Australian Guitar

ROSIE TUCKER

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HAILS FROM LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA USA

PLAYS SOLO

SOUNDS LIKE WIDESCREEN INDIE WITH A WRY FOLK BITE LATEST DROP SUCKER SUPREME

(LP OUT NOW VIA EPITAPH)

What’s your current go-to guitar?

I play a Fender Stratocast­er with a humbucker on the bridge pickup, purchased from a Sam Ash in the suburbs around 2009. It’s yellow – painfullyy­ellow – and I love it because it’s the guitar I know best.

How did you initially fall in love with the instrument?

I think my first guitar was a super, super cheap Yamaha acoustic starter guitar from that same suburban Sam Ash, purchased when I was 13 for a music class at school. No glamour or history, but still life-changing.

What inspires you as a player?

As a late teen I was really into folk music, so I played a lot of flat-picking and fingerpick­ing. Anais Mitchell is known for her songwritin­g, but she also has a very distinct claw-hammery guitar style that I found to be very inspiring. As I got a little older I got into mathy stuff – I was listening to TTNG and Toe and those types of bands, but I was mostly playing bass. These days, when it comes to writing, I find myself looking for tunings that inspire simple, memorable chord shapes; never more than the lowest four strings on the guitar. I like big, stupid powerchord­s that still feel personal. I like to allow my vocal melodies to elaborate on the underlying harmony. If I’m writing guitar parts for a record, they’re probably informed by my deep abiding love for the wiry single-note melodies of psychedeli­c Cumbia music, à la TheRootsOf­Chicha. I am, fortunatel­y, not the only guitarist who plays on my records.

Are you much of a gear nerd?

I’m am not. I understand that people love to collect gear as a hobby on its own, and there are certainly musicians who have an ear for the distinct difference­s in timbre between comparable reverb pedals, or vintages of a particular guitar. Even so, gear is expensive, and a good piece of musical equipment should give you a lot to work with for a long time. Like I said, some musicians are experts and aficionado­s, but I’ve encountere­d plenty of people with expensive pedalboard­s who aren’t very musical at all. I do think I would enjoy building a pedal at some point. Electronic­s are a totally alien realm to me, and I have had a lot of fun cruising the internet for explainer videos and little breadboard synth kits to build.

Do you have any ‘white whales’?

Yes! I do! Keith Armstrong, who mixed my third album, has a teal Danelectro baritone guitar that I cannot find online. It’s a solidbody (mine is semi-hollow), and it’s got kind of a square headstock with the tuning pegs on both sides. Did I mention it’s teal? Keith knows it’s special, too. Decidedly not for sale.

What would your signature model look like?

Two necks, plastic body… Okay no, but the truth is I have no idea. I follow a luthier named Leila Sidi (TunaTone Instrument­s) and if you told me to come up with a custom guitar, I would just contact her as quickly as possible, because she makes beautiful instrument­s.

If you could jam with any guitarist, dead or alive...

Maybe Frances Quinlan of Hop Along. The guitar on the Hop Along records is frenetic and mind-blowing. Or the band Black Ends – or Screaming Females, who I’m sure Black Ends get compared to. I would want to make a big, giant, freaky guitar art piece with any of them, record a million angry and tight riffs to mix and match and layer on top of one another, like a big modular electric guitar orchestra that anyone could compose with. Or whatever. I’m open to ideas.

 ?? Photo: Sabrina Gutierrez ??
Photo: Sabrina Gutierrez

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