't too bad how did you uh how did you meet like Albert


18:34

Lee and James Burton and all the hot band guys oh when I when I moved out to


18:39

uh California I was 19 and uh I moved out there to play with Byron and Byron


18:44

played on all those Emmy records right knew all those folks and I started getting seen by by a lot of those people


18:52

the first gig I did when I played with Byron was at the Troubador in Los Angeles and we were opening for Guy


18:58

Clark mhm and you know so I'm up there and we we we did till I gain control


19:05

again in our show and it was one of the songs that Byron's band had recorded and I was singing it and and I'm in there


19:12

playing and guys in there and all of the you know everybody Emmy and Rodney and all these people were there to see guy


19:19

and I got done with our set and Rodney came to my dressing room he goes who are you what's your we're going to be


19:26

friends and he said cuz you already sing my song better than me well I don't know about that but that's how we met and


19:33

became friends and yeah and and he invited me when he left Emmy and started


19:39

the his original band he asked me to come play with him and I I I wanted to


19:44

cuz it was such a high level of musicianship that would have been great


19:49

but pure prair League had just changed to another record company and was getting a fresh shot at something and I


19:55

said I I think I want to give this one more shot before I bail on it and wound


20:00

up having a hit with Let me love you tonight and a couple other songs and uh and then another year passed and uh we


20:09

were going to have our first kid Janice and I uh in she born in uh May of


20:16

82 and uh I decided to get off the road cuz those guys toured 250 days a year


20:21

shows wow killed it you know and and I said I can't be gone that much with a new kid coming and so I quit and I


20:28

called Rodney I said hey out if you're if you're up for it I'm I'm around if you need somebody and we started doing


20:34

that and and play with him and Roseanne and uh a great stretch of life you know


20:39

killer band and I'll never forget the first rehearsal and once again it was


20:45

always my singing that kind of led the way for me and Roseanne reluctantly


20:50

hired me mhm and Rodney said no he can do it you know and so I'm replacing


20:56

Albert in the band and Albert and I played a bunch together when I was with Byron the clubs and all that and it was


21:04

one of my dearest friends and I didn't really get to know James until later but


21:10

um all I have to say is um when we were doing the first


21:17

rehearsal Larry London's playing drums Em's playing bass so it's heavyweight heavyweight everywhere you look and we


21:23

played the intro of the first song song called Raining and I have the intro


21:28

and I started playing the intro and they kicked in and I said oh my God I gotta play the best I've ever played right now


21:36

you know and it was like just so intimidating and I got through that song


21:42

and then she called my baby thinks he's a train which is all the chicken pick and Albert stuff and and we finished the


21:48

second one and I killed the first one and killed the second one and she came over to me she goes I think I owe you an


21:55

apology and I said for what she goes I didn't think you could do this like that


22:01

she said in fact the first song I thought you got [Laughter]


22:06

lucky so it was a it was a great chair you know to to sit in and be you


22:15

know it it it's very fan friendly you get to play a lot


22:22

of the solos and it's a it's a pretty big cool gig and I remember once we played and Michael Nees smth was going


22:29

to do a video I think for Rose and and he was at the show and and he came back


22:36

and he goes man you just killed me the way you play blah blah blah it was very complimentary I said well thanks I said


22:42

I full confession I said I was maybe one of the biggest monkey fans that ever lived I said I I watch the TV show every


22:50

weekend he said I even joined the fan club and wrote you a letter said I wanted to be in the banding well after


22:55

hearing you play I wish we'd have hired you


23:01

so I could have been a monkey could have been a monkey little bit of luck from listening to your playing it's


23:08

it's a it's at least obvious to me that Albert Lee's an influence on oh God the biggest yeah so when when did you first


23:15

hear him and meet him um when I first heard him I think might have been luxury


23:20

liner yeah you know one of Emy records in 767 whenever that came out and the


23:27

reason I was drawn to it you know I'd heard James play on on on Haggard records and and different things


23:35

um but with my Bluegrass playing flatpicking open strings all those kinds


23:41

of things it all felt like it was related right you know and I said this makes sense to me and I I understand


23:49

like I Can Hear jazz I understand how it feels but I don't I don't understand um


23:54

the theory of it to too well but but this this really spoke to me and I I


23:59

went out and I bought a Telecaster well that's what I was you know because it was like I because that that guitar


24:07

that's that's your that's your first Telecaster right yeah and your first Telecaster is a Black Guard so I was I


24:13

was thinking there had to have been you know an Albert or someone influence you to where it's like cuz he was playing a


24:18

Black Guard yeah and you decided you had to have a Black Guard like Albert I mean that that sound was it was so infectious


24:24

you know and not not different from jang's you know just tell's a Telly and they they have the the distinct sound


24:32

and um it had a lot of it had just kind of had everything I wanted to try to to


24:39

learn to do and my favorite story about my Telly playing is Hank DeVito The Great steel player I played with em and


24:46

Rodney and all of us forever and ever um he picked up my white Telly one time and


24:51

said can I play your guitar and I said yeah man so he picks it up and he starts yanking on it B you know taking the neck


24:58

and the looking for the he goes where's the pull string yeah said doesn't have one he goes yeah it does I hear it every


25:05

night and I didn't know there was such a thing right right so so I you know I


25:12

figured out you know bending is critical to me how long you take how the pitch of


25:18

it the intonation of it all and I learned to do it without a pull string


25:25

and it sounds kind of close you know it's it's very close and that's one of the things that's unique about your


25:30

playing is that you heard Clarence and the other pull string guys and when when


25:37

you bend a lot of times you bend in the same way that the pull string kind of sounds and so that's why people would


25:43

think that you had a b Bender cuz it was it's only I'm only doing it because of how I heard it right you know I never


25:49

got to see it per se and I didn't know they had a a a Contraption on their


25:54

instrument that did it like a steel guitar you know and I just I love the steel guitar so much in 1975 I got the


26:02

band I was in called the Bluegrass Alliance came to Nashville and made a record and Buddy Emmons played on it mhm


26:08

and that lit a fire in me like no fire has ever been lit and I went and bought a steel guitar and and I've always loved


26:15

the instrument and and it reminds me a lot of of a voice a human voice of what


26:21

it can do and and so I was a frustrated steel player for a little bit and uh we


26:27

called it a mercy selling when I finally got rid of it but yeah I was I was always trying to


26:34

emulate what what the pedal did and my fingers would do it in the same Cadence and the same kind of rhythm of it you


26:41

know you can see he guys Bend strings and some of them been too fast some of them been too slow some of them been


26:47

past the pitch and you know and for me every Bend had to be Soulful it had to


26:54

be just the right grease all that stuff is the Nuance of all this stuff is


27:00

what's interesting to me you know yeah and not how much you can play but how


27:06

how how moving you can play with as as sometimes as little as possible there's times to blaze and and it's it's


27:13

warranted and it's what you're supposed to do but there's other times that you're not I tell this story all the


27:19

time I got some producer that said to me after I played something he goes that was great that was impressive he goes


