3/15/2010

48- dél- Derek Trucks Band

A lap a " john coltraine él " Derek Trucks oldalának másolata

Derek Trucks

A Wikipédiából, a szabad enciklopédiából.

Derek Trucks (Jacksonville,1979. június 8.) amerikaigitáros.

A floridai születésű Trucks 9 évesen fogott először gitárt a kezébe és gyorsan kiderült, hogy csodagyerek. Zenekarával hamarosan turnézni kezdett és több lemezt is kiadott. Korai munkássága elsősorban ablues zenén alapult, főleg a The Allman Brothers Band inspirálta, ahol nagybátja, Butch Trucks dobos és alapító tag volt. Később olyan zenészek, zenekarok befolyásolták, mint aHowlin’ Wolf (blues), a jazz zenészek közül: Miles Davis,Sun Ra, John Coltrane, Charlie Christian, később Wayne Shorter és sokan mások.

A keleti és az indán klasszikus zenén és Duane Allman játékán alapuló slide guitar technikája kiemelkedő. 2003-ban ő volt a legfiatalabb gitáros, aki rákerült a Rolling Stones magazinminden idők 100 legjobb gitárosának listájára, és ő vált a legjobb slide gitárossá Duane Allman óta.

A Derek Trucks Band 1994-ben alakult. Ez a zenekar vált Truck állandó hátterzenekarává. A zenekar mostani felállása:

  • Derek Trucks – gitár
  • Kofi Burbridge – billentyűs hangszerek, fuvola, vokál
  • Todd Smallie – basszusgitár, vokál
  • Yonrico Scott – dob, ütőhangszerek, vokál
  • Mike Mattison – ének
  • Count M’Butu – ütőhangszerek

Derek 1999-ben csatlakozott nagybátyjához és a The Allman Brothers Band-hez, de közben folytatja saját zenekara irányítását. Az együttessel 2CD-t (2000: Peakin’ at the Beacon, 2003: Hittin’ the Note) és két koncert-DVD-t (2003: At the Beacon Theatre, 2004: One Way Out) adott ki.

2006-ban csatlakozott Eric Clapton Back Home című turnéjához.

Minden idők 100 legjobb gitárosaRolling Stone magazin
Előző:
Robert Quine
The Voidoids
80.
Derek Trucks

81.
Következő:
David Gilmour
Pink Floyd
82.

Derek Trucks Band Live at Blue Note on 2003-03-24 (March 24, 2003)

Afro Blue
Disc 1 (Early Show):
1. Intro
2. Naima
3. Leavin Trunk
4. Down, Don't Bother Me
5. Sahib Teri Bandi
6. Bock to Bock
7. For My Brother
8. Feel So Bad
9. Pedro
10. E: Yield Not

Disc 2 (Late Show):
1. Intro
2. Rastaman>
3. Ain't That Lovin You
4. Like Anyone Else
5. Cheesecake
6. Goin Down Slow>
7. Evil Clown
8. Gonna Move*>
9. Joyful Noise*

Disc 3:
1. Encore: Afro Blue

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Audio FilesShorten
Intro5.60 MB
Naima41 MB
Leavin Trunk32 MB
Down, Don't Bother Me38 MB
Sahib Teri Bandi46 MB
Bock to Bock28 MB
For My Brother49 MB
Feel So Bad45 MB
Pedro86 MB
E: Yield Not34 MB
Intro1.93 MB
Rastaman>63 MB
Ain't That Lovin You47 MB
Like Anyone Else35 MB
Cheesecake56 MB
Goin Down Slow>50 MB
Evil Clown47 MB
Gonna Move>37 MB
Joyful Noise63 MB
Encore: Afro Blue85 MB


Sorry for the small disc 3, but there was just no way to break the show up that would allow me to put everything on two discs!

Derek Trucks Band Live at UB Center for the Arts on 2008-11-02 (November 2, 2008)


Set #1:

1. Down in the Flood
2. Down Don't Bother Me
3. Get What You Deserve
4. These Days Is Almost Gone
5. Blind Crippled Crazy
6. Band Intro's
7. Done Got Over
8. The Weight

Set #2:

1. Soul of a Man
2. Already Free
3. Meet Me at the Bottom
4. I Know
5. Don't Miss Me When I'm Gone
6. Sweet Inspiration
7. Get Out My Life
8. My Favorite Things
9. Leavin Trunk
10. Crowd
11. Encore - Gonna Move

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(184 MB)

