Guitarist

Jeff Bridges

Best known as a big-screen actor, Jeff Bridges’ role as a washed-up country music star in Crazy Heart highlighte­d his other great love: the guitar. We meet the original Dude to talk songwritin­g and his new Breedlove signature acoustics

- Words Mark McStea Photograph­y Audrey Hall

Music was Jeff Bridges’ first love, since discoverin­g the joys of the guitar while still at school in the early 60s. Initially torn between pursuing a career as a musician or an actor, he harboured ambitions of transition­ing between the two. His debut album, Be Here Soon, was released in 2000, but it wasn’t until his Oscar-winning role in Crazy Heart in 2009 that he was finally able to fully showcase his musical abilities. His portrayal of an alcoholic country singer in decline pointed the way to the country/ Americana route he has continued to follow with his own music.

Since the release of his self-titled album on the Blue Note label in 2011, Bridges has toured consistent­ly with his band, The Abiders, named after his character in The Big Lebowski. A staunch advocate for environmen­tal issues, Bridges has now teamed up with US guitar builder Breedlove to launch a range of signature models that are built entirely from sustainabl­e woods. Bridges’ royalties for all guitars sold are being donated to the Amazon Conservati­on Team charity.

You’ve been playing the guitar for most of your life and music is obviously very important to you. What is it that music does for you that acting doesn’t? Do they feed your soul in different ways?

“There are more similariti­es than difference­s, really. They both share a solitary element, either practising your instrument or learning your lines and preparing a role. Then you have the teamwork aspect. There is nothing like getting together with a great band to hang out with each other and play, and making a film is very similar, in that you are again working with an ensemble of other players. I guess the only lack of comparison for me these days is that while I have the live dimension of playing gigs, I haven’t performed live as an actor in front of an audience for a long time. The way you feed off an audience’s energy is something that you don’t get from making a movie.”

You said that in your early days when you were unsure whether to pursue music or acting, your father, Lloyd Bridges, suggested that if you became successful as an actor you could move into music. Of course, it can be hard to cross over from acting to music as there is often a lot of resistance from audiences…

“I think that’s true. I’m certainly glad that I followed my father’s advice and stuck with the acting. He said, ‘Don’t worry, Jeff. You’ll be able to explore all of your interests as an actor,’ and that eventually came to pass a long time later with Crazy Heart in 2009. Of course, I had done The Fabulous Baker Boys with my brother [Beau] in 1989, but I played a pianist in that rather than a guitarist. I hear what you’re saying, though, there is a rift. People say the same kind of thing the other way around as well, with musicians who want to go into movies. There’s always the concern that it might be seen as some kind of vanity project whichever direction you cross from. Crazy Heart worked out real well for me. I had such a great experience that after that I thought, ‘Gee, if I ever wanted to realise my high school dream of having a band, now is the time to do it.’ [Laughs]”

Your first solo album, Be Here Soon, was redolent of some of the later work of Clapton and Steve Winwood, and was very different from the music you played in Crazy Heart and on your subsequent albums and shows. Was that due to the influence of Michael McDonald who worked with you on that?

“The way you feed off an audience’s energy is something that you don’t get from making a movie”

“A lot of the tracks on that album were very early songs of mine, or songs written with my good friend John Goodwin, who I’ve been buddies with since we were in the fourth grade at school. It was wonderful when Michael came into the picture and brought so much to what we did, but those songs we recorded were already written for the most part.”

Crazy Heart opened up a credible route into performing and recording for you, and the country/Americana genre seems to have served as the blueprint for your work since then. Is that the style you feel most comfortabl­e with?

“Yes, I think so. I’m open to all sorts of music, though, be it jazz or the American songbook kind of things. There’s a lot of wonderful music to explore at some point in the future perhaps.”

There seem to be two schools of guitar players: those who practise to improve their abilities and those who tend to use the guitar as a tool, the ‘I only play to write songs’ guys. Which are you?

“[Laughs] I know exactly the kind of thing you mean, man! Practice, man, that’s the whole deal. That makes a huge difference. A friend of mine is a wonderful guitarist and he emailed me yesterday to ask if I’d like some lessons via Zoom. I’m definitely going to get into that. I’m not much of a lead player – I mainly play rhythm when I’m singing. I know the better my chops are the better my writing is. I think what is great about the guitar is that it is a very honest instrument. The more you put in, the better you get.”

Did the guitar come easily for you when you started? What were the things you worked on and that, once mastered, made you feel like you’d reached a decent standard?

“I picked it up fairly quickly, actually. Not as quickly as my daughter Jessie, though! I showed her some things and she got it right away. Even the open F chord, which a lot of us struggle with at first, she had no problem with it whatsoever, no buzzing or dead notes. She couldn’t understand why I was so excited at that!

“Actually, talking to you about guitars and playing makes me feel really fired up to get into some lessons and work on a few things. But oh man, the first songs… [laughs] working my way through The Beatles and Bob Dylan were important stages. I first got into music through my brother, Beau, who is eight years older than me. He was into rock ’n’ roll – Little Richard, Chuck Berry and Buddy Holly – and their songs were also part of my repertoire.”

What guitars have you picked up and played over the years?

“When I first started playing guitar, I played my brother’s Danelectro. My dad had a Goya acoustic as well, which I liked to play. My main guitars currently are Breedloves, and the Gretsch Country Gentleman that

I played in Crazy Heart. I still have a few Gibson J-25s from over the years. One of my favourite guitars is a Gibson Roy Smeck. That is a very unique guitar; there is something special about that neck. I’ve got a few Teles as well.”

If you had to grab one guitar in a fire – and we know you’ve actually had a bad experience with a fire burning your house down – what would it be?

“Whatever is closest at hand and get out of there! I’ve had a few experience­s of that, and I can tell you, you don’t have time to think about anything much [laughs]. Chances are it might well be one of my new Breedloves.”

Were you a Breedlove player prior to the idea of a signature model coming up?

“No. Actually, Chris Pelonis, who is the musical director of my band, turned me on to these guitars. He owns a guitar shop near Santa Barbara and he’d been selling Breedlove guitars for some time. He said to me that I really needed to check them out, so I played one and I was just amazed at the sound and playabilit­y. He suggested that I meet with Tom Bedell, who is the owner of Breedlove, as he thought we would have a lot in common.

“Tom was passionate about the concept of making great guitars from sustainabl­e trees and his fondness for myrtlewood, which grows along the Oregon coast, where Breedlove is based. I told him that I’d been thinking about getting a signature guitar made so that I could express some of my

“A friend of mine is a wonderful guitarist and asked if I’d like some lessons via Zoom. I’m definitely going to get into that”

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 ??  ?? Jeff’s motto, “all in this together”, is custom-inlayed on his signature guitar, a collaborat­ion with Tom Bedell at Breedlove that is made from sustainabl­e woods
Jeff’s motto, “all in this together”, is custom-inlayed on his signature guitar, a collaborat­ion with Tom Bedell at Breedlove that is made from sustainabl­e woods
 ??  ?? “I’m not much of a lead player, I mainly play rhythm when I’m singing. I know the better my chops are, the better my writing is”
“I’m not much of a lead player, I mainly play rhythm when I’m singing. I know the better my chops are, the better my writing is”

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