27:25

play me half of what you know play me half of what you know and yeah once again that's kind of how I I go through


27:31

everything I I try to I say I try to say the most with the least yeah you know


27:37

there's uh did you ever like sit down with Albert and and try to get him to show you anything not really you know


27:44

there's a there there was probably a time where I I might have


27:51

felt like he didn't like me because I played a good bit like him mhm and I


27:57

hope he took it as flattery cuz that's all it was you know and it was just so good why wouldn't you want to learn that


28:04

yeah you know and I don't I don't I play like him a little bit but I


28:10

don't really play like him no no you don't there's a there's a bounce in a dance and a thing that Albert plays with


28:16

that's better than anybody I've ever heard he's playing swings it just dances like a like Sammy Davis Jr you know it's


28:23

a it just it's bouncy it's fun and it's and getting to we went to we went to


28:28

Australia together I don't remember when in the 80s and I went over and just him


28:33

and I and we picked up a band over there and took two telecasters and played two Acoustics and we just had the best time


28:40

you know I was never I would I wouldn't say I was intimidated but I was I wasn't afraid to


28:46

just to play because I've never you too many people they just look at guitar


28:52

playing it like it's a shootout and it's a contest and it's yeah it couldn't be more


28:58

wrong you know I don't think the guitar players really feel that way some do you can tell who's who's trying to bury you


29:04

right you know and who's friendly uh-huh we all get we all get our day in the Sun


29:10

and we all get used up and then cast aside you know I don't care if you're a record producer you're a songwriter you're musician you're an artist it it


29:17

just I always tell Young Artists I said men have a good time I said they quit playing Elvis and they're going to quit


29:22

playing you that's right absolutely and you just got to know it's coming you


29:27

know coming and it's okay yeah it's the way it's supposed to be you're you're kind of a Telecaster rig it seems like


29:33

you had that that 53 Telly and you had a twin with jbl's and that was kind of two


29:39

twins two twins with jbls cuz that was kind of the rig was you were supposed to have a twin with


29:44

JBL speakers but it was interesting because I would as bright as that could be I would


29:51

always roll the tone pot about halfway back on the tter and then your amp could be brighter so it wasn't as sizzly is


29:58

the top end of that tone pickup and you've talked about learning that trick from Roy Nichols so did did you ask him


30:04

that I me I I might have just heard it I I don't remember okay you know so did you ever meet Roy I don't know yeah okay


30:11

I can't remember yeah it's hard to remember things yeah it really is I'm 67


30:16

and I'll and I'll I'll think of somebody and I go what's their name what's their name and it's it's getting worse and


30:22

worse bizar get I get it but you know maybe these maybe I just heard him say it or watch say it cuz I learned it from


30:30

from you and Guitar Player magazine like in the '90s that you know cuz it was like I always thought well you just keep


30:35

the the the the knobs turned all the way up on the guitar and you know you know but I had never thought about using the tone control on a Telly and it was like


30:42

that's such a great uh it's not a trick but I mean just to I think it's like it just it really you just turn it down a


30:48

little bit and it just really tames it still sounds twangy and good they're I think a Telecaster is way too bright


30:54

yeah you know most of the time but that's what's so cool about my white guitar is it doesn't have it's not that


31:02

crispy crispy bite your head off kind of kind of tone you know when did you start


31:07

using a compressor pedal as part of your rig oh the whole time yeah you know and I use it


31:13

more I use it more for a gain than I do to squeeze the sound okay and I I don't


31:21

the the sustain of the a compression I I don't turn up very much yeah but I use


31:28

whatever my volume is all the way up and I use the compressor and use the gain what it does it it evens it evens the


31:35

sound out for me in my ears and uh that along with get rolling the tone


31:43

back a little bit and and whatnot it it it kind of warms it and I use it as a


31:50

little bit as a boost yeah you know to some degree but I'm not a p i don't know much about petals yeah I just dial them


31:56

until they sound good me is about all I know how to do how did how did you learn about the compressor pedals I mean who did you see or or did you just man the


32:04

first you remember I think it was was it ianz it had a multi effects yeah unit


32:09

and it had a compressor it had a delay might have had a distortion and something else I don't remember what but


32:15

you could just step on each had knobs on it had the yeah was like I think I still have it somewhere but um I just liked


32:24

you know I'm not crazy about compression on a humbucker yeah you know but I I sure like it for the just a little bit


32:32

there's a I can't remember the name now of the pedal that um Buzzy feon


32:39

turned me on to and it's a it's a green compressor pedal like a dang I wish I


32:46

could remember the name of it but it really does a beautiful thing because it really it takes the sound and it blooms


32:53

is that that the little green one I don't know is it what you're using now yeah you could tell me called like a


33:00

gatron or something like that it's some some strange it's a little green you don't


33:05

find yeah yeah but you used a like a boss compressor for a long time but that


33:10

I always found that one sucked the sound up a little bit too much for me yeah and


33:16

this one doesn't it doesn't squeeze it as hard yeah does that make any sense


33:21

yes absolutely sounds a little Randy sound a little Randy know what you


33:28

said yes oh go now there come the


33:35

comments oh so you're the 80s is kind of


33:41

an interesting you Era for you because it's like you were trying you you you had a solo career you're on


33:47

RCA uh quick aside uh recently Mary Martin passed away and and she did she


33:54

manage you at one point yeah when I first signed with RCA yeah so uh Rodney


34:00

posted something on social media where he he mentioned that both both you and and he were managed by Mary and he said


34:07

the term and I'm hoping you can explain this he said that both of y'all were


34:14

unmanageable of course those are Rodney's words but do you have any idea what he meant by being unmanageable I


34:21

think we're both a couple of Knuckleheads but um we're so I don't


34:26

know we we're tight you know me we're yeah


34:33

and I don't know I I don't my the guy I work with now Larry


34:39

Fitzgerald we've been he's who I found after Mary decided she couldn't I I couldn't afford I couldn't make Mary


34:46

enough money to survive yeah that's why she took a job at RCA and the anr department there and she had to and so I


34:53

found Larry and we've been 40 years on a handshake and he he he says the same


34:58

thing he said you kind of manage me more than I manage you I don't know if that might mean the same thing but I don't


35:05

I'm not I don't need a lot of codling and I don't need you know it's just pretty and take care of myself but


35:12

managers are pretty pretty darn important though they are they're critical how connected they are and the


35:18

things they can make happen for you yeah and it's you you need nobody nobody can


35:23

do this on their own you know you need you need a tribe to cheer you on help


35:28

you out and connect the dots and Keep the Wolves Away and I've had man I've


35:33

been so lucky same business manager just passed away last year Chuck flood Larry for 40 years same lawyer of John


35:42

frankenheimer and his firm Lin L I've had the same same folks but my whole


35:47

career never changed anything I'm so lucky that's amazing


35:52

yeah on Rodney um you you played the solo on stars on the water that's a


35:59

that's a great solo Oh thanks and and also the fact that it's it's Hank and Albert you know playing that opening run


