Well listening now, that was a pretty interesting attempt at the improvised ending of a song I'd gone to New Orleans with limited skills on the guitar but in the city of jazz, I started attempting to expand my guitar expertise in that direction After all, I was living in the French Quarter, had grown a goatee, and was hanging out at after hours bohemian bars listening to some very talented musicians trying to pick up some pointers
So in my attempt to show off some of that talent to Travis and Milton The D 9th jazz chord I was attempting, never made it out of the starting gate What was produced is what is known as a clunker chord The guitars version of a trainwreck
The meter was running on my session time so I just had them fade the ending before the clunker On the original tape though, it was still there When I first listened to the track I thought about trying to repeating the fade but then I thought that clunker chord was part of the process
Improvising is essential to anything creative, trying to stretch beyond my comfort zone on the fretboard at the time My fingers could not make out what I was thinking If it doesn't just try and not repeat your mistakes
So that brings us to the B-side of the first record and a song called: Abandoned on Tuesday By the time we were ready to do the track some local musicians had showed up at the studio and before I knew it, I had a band for the next cut
and the funny thing is, looking back on it, one of the session players on this track was a young guitarist from Mobile named Rick Hersch, who was one of the founding members of Wet Willy who are from Mobile also
Rick had gone on to play with bands from Randy Newman to Stevie Wonder We would run into each other on the road occasionally but then I lost touch with Rick As faith would have it, as we were putting the pieces of this project together I went back to Mobile to visit with Milton and do interviews for the video in this package that my daughter Delaney produced
While there as Milton told his version of events, he reminded me that the guitar player on Abandoned on Tuesday and several other tracks was Rick Hersch Our Producer for Buried Treasure is Will Kimbro who is also from Mobile When I told him that Rick was the guitar player on the track He told me he had been at Rick's house on Dog River in Mobile the night before
You can't make this kinda stuff up I'm getting back in touch with Rick who now splits his time between Los Angeles and Dog River He's now another nugget in our burried treasure and I plan to catch up with him soon Rick is still making great music so you might wanna check him out online In the meantime you can hear him right here on Abandon on TuesdayTeksty umieszczone na naszej stronie są własnością wytwórni, wykonawców, osób mających do nich prawa.