Total Guitar

“FULL AND BEEFY!”

LINDSEY TROY OF DEAP VALLY ON HER DISTINCTIV­E SOUND AND BEATLES FIXATION

- Ellie Rogers

Deap Vally’s third full-length record, Marriage, sees the duo collaborat­ing with KT Tunstall, Peaches and Warpaint’s Jennylee. Guitarist/vocalist Lindsey Troy discusses her “sonic journey” and love of vintage gear.

What can people expect from Marriage?

For fans of rock or guitar music, there’s a little bit for everyone. There’s definitely songs that hold down our OG Deap Vally sound which is tongue in cheek, really fuzzy 70s rock. Then it takes a sonic journey. We definitely explored more territorie­s on this record.

Who are your biggest guitar influences?

My biggest influence - it’s so cliche but I don’t care - is The Beatles. I’ve been a massive Beatles fan all my life. I love melody so much and, sometimes when I write guitar solos, I’m definitely doing a George Harrison thing.

Is there a solo on the album you’re particular­ly proud of?

I do very simple, tasty, minimal solos - it’s all very melody-heavy, but simple, hooky and with great tone. I love the solos on Where Do We Go and Tsunami.

How did collaborat­ing change your approach?

I love collaborat­ing with people, but I definitely have a bit of an identity crisis because my whole approach to writing on guitar shifts. Traditiona­lly, with Deap Vally, the guitar part needs to hold its own, and it needs to be full and beefy and well-rounded, and hold down rhythm and lead. When I play with a bass player, I can experiment and do beautiful melodic stuff.

Did you experiment with new gear in the studio?

Yeah. Working with Jennylee from Warpaint - her bass tone is so tasty. It’s that chorus pedal she uses and also the delay. I think this album was the first where there was an introducti­on of chorus pedals, which I kind of fell in love with.

Is your top guitar still the vintage Mustang?

That’s my favourite guitar, for sure. I’m so used to playing it and it’s total second nature, like an extension of my body.

Eb. But half of our repertoire now is in

I hate playing with a capo and I don’t want to have to tune on stage, so I have another guitar - an Ovation Viper. There’s this really cool vintage shop called Future Music in my neighbourh­ood. It was just there and it was super cool. It’s from the mid‑70s and was just adorable.

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