36:06

you know the the you know the kind of the yeah the kind of Boogie line and uh


36:11

how did you end up getting to play the solo when question I don't know no offense n taken I thought the same


36:19

thing what are you nuts um you know it was that chair it


36:25

took a while and even you you know you got when you had Albert you had Richard Bennett you had Stuart Smith you had all


36:32

these just world class really great recording kind of guitar players yeah


36:39

you know knew parts and knew knew really how to how to make your part count and


36:45

mean something you know that's a great tribute to Richard Bennett who played on a lot of those records back then too he


36:52

didn't want to play solos when I started playing with Rodney's band Richard was in the band he goes you play the solos I


36:59

like to play Rhythm yeah okay and once again I'm I'm


37:06

um it was it was a while before I think Rodney trusted me to play some solo


37:13

stuff but even then it's been minimal you know over the years and and that's


37:19

okay you know so and there was also uh Foster and


37:26

Lloyd had you play on you know cut of theirs you know what do you want from me this time that was a fun snaky you know


37:31

Telecaster solo on there and and then you finally get your uh your MCA you


37:38

know record deal and you get with Tony Brown yeah and he he starts uh you know


37:43

and the Machine starts working in your favor right but I I also I I don't know if I was wise enough


37:51

but that's the right term but I knew that I didn't need to go show the world


37:58

that I could play the guitar yeah you know I'm going to let you discover that you know we talked earlier about two


38:04

twins in my telecaster and yeah I showed up at a TV show in 1983 called new


38:09

country where you went and played your your record and the songs on your record and Stage maner came looked me up and


38:16

down he looked at my tell goes is that a prop yeah I said well you'll find out and and and this is going down the


38:24

rabbit hole but you you had this funny sticker on your Telly at that point was like behind the what was the it was a


38:29

backstage pass from playing with rose I it I love what it said said I can go


38:34

anywhere I want what it said on the backstage that's why you put it on there on your guitar yeah exactly you just had


38:41

it on there for a while I took it off fell off I don't remember why but and also you had Rusty young playing in your


38:47

band for a while the late ' 80s yeah yeah and he was you know he was fun because he he didn't he didn't I


38:55

wouldn't say he didn't treat the instrument with the reverence Nashville pedal steel players do that's the wrong


39:00

way to say it but he was more adventurous he was willing to hit a stomp box and turn it over and and and


39:07

be Rob Robert Randolph before Robert was born you know doing the fuzz steel yeah and just taking the instrument places


39:13

that traditionally it never would go you know yeah that's why somebody like Paul Franklin Tommy White these guys they're


39:21

they're brilliant and they can they can do so much more than just what everybody expected the steel guitar to do you know


39:27

there was there was times in country music's history where it the the


39:33

instrument fell out of favor you know in fact when I recorded when I call your name Paul played on that a lot of people


39:39

thought it might have been John huy but it was Paul Franklin and we cut the track cut the


39:44

song and Paul played the back half of that solo and it was it was slightly


39:50

pedestrian you know because in 1989 nobody was using the steel guitar MH


39:56

like that you know right and I called him I said hey man would you mind coming back and replaying the solo on This


40:02

Waltz we did and he said well I like what I played and he was kind of pissed I said well I I do too but I said I I


40:09

really want to see if I can get the get you to play the instrument like how we used to you know where it cries and it


40:16

whines all the stuff nobody really wants anymore you know he was okay and he begrudgingly came down and then it


40:23

became a big hit and a kind of a one of those steel solos that it's thought of like together again and you know lost in


40:31

the feeling and some of those kinds of iconic steel solos and he pulled me aside and he said I need to say thank


40:36

you for getting me to replay that solo and just all I that to say is you


40:43

just never know when it's going to flip and turn and I didn't have any reason to


40:48

believe that a 4 and a half minute Waltz would change my life yeah but it did and


40:54

and I just didn't I didn't have to make those records and shove my guitar down everybody's throat cuz it wasn't wasn't


41:01

how it worked you've always had other guitar players on your on your records playing


41:06

you know with you and supporting you yet you've always played the solos um let's talk about steuart Smith


41:13

so whose idea was it to have Stuart play on your records was it yours or Tony's


41:18

uh probably both of us we always go get together and cast cast a band who we thought would be right for the songs


41:25

that we had and the kind of record you know my s have always been a bit chameleon is and that they they'd have


41:30

something really traditional on them but also something contemporary and something that rocks something that might sit in the Soulful world and and


41:38

so you had to cast players that could go different directions you know and do


41:43

many things and and it was just so how about hey we you know we know of steuart


41:50

from Rod's records let's see if steuart will come down and play it was fun you know had Dean Parks come from California


41:56

and play yeah records you you've had Richard Ben Fred T he on when I call


42:03

your name and I just you know I I love other I I've always loved other people's


42:10

playing way more than mine yeah you know and it I'm not a control freak I don't


42:16

have to have the attention I don't have to be the loud you know all that stuff is I just love the camaraderie of it all


42:23

and seeing what turns up when you were cutting those records with


42:29

with Tony Brown were were you only singing when the Rhythm tracks were going down or


42:35

were you singing and playing no I always played cuz I I always felt like the field that I play with would kind of


42:44

direct everybody where to go yeah you know and and feel is everything to me


42:50

and you know I love you remember I made a record not long ago in Steve Jordan


42:58

um was going to play drums and and because of him and Willie weeks were going to play together as as a section I


43:04

thought maybe I'll let them lead where we go and I won't play and Steve says I


43:10

came all this way play with one of my favorite guitar players you're not going to play I ain't GNA play if you don't play Diana crawl I was do to do a jazz


43:18

duet with her and she says if you don't play I don't want to play yeah I said well I can't she goes that's that's kind


43:24

of refreshing that you don't know all those big all those Chang in in between stuff


43:30

whatever she goes just it'll be it'll be just like you and and that's what you learn after time you know I don't want


43:37

to hear anybody but Willie play guitar on Willie records oh yeah Willie n yeah


43:42

and and and I heard Chris Teton say you know he said yeah those guys play better than me but I play right I play just


43:49

right for what I do that's right you know and it's it's it's part of it you


43:54

know it's the way I I've I've equate the way I play is


44:00

similar to the way that I sing when I'm getting ready to play something in my head I go how would I sing this you know


44:06

and that's what points me and when I'm when I'm singing I go how would I play this and that's one of the things that's


44:12

very identifiable about your guitar playing is that you stop singing with your voice and you sing with the guitar


44:18

yeah it's like you always play solos that are you know they might have riffs but they're melodic they're not just a


44:25

bunch of it's not a barrage of notes being thrown at you and that's the thing they're hummable they're you know


44:30

singable solos the melody is in there yeah somewhere I mean that's a great old check quote he's doing a session the


44:36

guitar player I don't really know what to play The Melody usually works Melody usually works yeah it's all true yeah


44:44

and so when you were tracking those songs would you play acoustic or electric to play Rhythm I mean okay and


44:50

you would just deal with any kind of bleed through or or you replace it or whatever sure yeah like you know you