Audio FilesFlacOgg Vorbis64Kbps MP3VBR MP3
DTB20081102set1t01.flac39 MB5.86 MB3.39 MB11 MB
DTB20081102set1t02.flac29 MB4.59 MB2.56 MB8.09 MB
DTB20081102set1t03.flac25 MB3.62 MB2.02 MB6.33 MB
DTB20081102set1t04.flac29 MB4.28 MB2.42 MB7.54 MB
DTB20081102set1t05.flac38 MB6.20 MB3.45 MB11 MB
DTB20081102set1t06.flac5.36 MB1.10 MB518 KB1.70 MB
DTB20081102set1t07.flac29 MB4.46 MB2.48 MB7.76 MB
DTB20081102set1t08.flac46 MB6.94 MB3.93 MB12 MB
DTB20081102set2t01.flac13 MB2.54 MB1.48 MB4.40 MB
DTB20081102set2t02.flac12 MB2.42 MB1.41 MB4.21 MB
DTB20081102set2t03.flac21 MB3.65 MB2.07 MB6.50 MB
DTB20081102set2t04.flac37 MB6.09 MB3.49 MB11 MB
DTB20081102set2t05.flac34 MB4.74 MB2.66 MB8.68 MB
DTB20081102set2t06.flac35 MB5.19 MB2.85 MB9.03 MB
DTB20081102set2t07.flac62 MB9.61 MB5.37 MB17 MB
DTB20081102set2t08.flac99 MB17 MB9.68 MB30 MB
DTB20081102set2t09.flac49 MB7.32 MB4.21 MB13 MB
DTB20081102set2t10.flac8.80 MB1.74 MB819 KB2.82 MB
DTB20081102set2t11.flac46 MB7.13 MB3.97 MB12 MB



Derek Trucks Band Live at Great American Music Hall on 2005-02-10 (February 10, 2005)

Collection: DerekTrucksBand
Band/Artist: Derek Trucks Band
Date: February 10, 2005 (check for other copies)
Venue: Great American Music Hall
Location: San Francisco, CA
set I
Killing Floor > This Sky
Chevrolet
Soul Serenade
44 Blues
My Favorite Things >
Volunteered Slavery

set II
Sahib Teri Bandi
Crow Jane
Feel So Bad
Cheesecake
To Know You Is To Love You
Rastaman Chant > *
Lonely Avenger *
Joyful Noise *
Encore 1: Back at the Chicken Shack (tribute to Jimmy Smith) *
Encore 2: Freddie's Dead *


* with Jimmy Herring

Audio FilesShorten
Killing Floor > This Sky44 MB
Chevrolet23 MB
Soul Serenade33 MB
Forty-Four Blues45 MB
My Favorite Things >53 MB
Volunteered Slavery57 MB
Sahib Teri Bandi70 MB
Crow Jane43 MB
Crow Jane46 MB
Cheesecake51 MB
To Know You Is to Love You44 MB
Rastaman Chant > *71 MB
Lonely Avenger *53 MB
Joyful Noise *94 MB
Back at the Chicken Shack *73 MB
Freddie's Dead *76 MB
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As a developing guitar prodigy Derek Trucks shared the stage with Buddy Guy and the Allman Brothers Band, joining the latter officially a decade ago at age 20. He’s gone on to be an MVP sideman for Eric Clapton and lent his slide guitar skills — firmly in the mold of Duane Allman — to discs by his wife Susan Tedeschi, Guy, Widespread Panic, and many others.

But he’s led a parallel career as one of the more adventurous bandleaders since Zappa, Bruce Hampton, and Captain Beefheart, creating a fusion of roots music, wailing free jazz and sounds gleaned from other cultures. All of that comes together on the Derek Trucks Band’s new Already Free, an album that sounds distinctly American, yet liberated from tradition by a free-ranging set of influences and Trucks’ sweet playing. Tedeschi guests, as does fellow Clapton band guitarist Doyle Bramhall II.

We caught up with Trucks by phone at a stop with his band in Portland, Maine, and discussed all of the above plus, of course, his SG-driven guitar approach.

In the past your albums have explored different styles: soul music, Eastern and African sounds, modal playing. But Already Free has a very distinctive, swampy sound of its own.

I built a studio behind my house, in the swamp, so it does come out of a place where the alligators and manatees live.

It’s the most personal record for me, too, because the band and I have honed in on a unique sound. Up to this point we’d been all over the map. And I’m glad for it. That’s been an adventure. But the band and me matured to a point where all those influences have been distilled down to what came out on this record. It is very American music, but with all those other influences thrown in — while previous records were like a trip to Pakistan or Africa or wherever.

How important is gear in getting your fat, sweet mid-range heavy guitar sound?

Gear gets in the way if it becomes your focus. Some of the greatest guitarists find a guitar they are so comfortable with it becomes an extension of them as players. You see pictures of Duane with a Les Paul and later on with an SG and it looks so right.

