Posts Tagged ‘classic rock guitar guitar for baby boomers how to play lead guitar jam on guitar learn guitar riffs learn how to play guitar’

During the interview the only effect Carl used with his vintage blackface Princeton Reverb was a T-Rex Replica delay pedal. Then we went to his garage and there were stacks of flight cases and he showed me three of his pedalboards. From grab-and-go to larger, more sophisticated boards, he had whatever he needed to cover any gig. Here are some pictures I took. CLICK ON ANY PICTURE TO ENLARGE

Carl in front of his various flight cases
Carl in front of his various flight cases.

Click on image to enlarge.

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Another part of Carl's arsenal.

It was a beautiful sunny spring day and I was turning off of Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu to the majestic Topanga Canyon. As I winded my way through the mountains, I thought about all the musicians that had lived in the area since the 1960′s. Now I was going to interview a modern musician who had decided to move into the area some years ago.

I passed country stores and ranches, hovels and estates and then I got to Carl Verheyen’s lovely house where he ushered me in to his home studio and I set up to do the interview. He had two blackface Princeton Reverbs, shelves of effects pedals, and a beautiful original 1958 Stratocaster that he bought on the recommendation of pickup czar Seymour Duncan.

Carl proceeded to noodle in a way that would have silenced all those kids playing high-gain metal riffs at your local Guitar Center. His tone was pure, clean and magical and was only enhanced by a T-Rex Replica delay. Though he had just returned from a six-week tour of Europe with his own band days ago, he had been busy working on the soundtrack to a Will Ferrell flick.

Thankfully, he took time from his busy schedule to do this interview. There was so much great stuff there I decided to break it into two parts. I also made filmed him playing Goodbye Pork Pie Hat by Charlie Mingus. What a treat. Be sure you register for www.GuitarBandDVD.org and get his video lesson and 10 Minute Blues Bootcamp. His lesson should keep you busy for some time. It is brief, but packed with useful tips.

by David Caris

View Part 1 of the Carl Verheyen Interview here

View Part 2 of the Carl Verheyen Interview here

I find it interesting that people buy guitars and feel like they have to take tons of lessons before they play in a band. They think they suck and need to play at a certain level before they should play with other musicians while constantly comparing themselves to their guitar heroes. To an extent it makes sense, but really it is mostly about insecurity. I think it’s a shame.

I want you to get out there and find some musicians to play with who are at your approximate playing level and play some music. I think you should also write your own music and not get hung up on how good you sound compared to other people. Everyone has to start somewhere and if you keep at it YOU CAN DO IT.

You don’t need to know lots of chords or sing really well to make music. All you need is desire. If you know five chords, chances are you know the basis of tons of existing songs and tons more you can write with those same chords. Here is a simple way to write a song. If you keep doing it, you will in time write something really good.

And consider this when you get self-critical: recorded music now is so slick and the production is so perfect that in many cases the bands don’t sound anything like their recordings without “augmenting” their live performances with pre-recorded tracks and special effects.

So let’s get started.

1). Find a catchy line or phrase from anywhere. This could be a headline, a common phrase or just something that sounds good to you. This will be the title of your new song.

2). Write a verse that relates to the title of the song.

Here’s a quick example I will make up instantly for this article: let’s say the song title is “Wave”

She rolls in and washes over me
I’m drowning in her deepest tide
Pulling me into her world
With no place for my fears to hide

3). So there’s a verse that makes some ocean-like references. Now we need a hook. We need a chorus where the key word is WAVE since that is the title to our song. So here’s something quick:

I can’t fight the ebb and flow
So I am riding out this wave
And the past cannot be saved
So I am letting go and riding out this wave.

So there are eight lines. Four lines are a verse and four are a chorus.

4). Now all you need to do is apply some music to the verse and the chorus using some or all of the five chords. You can do this with a little effort. If you want to use my sample words and write the music around them first you can do that and then replace the words later with your own original lyrics.

5). Once you have done this just write another verse using the first verse as a template.
Write a verse that tells more of the story as it relates to the first verse and the chorus.

Pay close attention to step 6. You must do this:

6). Make sure you can sing the verse and chorus to the music you have created. Record yourself using any device and make sure you can play the verse and the chorus the same way every time. This is crucial to song form. You have to be able to reproduce the song every time or the other musicians won’t be able to follow you.

So now your song form looks like this:

verse 1
chorus
verse 2
chorus

6). You have the basis of your song now. That wasn’t too hard was it?

In my next article I will show you how develop your song further. I truly believe that once you get into this you will be addicted to songwriting. Once you start hearing your original songs being played in your own band you won’t be able to stop. Nothing else can give you that feeling. You can do it.


silhoutette

I am in my forties and I think it’s great so many younger players and listeners are embracing the music I grew up with. These certainly is no shortage of great players today, but classic rock is big with plenty of younger players and even, well… kids. My 12 year old daughter has friends that love the Beatles and Jimmy Hendrix. How cool is that. Some of them have Hannah Montana and Creedence on the same iPod.

I find this amazing and I want to know why you think this is happening.

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