Growing up in the 70's & 80's, fueled by Leslie West's tone, I am a renaissance man. I like overdriven humbuckers above all else. Thusly, for their tone and high energy level, my favorite 'modern' band is Airbourne. Volbeat caught my attention with "Seal The Deal," through tone and arrangement. However, I have been unable to get through any of their other songs. I enjoy playing classic covers. It never gets old to me.
I do not particularly like my original material. What I write has this kind of bizarre flair, like a cross between blues and country with heavily overdriven guitar. Maybe tis is because I was unable to openly listen to and play rock/metal at home as a kid, and the only alternatives were Buck, Merle, 50's Rockabilly and Delta Blues. so this music who have had a strong, yet unconscious force upon me.
I think those early musical restrictions served to make me very opinionated. My ear is very discerning. I can name 40+ year old "classics" that I never listened to all the way through because the music did not grab me. Some of these songs, I have only recently listened to some of these songs all the way through, and I realized why I stopped at the 30 second mark - I just didn't find anything interesting in them.
Now, back in 2011, when we released one of my originals, it did very well abroad, with furious airplay in Italy, France, England and South America. It was promoted heavily by Bishop 105.5 FM's Gary Grainger in the UK. Quite honestly, it surprised me that anyone would like it, but airplay royalties confirmed it did have an audience. It also did OK in the U.S. and I still have copies radio station ID jingles that I recorded for a number of domestic and foreign radio stations, which was fun. I went through a divorce about the same time and lost everything, so I just shelved the project, unwritten/unfinished songs, etc, I had been scheduled to perform at a few blues venues in the summer of 2011 (when interest in this song was at it's peak) but I wasn't emotionally able to do it.
Of an entire album of originals, only 2 songs survived - the two I had emailed to Gary Grainger. The rest was lost when my ex destroyed my files and computers. From a creative standpoint, I've never really come back from that. One of the drummers on those tracks has since passed away. It can never be re-captured.
I spent quite some time playing bass full time in a L.A. based blues band. The salary + 15% was nice, but my heart wasn't in it and I left on good terms. I would much rather play covers that I like, if that makes any sense.
So, I haven't really tried sitting down and tried writing seriously since 2011. Maybe I will once we get finished moving into the new house.
So, as far as new music is concerned, Airbourne is about all I listen too.
I was recently given tickets to a JB show along with backstage passes. I gave them to a student who idolizes JB because I knew it would mean the world to this young fellow.
Now, having said that, I would NOT have given away tickets to see Airbourne....
This little note from Phil Collen really sums up how I feel and he is the first artist I know of to take this approach:
“Everybody always says, ‘Listen to all sorts of music.’ I’m going to go somewhere else with that. I think you should listen to what you like. Listen to what inspires you. You can try to check out other genres and styles, but if you don’t get anything from them, don’t beat yourself up about it. Stay with what moves you.
I never learned fingerstyle because I never really liked it. I wanted to make a guitar scream and cry, so that’s the kind of guitar music that I listened to - guys who really wailed. That’s the music that inspired me, and I knew that’s where my talents really lie. I didn’t have the time to sit around and try to be an amazing fingerstyle player; I was developing the skills that I knew would ultimately serve me best.
A lot of other guitar players will guilt trip you - ‘You shouldn’t have blinders’ on and all that rubbish. I want to take that guilt away. Don’t feel bad about knowing what you know, liking what you like and sticking with it. If blues inspires you, listen to blues. If metal gets you off, listen to metal. And on and on it goes. Why stay away from something you love? That’s crazy.