Once you find the right combination of guitar and amp, on a great night you’re not thinking about gear. With my own band when I’m playing my SG through an early ’60s Super-Reverb it’s such a comfortable sound for me that I’m not conscious of the amp and guitar. If you play long enough and are natural enough, that’s just gonna happen.

The only time equipment is a concern is when you’re playing outdoors, maybe, and the wind is blowing the sound around so it’s not just right. Or you’re in a room that doesn’t have good ambience. Of course, professionals work through that, so you’re still gonna have at least one or two moments on-stage that are elevated, and that’s always what we’re striving for.

Already Free has a wide variety of tones. What amps and guitars did you use?

I used a lot. I have a bunch of old Gibson and Epiphone amps, and my Super Reverbs. I have an old Airline guitar with the amp built in its case. For every tune I imagined the guitar sound I wanted to hear and then dug up some funny old guitar and amp combination to get it. I used a vintage Marshall head and a Paul Reed Smith amp on some tracks.

Doyle played the Airline on “Get What You Deserve” and I use it for some of the most distorted tracks. When it sounds like the amp is on its very last breath, that’s the Airline.

For guitars, I used SGs for the most part. Most of the solos are SGs. I have a ’61 and a ’62 reissue. I also used an old Danelectro, a Silvertone, and a Supro.

What’s the appeal of the SG for you?

When I first started playing at nine or 10 years old I wanted the sound on Allman Brothers records like Live at the Fillmore. That Gibson tone is exactly what I wanted. Originally I wanted a Les Paul, but I only weighed about 80 pounds at the time, and I had a picture of Duane with an SG.

So the SG had the tone I wanted and weighed quite a bit less. Now it’s years later and anything else I try to play feels foreign to me. When I pick up the SG it is second nature.

On my reissues, I put in stop tailpieces. That’s what I use the bulk of the time. I love the look of that big silver plate on the front, but I found I was breaking strings and my tuning would go haywire.

How does playing with Eric Clapton, Warren Haynes, Doyle Bramhall II, Jimmy Herring and other great guitarists influence your playing?

It’s like being married to a great artist. When Susan sings or plays she has such a strong connection to the audience. Eric or Jimmy or any of those guys … it’s the same thing. They are just so good. It makes you step up your game, but not in a competitive way. You just don’t wanna be left in the dust, so your floor rises.

If you’re the best player in the room all the time, your playing is going to suffer. It’s important to be the guy trailing behind so you have to step up. I’ve been lucky; from an early age I’ve had great musicians to play with and look up to.

What kind of slide do you use and what tunings do you favor?

I use coricidin bottles for my slides and play in open E pretty much all the time. When I was 10 or 11 a guitar player in Jacksonville showed me open E tuning and everything made sense. So I just stuck with it and started learning everything in that tuning — chord voicings, all the scales I already knew in standard. I’m pretty much stuck in E now. Anything else feels foreign. A guitar tuned in standard feels all slinky to me, even if it’s strung with .11s.

How do you mute strings?

It’s a combination of left and right hand. I mute with all five digits and my palm on my right hand. It’s just a feel thing. I was doing an interview for a guitar magazine in Japan and they were filming to try to get my right hand technique, and it struck me I don’t really know what I’m doing technically speaking. It’s all just feel.


One of your SGs is covered with signatures. Who’s signed it?

Willie Nelson, Les Paul, Santana, Roy Haynes, Jerry Jemmott, Little Milton, Otis Rush, Allen Toussaint, Johnny Winter, McCoy Tyner, and about 10 more. These are people I’ve been lucky enough to share the stage with. They put some good energy on that guitar.

You have broad tastes. Who are some of your major influences?

Coltrane, Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan… a lot of singers: Mahalia Jackson, Stevie Wonder, Aretha Franklin, Donnie Hathaway, Otis Redding. For horn players, there’s also Clifford Brown, Lee Morgan, Wayne Shorter, and Marshall Allen, who played tenor in Sun Ra’s band. There’s Ali Akbar Khan, the sarod player.

So what’s ahead for you this year?

Touring behind Already Free is a priority for me. I’m happy with it and proud of it. This is the Allman Brothers’ 40th anniversary year, so that’s going to be a big part of my 2009.

Now that we have the studio I’m looking forward to focusing on more recording with my band and Susan. I think we have a few great albums in us in the vein of Mad Dogs & Englishmen and Delaney and Bonnie. If we spend the right amount of time and get people like Doyle and [Derek Trucks Band singer] Mike Mattison in to write tunes, we can come up with something great.









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