Avsnitt
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My guest for this pilot episode is Gale Paridjanian of (the magnificent) Turin Brakes.
If you listen to the song Underdog (Save me) by Turin Brakes, it will tell you a lot about how Gale plays and what he brings to a song with his guitar playing. Gale is an underrated and understated guitar god - as all Turin Brakes fans know. Olly Knights, singer in Turin Brakes describes Gales playing as “the real deal since the very beginning", and also “band cheat code” which Gale & I explore further in this conversation.
Gale's choice of guitar is a Charvel electric-acoustic model from his days working in the acoustic department of one of the music shops in London’s famous Denmark Street, for which he paid something like £469 (roughly £1,200 in today’s money).
“It’s got my sound in it. If you plug it in it just sounds like The Optimist and that’s our sound. It’s a battle to play but there’s something about how it sounds when it’s recorded. It sounds like me”.
https://www.songsommelier.com/
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With his band Mogwai, Stuart Braithwaite has been making music since 1995, with 11 studio albums that have gained increasing popularity over time. In fact, their last L.P. ‘As The Love Continues’ reached the lofty milestone of #1 (in the UK album chart). The band has announced a new album, ‘The Bad Fire’, coming January 2025. Stuart plays us a riff to the new song “Lion Rumpus”, in which he plays out of his comfort zone i.e. fast!
Stuart’s guitar playing style in Mogwai is characterised by a blend of minimalism, emotion, and powerful quiet-loud dynamics. Mogwai eschew traditional structures (as well as virtuosity), instead opting for texture - building from slow-burn delicate passages to massive, wall-of-sound crescendos. Stuart’s tricks of the trade are use of open strings, multiple effects and deploying that trance-inducing trademark of post-rock: the drone. In Stuart’s words:
“I’m quite minimal. I see the guitar as a way of expressing emotions. I’m never impressed by how hard something is to play. I like to play with patterns where the instruments will meet at certain times. “It’s a cacophonous thing where we’ll all play almost the same thing, but not quite, so it will be a bit wonky”.
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