44:55

can't I couldn't you you know we couldn't have done Liza Jane if I didn't play that Groove and get that swampy


45:01

thing going and um I don't know it's it's all fixed that's the beauty of it


45:08

it's all fixable so yeah you know just make sure you cut out on the bleed and this and that and yeah make it work did


45:15

you talk about Stewart's kind of contributions to your to your records


45:20

God it's been so many years ago but um just beautifully iconic Parts like I


45:26

still believe in you I always think that's that's brilliant guitar playing with what John played on on the


45:32

keyboards and so identifiable and and once again you're you're not you're not


45:38

looking for something to blow your skirt up you're looking for something to serve the song and and that's what what great


45:45

musicians do they listen to each other yeah what you play affects what I play and what I play affects what you play


45:51

and kind of it's a nice dance when it goes the right way one of the few uh


45:58

albums where you did more of uh you you mimicked a little bit was the


46:03

Bakersfield album in it you and it's and not really on the mer Cuts but more so


46:09

on the butt Cuts you you kind of had you're you kind of moved your voice more in the Buck Owens Direction I did yeah


46:18

and and and purposely you know and it was um it was such a fun record to make


46:24

with Paul because adored both of those artists in the music so much probably


46:29

shaped me as much as any um and we picked songs that you know so often


46:35

those records never really got to let the musicians shine yeah they get to play a


46:41

turnaround an intro and that was about it you know two and a half minute song you didn't have time to hear the guy go


46:48

Whittle away and play a solo reverse and then a chorus and whatever and and so we


46:53

picked things that were more suited towards the


46:59

musicianship than me being the singer I sang the songs but we we chose songs to


47:06

where really his steel plane and my Telly plane would be kind of the focal


47:11

point I think I only play I played Strat on one song on that uh holding things together record yeah you know and bent


47:19

some strings in a different way and all that but um holding things together I


47:25

mean that's a song that is I mean you couldn't go wrong with with any of them you picked yeah but you know there were


47:32

a few of those that I've been singing in my whole life yeah you know that was you know you sit in with a bar band and go


47:37

hey let's play holding things together yeah you together again or some of those things were the ones that you know I


47:43

can't be myself pretty obscure meral track that was written by Steve Young I think and I always Sayang it wherever I


47:52

went in a club you know it was easy and everybody could follow along and yeah it was great great fun your guitar playing


47:58

on that album is really interesting because you you kind of you you tip your


48:03

hat to Burton and Don Rich and stuff but you a lot of the cuts you're playing with your fingers instead of a pick and


48:10

you kind of you kind of did kind of a bit of a departure yeah you know I I I


48:16

think I I just like I said I just I play what what's in my heart and I hate


48:22

records that are note fornote right rapes of of other records that's boring


48:28

to me the parts were great yeah I I loved it I loved the the spin that you took on it because it was like how do


48:35

you do those and and you know because Burton and those and Roy Nichols and all those guys have done such identifiable


48:41

things and when you take when you put a little twist to it it makes it it makes it interesting instead of just like well


48:47

he just mimicked what James did yeah I never liked you know note fornote representations of old records that


48:54

didn't that didn't that wasn't that didn't seem very creative cretive yeah you know and and then you and then you


49:00

run into the the people that are going to say well I like the I like the old one better I'm not trying to say I'm


49:06

better than either of those guys or any of those guitar players I just play like I play and we did it we do this because


49:14

we love that music not because we think we can do better versions yeah but people like to listen to things and and


49:22

and then well it's not as good as blah blah blah I like that better than the original


49:27

you get that sometimes but um the whole point is of emulating something you love


49:33

is the fact that you love it yeah you know did did you want to be one of the


49:40

guitar players in the hot band sure I was on standby for a long time for Frank


49:47

cuz Frank would Frank reard would would occasionally threaten to quit yeah and Emmy would call say hey Frank's


49:52

threatening to quit again are you free go yeah and he never quit never never went where it worked you know yeah and


50:00

uh so I I uh I never got to I played with Emmy in the'80s with a uh the angel


50:06

band Angel Band thing with Carl Jackson and emry and that was fun you know but


50:11

never got to play all those songs with the Eagles


50:16

how long have you been 10 years with them eight this my eth year okay one of the interesting things about you know is


50:24

that again you're back to being a sid man and and you're mainly there for your singing I mean and and you're playing


50:31

rhythm guitar you really don't play yeah you know it's had an impact on


50:37

my guitar playing you know I'm not I'm not as as fluid as I I probably usually


50:43

was uh and I found that out two years ago I went out and did about 35 shows in


50:48

the Summer where we weren't working and I had the hardest time keeping up you know and it was really a mind Bender for


50:55

me was funny I had refretted my my white tally went to Joe and said hey I want to


51:00

try to wean myself off these big Frets so we put a smaller fret in okay and I went out and started playing I'm going


51:06

I'm sucking bad you know this is horrible and I went I said is it because


51:12

of the smaller Frets or just because I suck it was just because I sucked so I


51:17

went back to Joe said will you please put the big Frets back in I'm having a a mind meled down you know why why did you


51:23

feel necessary to go to little Frets I don't know yeah you know I have no idea just


51:30

experiment maybe may maybe make it a little easier but it made it a whole lot harder yeah the bigger Frets are easier


51:35

to play on yeah and he put the big ones back in and I was still struggling a little bit I go okay it's just me yeah


51:42

just got to keep got to keep playing I got to practice this is my best this got to be my close to my best friend the the


51:49

old I guess the old joke if the house is on fire is this the one this would be one I'd grab first and what would be the


51:54

second one uh I've got a mark that I bought when I was 18 oh the one with your kind of college money you're


52:00

saving all the money I spent everything I had to get it and was broke yeah but


52:06

there's a few I mean I don't know there's a bunch of senent one of those Martins over there was chats was pretty


52:12

sentimental his wife gave to me after he passed yeah that it's funny you know


52:18

people will make a snide comment about well why do you need so many if you knew some of the stories behind some of these


52:25

guitars you wouldn't I don't know that you'd say that but yeah because you know


52:30

these these and every every guitar is different I mean even though you have a bunch of black guards nothing none of


52:36

them hang with this one this is my favorite for me yeah just for me but they're they're all different and yeah


52:42

and that's the thing that when you go when you go down the rabbit hole it's it's just crazy because it's like the


52:48

more you get into it the more you find out that they they sound and feel and react different exactly yeah so this


52:54

guitar it has a second string tree when did you add that or was of course Joe Joe would get Joe would get mad if I


53:01

said he did it yeah but I think I I don't know if Joe did this or not but I've always had that second string tree


53:06

yeah and for the the reason being we argue about this me and Joe all the time yeah I said I understand that it only


53:13

has an impact when I play open strings yeah but I play a lot of open strings you know all the time so with that


53:20

little bit of tension on the nut that has it's not as flappy right


53:27

you know and all that cuz there's no angle on it and you get better downward


53:32

pressure on the on the G and D string that's and then after you after you fret it it doesn't matter anymore I get that


