An Interesting Look At Tom Scholz.

More than a feeling was getting airplay and he was still working at Polaroid.
He figured it wouldn't get further than the local radio stations.
He stayed at polaroid until the album went platinum.

I seem to remember hearing or reading that somewhere.
 
Extremely cool vid. My Rockman x100 is a prized possession of mine.
I heard that music in 78 or 79 in music class - Jr. High. The teacher let us bring in albums and listen in class. Absolutely blew me away. It still does.
 
Extremely cool vid. My Rockman x100 is a prized possession of mine.
I heard that music in 78 or 79 in music class - Jr. High. The teacher let us bring in albums and listen in class. Absolutely blew me away. It still does.

Our art teacher, Mr. Bitner, had a stereo in the classroom and he would let us bring LP's in and play them.

I remember hearing "Back In Black" on the stereo for the first time in that class...

I remember walking to first period art class one very foggy morning. The tiny drops of moisture just hung in the air and you could only see a few feet ahead of you.

All of a sudden I heard a girl shrieking loudly, I mean like someone was killing her. As I got closer to my homeroom, I saw a girl sitting in the doorway being supported by too other students. She literally passed out and they had to grab her to keep her from falling.

I asked a fellow student, Todd Wildermuth, what happened and he replied, "Dude, somebody killed John Lennon...."

That was Monday, December 8, 1980....
 
Extremely cool vid. My Rockman x100 is a prized possession of mine.
I heard that music in 78 or 79 in music class - Jr. High. The teacher let us bring in albums and listen in class. Absolutely blew me away. It still does.

I could never get into Boston. I think they were talented, but there was something I found lacking (no disrespect) in the guitar work...and in retrospect, I think it was his rather synthetic tone.

At that time, in the late 70's, i was into Triumph, AC/DC and Scorpions....
 
The Big Muff and Rat were the first solid state I remember. They sold those in a record store called Sam Goodies. Very cheap in late 70s early 80s. May be first "headphone amp". The Fuzz Face was in the 60s too.
 
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The Mastro Fuzz Tone distributed by Gibson was actually the first on the market ( I owned one and they sounded terrible.) There was also the Range Master from the U K, but it was more of a treble booster than fuzz, it just pumped the front end of the pre amp section.FZ1_1.jpg
 
The Mastro Fuzz Tone distributed by Gibson was actually the first on the market ( I owned one and they sounded terrible.) There was also the Range Master from the U K, but it was more of a treble booster than fuzz, it just pumped the front end of the pre amp section.View attachment 4564

When I was a kid, a session guitarist who used to frequently visit Mom's studio heard me trying to play rock with a Big Muff, a Watkin's Copicat (or the studio's Groupnaster) and a very old Fender amp I was using.

He politely asked if he could show me a thing or two and I graciously accepted.

He said, (as best I can recall from 1974) "Kid, Fender is OK and all, but rock is Marshall territory. Do you see Ritchie playing Fender amps???" I shook my head no, and he continued, "That box has a real fizzy sound. You need something like this..."

And he pulled over a Marshall combo he brought and plugged me in. I guess my surprised face must have made him laugh because he was busting up at my wonder and amazement.

After a bit, I noticed he was gone and I went looking for him. Mom said he had already left, so I told her that he forgot his amp. Mom said that he didn't forget it...he had given it to me.

Years later, Mom would tell me that he told her I was enjoying that amp so much that he couldn't bear to have me unplug it. He told her, " The kid has an ear. Encourage him to keep playing. He has got more enjoyment out if that amp than I ever will, besides I have more of them laying around...he can keep it."

That's how I got my first Marshall.
 
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