Dear Guitar Hero: Paul Gilbert
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I’m a big fan of your guitar tone. What do you consider to be the key element to your sound?
—Thomas Hartley
I first began having success picking on a guitar that wasn’t plugged in. I was picking really hard so I could hear it acoustically, and when I plugged into an amp, I was surprised that it didn’t sound very good. I discovered that the way I attack the string really affects the tone. Modifying your picking attack—for clean tone, distortion and playing on an acoustic—makes a huge difference in the sound.
With solos and shredding becoming popular again, do you think the younger players are falling into the trap of flash over substance?
—Lorne
Well, I’d probably have to listen to more young players. [laughs] Actually, I’ve done a lot of teaching lately, and I’m really impressed with the kids that are coming in. In general, their technique is genuinely good. I’m pleasantly surprised by that.
Have you ever thought about doing a traditional blues album?
—Pauly
I did a bluesy album [Raw Blues Power,2002] with my uncle, Jimi Kidd, who was a huge influence on me when I was younger. But traditional blues? I don’t know. I like some of the really dirty traditional blues, like John Lee Hooker. But for that stuff, those guys are out of tune and the bars go too long, and you hear the bass player change a second later than the other guys. That stuff really gives it its down-and-dirty feeling. I think I’d have to start drinking a lot more to really do it right. [laughs] I don’t know if it’s possible. When you say “traditional” I take it seriously enough to know probably not to go there! [laughs]
How did you develop your string skipping and legato playing over the years?
—Anthony Padilla
The legato playing that I do is very intuitive, and I learned it through a lot of good accidents. I used to sit around and play to Eddie Van Halen, doing it wrong and coming up with my own patterns. The string-skipping stuff involved taking those same patterns and translating them into string-skipping licks. It was quite easy, thanks to the way I pick, which is mostly outside pickin. It was such a great discovery: suddenly I had a new bag of licks, and with very little effort.
Is it true that you used to pick using only upstrokes? Did reggae players influence your approach?
—Jeff Dunne
The upstrokes came from lack of knowledge rather than from reggae. I started playing by ear at age nine. I had no idea how to play, and for some reason upstrokes felt good. I was talking to Scott Henderson, the amazing fusion guitar player, and he said an interesting thing about the architecture of the guitar: that it is essentially six separate instruments. Because each string is tuned differently, they all have a different feel, they’re in different places, and you have to learn the notes on each one. That may be simplified, but some of the art of learning guitar is to learn each of those six instruments, and that’s how I started, unwittingly. I spent two years learning the low E string before I finally took a lesson and a teacher taught me how to tune the other five. It was a grueling way to learn. [laughs] Chords sound so much better! But that’s how I learned: a lot of upstrokes on that E string, and learning every Led Zeppelin riff I could that way.
You are often lumped in with shredders like John Petrucci. Considering your opinion of your own style, would you prefer to be put in a group with him or someone like Jimmy Page or Randy Rhoads?
—Enrique Angeles
I think as a fan and as a listener: Jimmy Page and Randy Rhoads are where I was coming from. John is certainly a great guitar player, and some of the Dream Theater stuff is killer. And where we’ve ended up is similar: our styles have crossed paths, as far the kind of picking we do and our modern shred tone. I’ve done some tribute gigs with Mike Portnoy, who plays drums with John, and he said John’s influences are really different than mine. Apparently, John was really into progressive rock, like Rush. I love Rush, but at the same time, I have a feeling I went a lot deeper into the pop music of the Beatles, Todd Rundgren and Cheap Trick. It would be a huge honor to be in either category. But I’ve gotta say, if I look to my right, I’ve got a big poster of Jimmy Page hanging on my wall.
Do you think you’ll ever get back with your old Racer X buddies for another album or tour?
—Ryan
On this tour that’s coming up, I’m actually bringing Bruce Bouillet, the other guitarist for Racer X. It’s really exciting, because he’s been producing underground for awhile. We’re certainly doing some Racer X songs on my tour. But yeah, if we’re all feeling some heavy metal, it’d be great doing another Racer X record.
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ekodokcell
August 16, 2011 at 3:15am
thought you stole the show with your playing and stage presence. Very entertaining and the sound was good. I've since dusted off the old REH VHS tapes and giving it a go with another 17 years playing experience under the belt. Thanks for the inspiration Magazines For Ipad
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soccercleats
May 07, 2011 at 3:36am
I thought you stole the show with your playing and stage presence. Very entertaining and the sound was good. I've since dusted off the old REH VHS tapes and giving it a go with another 17 years playing experience under the belt. Thanks for the inspiration! ralph lauren outlet,cheap soccer cleats,abercrombie hoodies,new era cap,ladies sunglasses,polo t shirts 2011,wholesale shoes
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Kirk Hammett
May 31, 2007 at 7:16am
Paul was great, $10 lesson (Ignore my username anyone who's looking, I'm just an Aussie guitar player). He spent a lot of time giving us a proper guitar lecture and is clearly a brilliant teacher. Free concert too from him!
Thanks Paul!
Anyhow as far as general comments go, I saw G3 recently, Paul wasn't there but I did see him a few months later and he was a great fellow to meet. An honest player if there ever was one. Diverse, interesting, and attached to his guitar.
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Spanish Fly
April 28, 2007 at 3:22am
Hey, Paul what up, I have been playing guitar for as little as 4 months, and now I can play some of your licks, and John Petrucci's under a glass moon" solo. I don't know how I got it so quick, but I like it any ways, I guess I spend too much money in lesson books and too much time practicing, any ways, all I have to say is that you were a great inspiration, along with John Petrucci, Eddie Van Hallen, Francisco Tarrega and finally and most important Master of Masters Mr. Paco De Lucia, I play a lot of classical, and I saw your Flamingo solo, I just have a question for you, have you master already the correct picking techique for that? I mean if you shred like you do and you play finger classical style, men you'd be like a god of guitar.
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jazz0630
April 26, 2007 at 4:56am
How do you effectively develop you ear so the fingers can follow later.What would be the first i'd do to lern the technique?
-jazz@randy
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SteveVai
April 24, 2007 at 5:41pm
Hi Paul
You're awesome.I'm a hungarian boy 17 years old..I play on guitar for 1.5 year...I try to play some song form the acer X..My favourite is the Scarified...I know this is not a difficult song but very cool..And..the G+ was awesome ohh very very awesome;)
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Roxy
April 21, 2007 at 6:41pm
G3 was awesome! My buddies and I made the trek from Cleveland to Pittsburgh (Greensburg) and it was well worth it. I thought you stole the show with your playing and stage presence. Very entertaining and the sound was good. I've since dusted off the old REH VHS tapes and giving it a go with another 17 years playing experience under the belt. Thanks for the inspiration!