53:38

but for those open strings for playing you know those kinds of things


53:45

it's yeah that'll hang with you a little better yeah have you ever done any uh you know


53:51

modifications that you regret on guitars like something really heinous


53:57

I not too bad i' I've been pretty good with them some some people have done


54:02

some things that I wish they hadn't have yeah um but this one I've never done


54:07

anything to except replace that pickup and half a dozen fret jobs probably over the years have the have the pickups ever


54:14

been rewound like the bridge pickup no no really uh-uh that's amazing that's


54:19

death sentence it's all over we have to do that I


54:25

quit d yeah but I guess they'll you know they'll eventually kind of wear out and


54:30

do what they do well the biggest thing you watch out for is if when it starts getting a bunch of rust on the low E


54:35

string on that pole that's when you know that there's rust going down in there gotta that's the that's what I've


54:41

learned from U rewinders and stuff like that that's when they start really you know got to watch out for that now but


54:48

this one I I I got for 1978 I still have the receipt and I remember the day two


54:54

guys Bob Woods another guy named Larry Briggs Larry's a vintage instrument dealer and Bob had an old cool music


55:02

store in Dell City Oklahoma where I'm from I'm not from Del City but in close


55:07

anyway they traded about 20 guitars for 20 guitars and I wanted a Telecaster Y and this one went by in the trade and


55:14

Bob Woods had picked it up the guy that had the store I said hey Bob will you sell that Telecaster goes yeah sure I


55:20

said how much 450 see I'll do that and it might have been worth another 200


55:25

bucks then 250 might have been worth a little bit more and so I paid him for it


55:30

every time I saw him from then on until he died he he would look at me he goes God dang you got to me on that


55:37

Telecaster I said Bob I said that guitar saved my butt made me famous and he's


55:42

made thousands of deals where he made good money on it it's just fun to complain sometimes


55:49

exactly but for some reason you know I mean all the Finish is gone and it was


55:54

that way when I got it yeah you you know I mean I'm sure I've worn a good bit of wood off of it over the years but the um


56:02

I don't I can't find any sand marks on there or anything that looks like somebody took it off or got reshaped or


56:08

anything I just think it's it's just has the best the best neck profile of any


56:14

Telly I've ever had I was the color you know always is really interesting on


56:19

this and uh Nacho the guy that wrote the pinecaster book he uh I asked him I said


56:26

what what do you think about that color he said I don't know I mean they could have done something at the time he said or it could have gone back for a refin


56:32

you know a couple years later but what I heard was they they did most they did a lot of the lap steals yeah in that color


56:38

that's right in the white yeah and that every now and then they do a white one and then I've got this one not too long


56:45

ago from Norms out in La uh who I knew when I lived out there and bought a


56:50

bunch of guitars from him over the years but that was Roy Buchanan's backup to Nancy yeah and came up for sale and I


56:57

said man to have a chance to have another white one would be pretty cool I never I don't remember ever seeing


57:04

hardly any white ones yeah you know cuz most of them were the butterscotch color and then yeah yeah so this is a really


57:14

cool guitar cuz this was this was jabo's guitar that he played with Little Jimmy Dickens and again this is another thing


57:20

I learned from Nacho was that the finish on these broadcasters is really really


57:26

brittle and you have another one where it's really coming off bad it was yeah most of it had come off even when I


57:32

bought it yeah and this this is one of those guitars that they sold it to you and of course they wanted you to play it


57:37

on the Opera yeah The Story Goes they found out that I have that I played a


57:42

guitar like that and they contacted me and said we see you play a guitar like our relative Jabo who played with Jimmy


57:48

when we first came to the oery would you be interested in his guitar and I said it's been under the bed for 60 years and


57:54

I said well sure so they came to the opery and I bought it and


58:00

um they said um said our dream is to see it played on the oery one more time yeah


58:07

you know and Jabo died probably back in 51 or two oh yeah he died in the early 50s yeah and uh so I went to Jimmy I


58:15

said hey little Jimmy can I can I play with you tonight he said how come and I said well I just bought jabo's old


58:21

guitar and he said I want that guitar and I said well


58:27

I just I paid this much for it and he goes I don't want it that


58:34

bad I hear little Jimmy saying that yeah I don't want that so I went out played


58:40

it played it with him and then family's over boohoo in a great moment and all that and I took it home with me and then


58:47

fast forward a few years later and Jimmy passed away and um


58:53

so I had an idea I said I'm going to take jabo's guitar and play it at Jimmy's funeral sing go rest high yeah


59:00

play it on that guitar and I told the story of the instrument you know to the to the people and and I said this guitar


59:07

was the guitar that brought Jimmy here and I think it's only right that it should be the guitar that takes him out


59:13

of here yeah it's just beautiful thing beautiful moment everybody's boohoo and and yeah it's beautiful and I get home


59:21

from the funeral the phone rings and it's Haggard Merl Haggard is Merl said


59:27

yes sir he said what I just watched you do that was the most beautiful thing I've ever seen what you did for that man


59:33

was so beautiful wow and he said I want that


59:40

guitar I said you can't have it either he said I can't quit crying he


59:46

said I don't cry yeah I do not cry and I can't quit crying that was beautiful and


59:51

was a neat moment you know for Circle and jao wasn't important guitar player


59:57

because he he was uh him and spider right played twin guitars and and Grady


1:00:02

Martin and and apparently Jabo was uh you know kind of helped Grady out and


1:00:07

and they got going and this is probably the first broadcaster Telecaster was played on the Opera it would have to


1:00:14

have been I mean I know the serial numbers are not sequential but that's 0048 yeah so it's got be it's got to be


1:00:21

early early early yeah that's a really


1:00:26

really cool guitar this this is one that you've been


1:00:33

identified with a lot that forever you played this in in Pure Prairie League you played it yeah and you got this from


1:00:40

your your buddy my best Benny yeah Benny Garcia was my childhood first music friend and we played in all of our first


1:00:47

bands together and everything and even when he had it I bought this guitar I


1:00:53

only had one Fender and I knew I wanted to maybe get a strat and he had that and had been refinished back then and we


1:00:59

made a deal that uh he'd sell it to me for $200 and a pair of boots a pair of


1:01:04

rough out boots so I bought him some boots gave him 200 bucks and got that Strat and I played it the whole time you


1:01:11

know I played it my whole life and I've put the emgs in there and and changed the to one of those uh uh Bridges two te


1:01:20

was the name of the company that put those bridges in there Mike Hansen was a good it was a good it made a lot of


1:01:26

sense it made the guitar sustain a little more and yeah do some interesting things and the fact it had been


1:01:31

refinished it didn't mind routing out the body a little bit yeah um and then I


1:01:37

put the old pickups back in it and then found my way back to I like having that sweet quiet EMG sound sometimes for


1:01:44

certain things and they have kind of a presence like a high-end thing that's that's really that kind of cuts through without being harsh it's kind of and it


1:01:52

was great because those emgs with with this and I'd play whatever amps I was using I didn't have


