Guitarist

KT TUNSTALL

Since blowing away the nation on Later… With Jools Holland in 2004 as an unknown ex-busker, the Scottish songwriter has clocked up millions of album sales and a host of awards – and all as a self-confessed “scrappy guitarist”…

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We talk guitars and unplugged inspiratio­n with the awardwinni­ng Scottish songsmith

On The Streets

“Busking was the key factor in learning how to be a rhythm guitarist. I started to really appreciate those 50s and 60s players, like the Everly Brothers, Elvis and Eddie Cochran. They were going at acoustic guitar like they were playing electric guitar – but electric guitar didn’t really exist yet. When you listen to Wake Up Little Susie, that is just a masterclas­s in hardcore, precise acoustic rhythm guitar… Busking made me transfer over to steel‑string with a pick.”

Times Change

“I still feel like a very scrappy guitarist. I think I err on the side of rhythm playing. Although age is a great factor in this.

I feel like I might become more of a picker. I’m a huge Joni Mitchell and Nick Drake fan, and, actually, I maybe listen to Django Reinhardt more than anything else. I was actually in the car yesterday thinking, ‘Maybe I should become a bebop guitarist…’”

Tough Love

“I’m now on my third main [Gibson] Dove acoustic. I’m literally having to stop playing these guitars because I batter them apart. We try to look into putting some extra bracing inside and just giving them a bit more of a chance. But they’re inevitably cracked within a month.”

Behind Barres

“I have very skinny fingers and bony knuckles, so I basically can’t play barre chords… Finding open chords, and making up chords instead of barres, has become a really important signature for me. Barre chords just never sound very inspiring to me. It’s the ‘straightne­ss’. I’m always looking for the hanging note or the suspended note.”

Loopy For Effects

“I still really enjoy looping. Because I perform mostly solo, it’s important to keep myself on my toes. Working with Howe Gelb on Invisible Empire // Crescent Moon [2013] also introduced me to really experiment­ing with effects. That is absolutely staple for me now – to be able to put overdrive, tremolo and reverb onto my acoustic.”

Attitude Matters

“When I do my two‑piece show, there’s this moment where we do some clever triggering and I play the lead line on The River [from Wax, 2018]. I fuck it up every time. Total mess. But it’s all about the attitude.”

Precious Little Ones

“I have a 60s Gibson parlour guitar, which is currently in the care of [US artist] Maggie Rogers. It’s a really beautiful storytelle­r of a guitar. I need to play big‑body dreadnough­ts live because I need that spectrum, especially if I’m playing solo; I need the breadth and width and depth. But, really, I love small‑bodied guitars, like my little Taylor GS Mini. It’s so nice, having a little baby‑sized guitar. It feels very intimate, like you’re in a cocoon.”

[HY]

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 ??  ?? Drastic Fantastic: Ultimate Edition is out now on Universal.
Drastic Fantastic: Ultimate Edition is out now on Universal.

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