Sad news that the great R&B singer-songwriter Bill Withers passed away on March 30, 2020 at the age of 81. The West Virginia native made a big impact during his relatively brief 15-year career between 1970-1985. (He stopped recording and…
On the 50th anniversary of the Woodstock Festival, our author compiled a catalog of the acoustic guitars played on stage by Richie Havens, John Sebastian, Country Joe McDonald, David Crosby, Stephen Stills, Neil Young and more.
David Grier is the classic guitarist’s guitarist—not terribly well-known by the general public despite a long, stellar career working with just about everyone who’s anyone in the bluegrass and Nashville country music communities over the past four-plus decades, but uniformly admired by fellow guitarists for his amazing skill and versatility.
It's a been a while since we've heard new music from the powerhouse nylon-string-guitar-wielding duo of Rodrigo Sanchez and Gabriela Quintero, better known, of course, as Rodrigo y Gabriela.
In a career spanning five decades, singer, songwriter, and guitarist Eric Bibb has proven to be a musical alchemist—combining heaping helpings of blues, gospel, folk, and world music styles into a distinctive and magical amalgam that feels like its own…
The Louisiana-based duo of Clay Parker and Jodi James plucked the name of their first full-length album—The Lonesomest Sound That Can Sound—from a line in a semi-obscure Woody Guthrie tune called “When the Curfew Blows”
Guitarist, singer, and songwriter Rory Block has been one of the country’s preeminent blues artists for more than four decades and close to 30 albums now, but if you haven’t checked in with her in the past dozen years, you’ve missed out on some of the best music she’s ever made.
The Kentucky-based guitarist Nathan Salsburg has made some of the most compelling acoustic-guitar instrumental albums in this decade, both as a solo artist and in collaboration with the wonderful Chicago-based (English) guitarist James Elkington.
Steve Tibbetts’ music is impossible to pigeonhole, leaning towards jazz, avant-garde, and modern classical, but he doesn’t fit neatly into any of those categories.
The “Paco” in the title of Tim Easton’s latest folk-blues album is the nickname that was bestowed long ago on his trusty, travel-worn, black Gibson J-45, his constant companion over many years of traveling the globe—busking, playing clubs and any…
This stuff is rough and ragged in places, much of it clearly improvised, and sonically not what modern audiences perhaps expect/demand. But it’s undeniably heartfelt and soulful in a deep and occasionally even spiritual way.
When Del McCoury’s tour bus rumbled into the parking lot of our offices on a crisp morning in late November 2017, the band members were still waking up after a sold-out two-show night at Berkeley’s Freight & Salvage.
Chances are you know Lead Belly, the iconic, influential, and greatly celebrated folk and blues master. You will not be surprised to learn that he is the subject a forthcoming documentary film directed by Curt Hahn featuring reflections on the…
When the neo-psychedelic folk-rock-blues group Chris Robinson Brotherhood came through the San Francisco Bay Area for dates supporting their eclectic new album Barefoot in the Head, leader Robinson (of Black Crowes fame) and guitarist Neal Casal stopped by the AG studio to play a couple of songs for Acoustic Guitar Sessions, and to talk about the cool old guitars they brought.
Chris Robinson: This is my 1959 Martin D-18 that I’ve had quite a long time. This guitar was purchased in 1992 in Los Angeles, when they used to have guitar stores all over the place; this one was from Guitars ’R Us on Sunset [Blvd.]. At that time I didn’t play any guitar, but my father [Stan Robinson] was a folk singer on ABC Paramount Records and I grew up with a 1953 D-28 in the home that he played all the time, so that was one of the resonant sounds I heard growing up. Eventually, when I was going to purchase something, I wanted something nice and something I could hold onto, and I told Albert [Molinaro, owner of Guitars ’R Us] I was looking for a dreadnought Martin, so he pulled a few down, and this is the one I’ve had ever since.
I don’t really know anything about it, except for the fact that this is the guitar that all the songs fall out of. I love the sound. It’s on all our records. When it’s time to write, this is the guitar that comes out—so I keep it away from all the other guitars so as not to be influenced by them!
It’s funny about guitars—when I was a kid and didn’t play guitar, I was so cavalier with this guitar. I’d take it around, throw it in a case, put it on the plane to Jamaica, take it on tour to Europe.… It’s like anything in your youth, looking back at the decisions you made—it’s horrifying! But I still have it and I love it; it’s my favorite.
Neal Casal: This is a 1952 Gibson SJ that I have not even had a year. There’s no particular search story for the guitar because when I ran across it, I wasn’t searching for a guitar. I’ve spent all the money I’ve made the last few years on guitars, amps, and pedal boards, and at the time I found this, I had sworn I was done buying any gear for a while. But a friend said, “Come into this incredible vintage acoustic store in Philadelphia with me!” I said, “I don’t want to go in there, man.” “It’s cool, you don’t have to buy anything.” I said, “All right, fine, I’m not going to buy anything.”
So I went in and I was looking around at these very expensive guitars that I’ve played before—Martins of [Chris’] ilk, different Gibsons. I was picking them and nothing was really calling to me, and I didn’t want anything to call to me. Then, just as I was leaving the guitar room to go into the mandolin room, this guitar caught my eye. I’ve always had a thing for Gibsons of that era, because the Everly Brothers and the Beatles and Rolling Stones records, and so many other classic groups and recordings had these. It was the last guitar in the row and just as I was leaving I thought, “Aw, let me just check that out for a second.” I hit one chord… and it was all over. My friend was there and he said, “You realize you have to buy that guitar now.” I was like, “Man, you made me come in here.”
But I forced myself not to buy the guitar at that moment. So I left the store without the guitar, but it wouldn’t leave my mind, so I bought it a week or two later. It was good timing because we were just about to make Barefoot in the Head, which was originally going to be an acoustic album. It turned out to be more than that, but there is still a lot of acoustic music on it, and this guitar made a really beautiful debut on that record. It’s a lifetime guitar, like Chris’. I’ll have this forever. It’s been a bit painful paying it off, but I’m a musician, we do this for a living, and it’s well worth having.
This article originally appeared in the December 2017 issue of Acoustic Guitar magazine.
This year marks the 135th anniversary of the founding of Washburn Guitars, and one way the company is celebrating this milestone is by releasing a limited-edition anniversary instrument, the RSD135D, modeled after a 1937 Washburn dreadnought. Only 135 of these…