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The Clapton is God graffiti thing was a marketing stunt dreamed up by Hamish Grimes.
Obviously Clapton was a bigger legend but Hank was the first.
Been uploading old tracks I recorded ages ago and hopefully some new noodles here.
Been uploading old tracks I recorded ages ago and hopefully some new noodles here.
Ask guys of a certain age and they will confirm the level of impact he had
Many guitars have a re-sale value. Some you'll never want to sell.
Stockist of: Earvana & Graphtech nuts, Faber Tonepros & Gotoh hardware, Fatcat bridges. Highwood Saddles.
Pickups from BKP, Oil City & Monty's pickups.
Expert guitar repairs and upgrades - fretwork our speciality! www.felineguitars.com. Facebook too!
Them guys, all guitar heroes!
Hank made people pick up the guitar and that makes him a guitar hero.
I think the first 'proper' guitar hero was Page. He's the template for what came after. Undoubtedly, those who came before were an inspiration to many, who subsequently picked up guitars.
But Page was the one who inspired millions to play air guitar, even if they couldn't be bothered to pick up the real thing.
Had to be very careful how I typed that.
Indirectly, he probably created the "guitar heroes" that followed on.
Many guitars have a re-sale value. Some you'll never want to sell.
Stockist of: Earvana & Graphtech nuts, Faber Tonepros & Gotoh hardware, Fatcat bridges. Highwood Saddles.
Pickups from BKP, Oil City & Monty's pickups.
Expert guitar repairs and upgrades - fretwork our speciality! www.felineguitars.com. Facebook too!
There were plenty of others later, but Hank was the man.
And - for those few who don't get it - I dare you to try to play one of his "simple", "easy" hits. Go on, I dare you. Out there way up on top of the mix, no distortion, very clean sound, no chorus to hide behind, no bullshit pedals, no mercy if you make the tiniest little mistake anywhere - you have to nail it exactly. Every single time.
Hank. All day long.
To be a 'guitar hero' I think firstly you must impress with technical quality and creativity. I would add the level of guitar icon to this: someone who had swagger, showmanship and visual style to go with the musicianship - a UK Hendrix if you like.
I would rank like this:
First notable popular guitarist from the UK - Hank Marvin
First guitar hero. Eric Clapton
First guitar icon. Page
On a personal note Iommi was of more interest to me as a kid learning guitar ...
Formerly TheGuitarWeasel ... Oil City Pickups ... Oil City Blog
I voted for Page, but that is a much better description than hero.
Did he not use delay/probably reverb (?) quite a lot?
And a lot of trem work.
Maybe not in pedal form mind.
And the last?!
Ask most guitarists under the age of 40 or so what they think of Clappers and you'll get the same sort of responses as you have here for Hank (or probably worse tbf)
It depends on your outlook on music - to some Iommi would be the first guitar hero, to others Marr, to others Fripp, to others it might be Derek Bailey
Obviously people have very different views on what constitutes a hero but I'd wager most people would see a guitar hero as someone who is a hero to signifiant number of aspiring guitarists. Hard not to see Hank as the first one of those from the UK. As much down to exposure on TV and Film as anything else.
It really doesn't matter if he looked goofy by todays standards or the standards of older or "cooler" people at the time. Don't get much goofier looking than Buddy Holly and I don't think anyone can question him being seen as a musical hero. Likewise if you're thinking about the first, it doesn't matter if his status didn't last long until other people came along.