Jump to content
Jambands.ca

LES PAUL "Rocks out" at age 90!


StoneMtn

Recommended Posts

NEW YORK - Take it from Peter Frampton . Or from Jeff Beck , Eric Clapton , Peter Townsend or Jimmy Page — they all owe a debt to Les Paul, father of the electric guitar.

At age 90, the man who developed the solid-body electric guitar has finally released his first rock album, which is remarkable considering that he is a longtime inductee into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He appears with Frampton, Beck, Clapton, Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top, Bon Jovi‘s Richie Sambora and other guitar legends on the new CD.

This is Paul‘s first new recording since the mid-1970s, when he released two albums with the legendary country guitarist Chet Atkins, including "Chester & Lester," which won a Grammy for best country instrumental album.

Paul built one of the first prototypes for the solid-body electric guitar in 1941. After repeated rejections, Gibson finally began mass-producing a guitar based on Paul‘s design in 1952, and the electric guitar went on to become the lead instrument in rock ‘n‘ roll.

Only Paul could have brought together the disparate all-star lineup of jazz and rock guitarists who turned up on Father‘s Day at Carnegie Hall for a JVC Jazz Festival 90th birthday tribute concert. More than a dozen guitarists — from jazz veterans Bucky Pizzarelli and Pat Martino to rockers Frampton and Steve Miller — performed separately and then crowded the stage to join Paul for a rollicking jam session on "Let the Good Times Roll."

Even though the rock revolution led Paul to retire from public performing in the mid-1960s, he was never disparaging to the upstart younger guitarists. Jimi Hendrix was among the many rock stars who would call Paul for tips.

In May, Paul was inducted into the National Inventors‘ Hall of Fame in Akron, Ohio, earning a spot alongside Thomas A. Edison and the Wright Brothers.

None of the musicians on the new record has a closer relationship to Paul than Miller, who prefaces "Fly Like An Eagle" with a homemade tape recording of the guitarist encouraging him to sing when he was a young boy in Milwaukee. Miller‘s father was the best man at Paul‘s wedding to singer Mary Ford.

On the album, Paul plays lead guitar on only one track. On the others, he listened to the lead and solo tracks recorded by the guest stars, then recorded his own riffs, trills and other accompaniments at his new state-of-the-art home studio.

Paul acknowledges that he can no longer play the way he did at his peak. Arthritis has gnarled his fingers and he has needed a hearing aid since a friend playfully cuffed his ear and broke an eardrum back in 1970. He has taken to heart the advice given to him by a nurse who showed up shortly after he started playing at New York‘s Iridium Jazz Club in 1996.

"She said, ‘Don‘t make the mistake of trying to play like you did when you were a kid, you‘re never going to do it, so play like you play now,‘" Paul remembers. "All these guys ... play so fast, but the guy that wins is the guy that plays the melody and reaches the heart."

But what keeps Paul going more than anything else are his Monday night gigs at the Iridium, where Paul McCartney or Bob Dylan might turn up in the audience and legends like Tony Bennett , Richards or Jeff Beck might show up on stage.

After undergoing triple-bypass surgery in 1980, Paul came out of retirement on the advice of a doctor who recommended that he go back to work.

"I wouldn‘t miss Monday for anything," Paul said. "It gives you a reason to get out of bed other than to go to the bathroom.

"And then you don‘t look at 90 so bad ... I‘m doing just fine, playing and having fun down at the club, just being with my friends and making new friends. ... Naturally I feel like the end of the road is in sight, but you got to keep the faith, work hard and enjoy what you‘re doing. I‘m blessed to be here. I‘m one of the lucky ones."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...