RobbieReverb
Joined: Feb 28, 2006
Posts: 2344
San Jose, Ca.
|
Posted on Nov 24 2019 02:17 PM
Roy Buchannan was a good as any guitarist that I've ever heard or seen. He was most known for his blues and country leanings, but he would occasional-ly play a surf-ish instrumental. I saw him play "Telstar" once or twice, and then there is "Walk Don't Run". Here's a video of Roy playing "Walk Don't Run" on Rockpalast, in Germany: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yc6ePrq-7Ts&feature=share&fbclid=IwAR31-z3LDO2hdokjJtPkvo3PgCKyV36QBEq27JVowHbGGTU43gD1A8zCsok
— Bob
|
Redfeather
Joined: Jul 30, 2016
Posts: 883
|
Posted on Nov 24 2019 02:45 PM
Good ol' Roy. And he's even smiling while he plays it. You don't see that too often with him.
|
Boss_Daddy_Meltdown
Joined: Apr 25, 2018
Posts: 84
Gainesville, GA
|
Posted on Nov 24 2019 05:07 PM
So blessed that I got to see him on a double bill with Robin Trower in the mid '80's...frillin mad skills and feel....RIP RB.
— Can I have everything louder than everything else!
https://thesurfaces1.bandcamp.com/releases
|
dp
Joined: Feb 26, 2006
Posts: 3546
mojave desert, california
|
Posted on Feb 24 2020 09:59 PM
He played 'Peter Gunn" when I saw him live...also heard him do a mean "Green Onions" live, too... screaming Telecaster madness!
|
Surfing_Sam_61
Joined: Jan 15, 2019
Posts: 1515
|
Posted on Feb 25 2020 01:16 AM
Yeah Roy had some chops I'll say that and on a Telecaster no less.
There is a fine line between the Blues, Country and Surf. Each has its own expectations but sharing the same type of scale runs etc. Many Country style players like to play Instrumental Surf and Ventures style music because of that.
Its a shame Roy hung himself in the slammer after being arrested for disorderly conduct while being drunk etc . . . Supposedly used his shirt to do it, many friends said that was suspicious though.
He had a good version of a Cream song too below.
I don't recognize the neck he has on this Telly, the body looks like a 50's but the neck is either a replacement or a different manufacture ...dunno anybody know?
Roy jammed with Albert Collins and Lonnie Mack back in the day too, sample in the bottom video. RIP all
Last edited: Feb 25, 2020 02:10:08
|
RobbieReverb
Joined: Feb 28, 2006
Posts: 2344
San Jose, Ca.
|
Posted on Feb 25 2020 03:33 PM
Thats for sharing the videos, Surfin' Sam! I had never seen Roy play "Sunshine of Your Love", and had never seen him using that model of guitar. After the Carnegie Hall show in the 2nd video, Roy did a tour, called "The Great American Guitar Assault" with Lonnie Mack, and with Dicky Betts replacing Albert Collins. I saw the show in L.A., and it was epic.
Towards the end of his career Roy experimented with guitars other than his beloved Telecasters. In the late 70's he recorded with a Les Paul, but ended up going back to Telecasters. In the mid 80's I saw him do one tour with a Strat. The next time I saw him, he was back to a Telecaster. I had the good fortune of talking to him that night, and when I asked him about the strat used on the previous tour, he said that he liked it, but it just didn't "cut" like the Tele and give him the tone that he wanted. The guitar, in the first video, about which you asked, is a Bill Laurence RB II, which was made specifically for him, and used by Roy briefly in the late 80's. After the Bill Lawrence RB II, he started using Fritz Brothers Bluesmaster signature models, and used them until he died.
— Bob
Last edited: Feb 25, 2020 15:37:40
|
OaklandA
Joined: Nov 01, 2017
Posts: 83
Arizona
|
Posted on Feb 26 2020 01:03 PM
He was a special player. There are some epic threads on the TDPRI, the Telecaster forum about Roy. Pickup winder Don Mare has practically done a doctoral dissertation on his #1 Tele (Nancy) and offers a set replicating his findings.
Spoiler alert - the pickups in Nancy were very microphonic and he used an unusual wiring setup. Roy reportedly used to wrap that guitar in a towel and throw it in his car in his early days.
|