1:01:58

to readjust tone all the time on the amps it would take whichever one well


1:02:05

and so yeah Benny passed away three or four years ago and I was told him I said I'd say I'm going to sell you that


1:02:11

guitar back someday for $200 pair of boots never got to yeah I I had the


1:02:17

pleasure of meeting Benny a number of years ago you know out on the road and uh what a what a a fabulous guy and the


1:02:24

fact that you had uh a childhood friend that was with you my whole career yeah


1:02:30

and from the late 80s on so for I guess that would be kind of helping kind of


1:02:36

grounding you having someone having a friend that knew you pre Fame and and


1:02:42

who was always there to kind of you know when you when you when you got the big head they were there to kind of let yeah


1:02:48

he kept me he kept me in line but what was cool was when I called him to see if he'd do it you know I said hey man would


1:02:55

you considered coming out and being a my guitar tech and he goes what's a guitar tech yeah he's a good player himself you


1:03:01

know I said I don't really know but we'll figure it out it just be fun to have you with me on this run and and he


1:03:08

did and and it was awesome I remember years ago I from recommendation from my


1:03:14

manager I hired a guitar player to be my second guitar player for a tour and and


1:03:19

the first rehearsal um I knew right away it was the wrong thing to do and I called my


1:03:26

manager Larry I said hey man this isn't GNA work out and and he he said don't tell me that he said I promised him to


1:03:32

gig I said I know but look it's just that it's not a good fit and yeah stylistically great guy but you know


1:03:38

whatever and said okay so he called the guy and and he said hey man I'm sorry


1:03:44

but the the gig with Vince isn't going to work out he goes yeah no kidding he said what do you mean he goes hell I


1:03:50

couldn't play as good as his guitar tech said I knew I didn't have a shot


1:03:57

well I guess that kind of made he was expecting the hammer to come down and Benny's father was a world class jazz


1:04:04

guitar player played with Charlie Christian when they were young and both from Oklahoma and uh Benny's dad just


1:04:11

didn't want to travel and and live that life he wanted to stay home play clubs


1:04:17

but he would have been as big a giant as a jazz guitarist as anybody that ever


1:04:22

lived a few clips of him you know playing on on that you can find he played with Wills a little bit and all


1:04:28

those guys it was it was magical to hear him play you know we were too dumb we were


1:04:34

up playing a rock and roll tell us one Benny story oh my


1:04:41

God like


1:04:46

there's I can't tell several of them he did we lost him in Europe once and he


1:04:54

Benny had been known he'd been known to have a good time once in a while and and


1:04:59

U we were in Amsterdam I think and it's time gig was over and we're going to


1:05:05

leave in two or three hours bus call whatever and there's no Benny you know and there's no cell phones back then and


1:05:12

we didn't what do we do well we leave him so we left him and went to the next


1:05:20

gig and somehow in hell he managed to find his way to the next country and to the gig and boy Larry lit into him good


1:05:28

he said I don't care whose best friend you are said you ever do that again he said run you off but uh no he was God he


1:05:37

was beautiful I remember my favorite story Benny he he'd partake a little bit


1:05:42

and uh occasionally have have himself over served but um when his father passed he called


1:05:50

me up and said man my dad just died and I said oh man you know we I said let me


1:05:56

can I call you back in just a little bit I'm in the middle of something he said yeah so I called him back that night and


1:06:02

he was pretty buzzed and I talked to him for three hours we talked about everything you know we talked for about


1:06:08

three hours and the next day he wakes up he turns over to his wife and he says I


1:06:15

can't believe that son didn't call me back he he told me he's going to call me back somebody didn't even call me


1:06:20

back my dad died he didn't even call me back his wife said Benny he called you back you talked to it for three


1:06:28

hours I did Ben he was a


1:06:33

party he was the best you know it's it was interesting he was my he was my


1:06:39

first music friend yeah you know when I was sixth grade I think I had just gotten my red 335 and uh was sitting out


1:06:47

on the porch playing it through my super Reverb and he rode by on his bicycle and


1:06:52

he pulled up the driveway and he goes hey man so I play guitar too I said you do he goes yeah I live a couple miles


1:06:58

away so we should get together and we did got together and started in our first Garage Band yeah Larry on drums


1:07:05

Benny played bass and I played guitar we were a bad power [Laughter]


1:07:12

Trio low voltage yeah we went through it all


1:07:18

yeah let's have we got we're going to pull out a Gibson


1:07:25

just to be nice a gypson a gypson yes made in


1:07:31

China so you you talked about Larry Carlton earlier and one of the fun things is uh seeing you at the uh the


1:07:40

the Christmas shows that you and Amy do are are are a lot of fun partially because you get to see kind of a


1:07:46

different side of you and uh on some of the tunes like uh uh like you would do


1:07:52

this Christmas and you'd just go off playing the 330 and you playing in kind of a Larry Carlton kind of stylistic


1:07:59

thing and uh it's fun hearing you you know hearing you play the 335 so this is this your favorite one it is I mean my


1:08:06

red one is obviously my favorite but this is the best sounding and I was with Robin Ford when I found this and down


1:08:13

Carters and he started playing he goes I think this is the best 335 I've ever played wow that's pretty good pretty


1:08:19

healthy endorsement isy that helped push those were the two guys that you know just


1:08:26

knocked everybody out when they'd play together at the clubs in LA and I was kid and whatever and just love to hear


1:08:32

them play and did you hear Robin and Larry play together a lot yeah yeah they play some of the clubs out in


1:08:39

LA and the guy Mike Maguire that worked at Valley Arts he's the one that did all their setup work and fret jobs and


1:08:47

everything guitar wise for them and I started going to him and said make my guitar play like their you know and put


1:08:54

big Frets in and all this stuff what year is this 59 yeah you know it


1:09:01

uh this is really something you know it's not too big for a 59 a lot of 59s


1:09:07

are too big for yeah they got big necks on them at times [Music]


1:09:16

yeah but you know they just sustain they do all the things that Fender wants to


1:09:22

do but can't quite yeah it's a different beast and and then that's the thing it's


1:09:28

it's nice you know because you know when you when you play the the Telly when you play the


1:09:33

Strat when you play the 335 you know you get different parts of of you you get different parts of your INF yeah you


1:09:40

know and and that's what that's what I'm always doing I'm trying to I'm not trying to play this guitar on everything


1:09:46

yeah I'm trying to I'm just trying to play pick the right guitar for what I'm wanting to do yeah you know and and I'll


1:09:54

go through several of them just going you know how does this sit in the track how does this you know play well with


1:10:00

others you know so I don't know it's a it's such a fun


1:10:06

fun thing to chase it yeah you know tone and you played I've played for 60 years


1:10:11

and I'm still trying to sound better still trying to find a better stomp box still trying to find a better speaker


1:10:17

still trying to you know all this stuff still goes on well again going back to to gear you were kind of a Fender Twin


1:10:25

guy with with jbl's for a long time and then you started using the Rivera amps MH and that kind of got you away from


