Total Guitar

Five Minutes Alone: Steve Morse

The Deep Purple and Flying Colors hero on changing picking styles, choosing guitars and famous friends…

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Got my first real six-string…

“My first guitar was given to me by my grandmothe­r. She’d actually found it thrown out in a case at the end of the driveway, but it was cracked and broken, the neck was bowed. I ended up renting a Gibson LG-0 acoustic for a year. Then I wanted an electric guitar, so I got a Fender Musicmaste­r. It played great but sounded terrible. Its only single-coil pickup was halfway between the bridge and the neck. I played it through a portable radio with a preamp input. It sounded stupid!”

I’m a speed king, see me fly…

“As guitar players, I think we have it pretty good. But I would say finding a place to practice comfortabl­y is quite a hard thing. Even without an amp, I annoy people when I play because I pick my strings pretty hard and make a lot of acoustic noise. It can get pretty weird if others are in the room! Throughout my life, I’ve always annoyed people. The guys in Deep Purple used to put me in a separate van for that reason ha ha! I’d just be playing the whole way in between gigs and going to airports.”

The show must go on…

“For about 50 years, I played with my thumb and two fingers on the pick. It really helped me play with exceptiona­l clarity and muting. There are a lot of advantages with it. The only disadvanta­ge is it wears out your wrist after 50 years. But I was doing 10,000 notes a day… most people should be fine! Now I’ve had to switch to one finger and the thumb because I have arthritis in my right wrist. It’s very painful to flex my wrist, so I save that for gigs. I prepare with topical painkiller­s and other things too. I’ve switched to playing from the elbow. Certain string-skipping patterns and direction changes need the wrist to ensure you don’t hit adjacent strings… So now I have to practice longer and think it through. I’ve even changed how I play certain things, choosing a more laborious left-hand fingering to avoid skips with the right. It’s far from ideal, but I have to keep my chops up and finish strong!”

Smoke on the water, fire in the sky…

“When choosing guitars, I’ll listen to all the pickup combinatio­ns on a clean setting and try to see if any notes jump out. Is there too much boom from the bass? Is the bridge pickuptoo brittle and harsh? Then I’ll add in the distortion, which chops the signal at the top and makes new sharp edges in the sound wave, producing sideband harmonics that our ears perceive as high-end, which can get irritating. In a band, the guitar lives in the midrange, so that’s what I care about more than anything. I might just do minor scales or random chords, not even looking at the guitar. I’m not looking to make a musical statement, it’s about the reaction.”

I get by with a little help from my friends…

“I like people that ask questions and let me do the same. I’ve been able to do that with guys like Bumblefoot, Joe Satriani and Steve Vai. They’ll always explain exactly what they’re doing over long jams. We all love exchanging ideas and commenting on each other, you might realise you’ve been dragging across a string that isn’t doing you any favours. To become a good guitarist, you have to be open to things. When I first played with Al Di Meola, I asked how he sounded so percussive. We switched picks and there was a difference, so I changed from nylon to celluloid for the rest of the tour! I’d love to get to know Jeff Beck and see if he really is pulling it all out of nowhere, which is how it seems. It feels like he’s really improvisin­g and making art through his guitar.”

“I’VE ALWAYS ANNOYED PEOPLE WHEN I PLAY. DEEP PURPLE USED TO PUT ME IN A SEPERATE VAN!” Flying Colors’ new album Third Degree is out now on Mascot and the band play London’s O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire on14thdece­mber

 ??  ?? Steve’s playing is less about statements and more about the
reaction
Steve’s playing is less about statements and more about the reaction

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