1:10:31

the jbl's and you started using a pedal board cuz I thought it was funny cuz on earlier performances you'd see your


1:10:37

pedals on top of your amp like you didn't have them in front of you you'd have your p and you you could see you turn around and you'd hit the pedal on


1:10:43

top of the twin this is pretty funny half the time I'd have to kick the twin to get it to


1:10:50

work put a boot on it you know to get tubes to reset whatever


1:10:55

and and then you uh you kind of yeah you've kind of morphed through through


1:11:01

the years and you've been using little Walters you used Fender deluxes for a while and and but then you you got on


1:11:06

the The Little Walter thing and you've you've been doing that for quite a while yeah I like those a lot cuz they it doesn't matter what you throw at them


1:11:12

you throw a strat a tally a 335 a Les ball yeah doesn't matter and it it it


1:11:18

it's they're so musical they just they take everything you throw at them pretty well and and that's you know what I'm


1:11:24

going to do I don't want four different sets of amps out there to play yeah through through during a show


1:11:30

and it just makes it simple and it works pretty good yeah PHS great guy what kind


1:11:36

of speakers do you like oh gosh I don't even know anymore yeah uh mostly


1:11:42

probably celestian yeah I think I'm not sure which ones what the numbers are on


1:11:48

the back or what color yeah yeah yeah I'm not a good I'm not that big of a gear guy you know just enough to to be


1:11:55

dangerous yeah but when it sounds right you leave it alone yeah yeah you know but no it's


1:12:02

uh I don't use jbls anymore yeah they ruin my back yeah make an amp carry a


1:12:10

twin through a club we kill him man yeah yeah all right we got you to get one of


1:12:15

your bursts out one of your bursts that sounds so a it's not a it's


1:12:22

horrible it's okay you do this for a I don't have a boat okay do you have a


1:12:28

private jet no I don't have a jet I don't have a home I don't have another car see it's okay to have a burst all


1:12:33

all I want is guitars yes so you're good you're [Applause]


1:12:39

good so this other burst is a 59 also thirst


1:12:47

thirst well th this is a great burst it's it's lightweight it plays great it sounds great it's less filling yeah yeah


1:12:55

there really you know there there really is a it's not


1:13:01

just hoodoo you know they're great and they sound great this is this is my


1:13:06

favorite Bridge pickup I've ever heard mhm on on on any guitar yeah I went to


1:13:12

Joe and I played this a little bit with the guys and I said I finally feel like I've got really legit rock and roll tone


1:13:19

well it's clear and fat I mean it's just it's unbelievable it's you know that's that's yeah it's a good fit for a Telly


1:13:26

player too cuz it's kind of like a big big tell in a


1:13:34

way sounds good where did this one come from from uh well strong guitars Dave


1:13:40

Davidson yeah yeah he's become a really good pal of mine and I try to go up there whenever we're in New York and we


1:13:47

we wound up spending a good bit of time in New York City and so I can go to see him whenever I


1:13:52

can and this is a 59 mhm yeah had a Bigsby or whatever couple bite marks but


1:13:59

yep but it's a good one you really is that's what I that's what I'm crazy


1:14:04

about is is that that pickup right there yeah well I was going to ask you to play


1:14:10

the solo off take your memory with you you play it on that or on the Telly or whatever you want to play I don't remember what I played it on I might


1:14:16

have played it on my red 335 really yeah yeah that I can't remember


1:14:39

was that a composed Solo or was that something that you came off off the okay


1:14:45

it has been a couple it's been more than three years ago so yeah I don't know I just kind of


1:14:54

[Music] take off and and and keep what I like


1:15:00

and fix what I don't just like everybody else you


1:15:05

know you know I think I'm probably emulating a more older style of


1:15:11

Nashville guitar playing than a Telecaster style kind of more of the Grady marketing kind of exactly cuz you


1:15:16

know Gibson was King yes here in Nashville for the longest time absolutely I think I've seen you do a


1:15:22

thing on on when you when you thought the tele showed up you know yeah well that you know that the Jabo guitar is


1:15:29

like kind of the the ground zero in that and then it's like it really it's not until years later that it really kind of


1:15:34

takes off as being popular it was more of a California thing exactly it was you know it buck


1:15:40

and Phil ball and all those cats were all playing Tellies and so yeah so this


1:15:45

this was kind of you you think you might have played it on the 335 originally maybe I can't remember yeah but it's a


1:15:52

great solo you know starts off with that kind of with the arpeg and you're outlining the chords really well it's a


1:15:57

really nice well thanks nice solo wish I could play it I never played


1:16:04

anymore steel player all


1:16:10

now I'm already lost


1:16:28

yeah just swingy yeah dances you know and I you know I learned a lot more about shuffles in the last 30 years than


1:16:35

I knew in 1990 yeah you know I loved them you know and we played them a lot Rodney we love to play in shuffles


1:16:42

together and I love being Don Rich and he'd sing and we'd do all those songs yeah like on diamonds and dirt yeah


1:16:48

uhhuh yeah but we did we did Above and Beyond on that record and buck said that's great but you could have changed


1:16:54

one notice it so not we we do I think I think Paul played the solo like Bramley


1:17:02

yeah even you know I can't remember but well it's a it's a great it's a great tune yeah it


1:17:07

is most of your solos are they are they more off the cuff or are they composed


1:17:13

or you know how do how do a lot of them come together they just evolve you know and what's interesting is I find that my


1:17:20

first impression has generally got some some validity to it you know and then I


1:17:27

refine it it may start and I'll play and play for 30 45 minutes go hey play me


1:17:32

play me the first thing I played let me you know kind of and I just think soloing is is no different than than the


1:17:41

writing of the song is to have a beginning a middle and an end and yeah you know you I don't I don't have any I


1:17:48

don't have a an idea in my head of what I think it


1:17:54

should be be you know I just start playing and it Finds Its Finds Its way to me you know most of your solos would


1:18:02

they be overdubbed I or or would you yeah so you would you would track the song and then would y'all have like an


1:18:09

overdub session later on where it's just you and the engineer and the producer or or would you have everyone there yeah


1:18:15

yeah everybody's gone so it won't waste time everyone's not smoking a cigarette yeah well you can't you can't afford to


1:18:22

to be doing overdubs while you got six seven guys payroll paying them session


1:18:28

fees and all that stuff you gotta you got to track while you where you got the guys there and then you sing and do the


1:18:34

overdubs later when you take your time and you're not making somebody else wait for you that's that's that's a lot of


1:18:40

tension when when you have to play and there's a bunch of people waiting but um


1:18:46

now that I do all my recording here it's just I take as long as I want I don't


1:18:51

have to be in a hurry and and sometimes it sometimes it comes sometimes it doesn't you know lay it down try it


1:18:58

again yeah another day try another day yeah what of your solos are you most proud


1:19:05

of I think elza Jane's fairly iconic for Telecaster absolutely kind of solos one


1:19:12

more last chance might be another one but um there's a solo on a record I did


1:19:19

some years ago um what was this song called


1:19:27

me and me and me and my girl you can hear a little you know tip of the hat to mark noler of course I mean I I didn't I


1:19:35

start playing with my fingers until I saw him doing it you know and he was doing [Music]


1:19:41

the yeah that's a cool Groove that Gro that grooves way deeper than


1:19:49

yeah swings more you know got more dance in it or something but yeah and I and


1:19:55

the the difference in sound I've been through this a many times but when you


1:20:01

play versus yeah it has more just the notes


1:20:08

just it balloons differently mhm yeah are are you willing to play a little bit of Liza Jane I don't know that I can


1:20:16

okay you can play it on the last B that's great find that


1:20:22

[Music] I don't know how it starts I just know it's in my head when the band's playing


1:20:28

it you got it was and it was it's composed but


1:20:33

it's also it had been edited okay you know you know i' take I would take a chunk out from another pass and another


1:20:40

chunk out from another pass and and and meld it together I didn't just play that right from start to finish I've learned


1:20:47

how to play it from start to finish right okay that makes yeah but that's I


1:20:53

think that's the way everybody does it seems like yeah just keep playing until you find something yeah and then put them together the the the bins on it are


1:21:01

really cool when you when you do the the B you cuz those are kind of like Clarence white kind of bendery kind of


1:21:07

licks cuz you're you're you're bending you know one note up to the same one that's being you know Fred and you you


1:21:13

you climb up the neck with that and it's a really snaky cool


1:21:19

[Music] sound yeah yeah and and it's iCal that


1:21:25

all those bends be in tune that's


1:21:30

right it's real easy to bend past that's right it's easy to not Bend to it yeah


1:21:35

you know I got a funny story B Bo and I are great friends and he's playing with me these shows at the Ryman but um he I


1:21:43

I like those dusenberg guitars but they're longer yes you know so I talked


1:21:49

to Nathan who runs the company in uh in the states and I said I said I have hard


1:21:54

time playing those guitars because the extra length I know it's a little bit longer but what I'm used to


1:22:03

bending a note I have to bend it further yes because it's longer and they made me


1:22:10

a guitar that is more of the regular scale length or whatever than they do


1:22:17

that that kind of brings up a kind of a the string question because it's the same thing with strings it's like when


1:22:23

you put really light gauge strings on a guitar you have to physically bend that string further for it to get up to the


1:22:29

the pitch and it's it's kind of a weird thing and one of the things I noticed was you always used tens you know on


1:22:36

your guitars and you didn't use the nines or even lighter or eights or anything like Albert and James and some


1:22:42

of the other guitar players used I tried once and I couldn't even play yeah you know one of one of those early gigs with


1:22:48

Albert we were playing in Australia and I tried to put eight or something on my guitar and I just what have you done you


1:22:55

know yeah it was a nightmare but but it it's it's also you know a bigger string


1:23:00

sounds fatter yeah you know yeah and I'll I'll I'll use different strings for


1:23:06

different you know guitars like I'll I'll take Italian 2 and a half step down


1:23:12

any guitar two and a half step down maybe one a whole step down and use 11s cuz then it compensates for for not


1:23:19

having as much tension yep you know and every guitar is different but every guitar likes a certain thing on it you


1:23:26

know so as you've gotten older have you had to lower any of your songs like if you


1:23:34

had no wow that's remarkable it is remarkable some people's voices hang in


1:23:40

there and stay in there forever like whenever you come around I cut in B I do it in C now yeah it's a half step higher


1:23:47

yeah which is stupid but I like playing the guitar in C better than a do in B yeah and I like playing this chord


1:23:54

better than this chord and uh so some some of the stuff I'll change keys on a


1:24:01

song just because of how it will flow with the brightness set and when I'm


1:24:07

doing a set it's like it's like uh sequencing a record yeah you know key the way certain songs follow other songs


1:24:15

is critical because of the key they're in too you know I think about all that nerd stuff you know yeah and you've and


1:24:23

you hitting on you know some of the players have been in your band and such you have always had an amazing band no


1:24:28

matter what you've always put and and to me it kind of goes back to being in those great Bluegrass bands seeing the


1:24:35

hot band being in the cherry bombs you've always well yeah Rodney and Emmy taught me that we respect respect those


1:24:41

guys you know most people take a road band out and don't pay them any money and you know three-o room and whatever


1:24:48

you know all that kind of stuff and I wouldn't I didn't never want to do that yeah and I had to deal with my guys back


1:24:54

and I was really touring a lot and doing well I said I'll make you a deal if you come play in this band I said if I do


1:25:00

better you will too there won't be a base pay there'll be a if I make more you'll make more yeah we'll we'll we'll


1:25:07

make this thing work for everybody yeah often times their bonus checks were bigger than their normal salaries you


1:25:12

know but you know I've because I've been that guy you know you've held on to good


1:25:18

good and even as you've had you know you've I've had people treat me good you know yeah and then you've had John Huey


1:25:25

and Paul Franklin and JD mayus all these all these cats you know play play in your band but you know once again I just


1:25:34

I I think that they would all tell you I give them respect they deserve you know


1:25:39

and so yeah I could have made more money if I have cut back here and cut back there but didn't didn't didn't matter


1:25:45

too much to me and you're particular about the way like at one point I was talking to to Jed Hughes and uh and I


1:25:53

asked him I said is it like you know playing with Vince and he said Vince hears everything yeah and he said that


1:25:58

he you know that he you know he's paying you're paying attention to everything and that you get you know like you


1:26:04

prefer like different voicings and things like that of chords and things like that at times and it's


1:26:11

like you're on it but I'm not I'm not you know I give everybody


1:26:17

has I always say the record's a real good place to start yeah if you want to find something in in to enhance that go


1:26:25

ahead I'm all for it yeah you know and I'm not a I'm not a note for I'm in a band that's a note fornote you know


1:26:31

expectation of of everything you reproduce with the Eagles but U that's the way it should be you know I can't


1:26:38

imagine not hearing those songs and not hearing the iconic lines the iconic


1:26:43

backgrounds everything that made the arranging of those records so great yeah


1:26:49

those those the deserve it yeah the Eagles are yeah you have to reproduce


1:26:55

exactly but you know with with us some some things like I like to hear I like to hear the


1:27:02

intro to when I call your name like Barry Becket played it yeah I like to hear you know just certain things hey


1:27:07

that was pretty was a pretty valuable part of that song and familiar you know


1:27:14

playing with those those guys with Don and Joe and and Timothy is just been a great lesson to relearn how important


1:27:21

songs are you know if you got great songs you're going to win then they do have they have a catalog of


1:27:27

great Tunes where they just play what what do you all do two hours or sh yeah just like oh yeah I know that one yeah I


1:27:33

know that one I know that one yeah pretty pretty remarkable yeah so they they're they're exactly as they should


1:27:40

be Furthest Thing from a jam band you know yeah yeah in a good way well thank you Vince


1:27:48

I really appreciate you uh letting us you got something you can use invade your home oh yeah yeah


1:27:55

glad we finally got to do this thank you yeah brother yeah

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