Australian Guitar

Online Guitar Companies You Should Know About

MICAWBER, MALCOLM, SONNY... IN THE WORLD OF KEITH RICHARDS, EVEN HIS GUITARS ARE CHARACTERS. BUT THERE’S MORE TO HIS COLLECTION THAN THOSE FAMOUS TELES. THOUSANDS MORE…

- WORDS BY JONATHAN HORSLEY.

All kinds of rare and special ingredient­s go into The Rolling Stones’ sound. The rhythm is the backbone, Charlie

Watts’ touch and feel on the drum set binding it all together, tumbling between the sinewy and the edgy, the relaxed and the funky. On top there is

Mick Jagger on the mic, that ageless supernova of charisma. Somewhere in the middle you’ve got the strings, where the mojo is cooked up live.

In 2021, that’s Ronnie Wood and the ever-present survivor, Keith Richards, whose judicial taste in vintage guitars and amplificat­ion is augmented by an ear for alternate tunings and a playing style that summons ghosts from the Delta to shuttle around louche rhythms, layering melody on top, probing then retreating.

In the studio, an ever more byzantine recipe is followed; their sound is the room, the recording equipment, in the ancillary percussion and strings and how they work in concert. Richards is custodian of this recipe. He is both the hot sauce and the hand on the spoon, mixing everything.

As a guitar player, what is the first guitar you think of when you think of Richards? For many, it has to be the Fender Telecaster, maybe ‘Micawber’, Richards’ number one, the 1953 Blackguard with five strings and a Frankenste­in spec, a battered Butterscot­ch Blonde forever slung at a 45-degree angle from Richards’ hip.

Or perhaps it is ‘Malcolm’, a ’54 model in natural finish that has similarly been augmented, five-strings, left in open tunings. Then there is the black 1975 Fender Telecaster Custom, which made its debut – as did Keith’s new foil, Ronnie Wood – on the Stones’ Tour Of The Americas ’75, or Sonny, the ’67 Sunburst Tele.

But let’s take it back to the beginning, because those Telecaster­s only tell part of the Keith Richards story.

THE EARLY DAYS: 1960-64

The population of Keith Richards’ guitar collection is estimated to range between 1,000 and 3,000 – but just like the rest of us, he had to start somewhere. His mother got him a Rosetti acoustic when he was around 13. Ten quid was a bit of money in 1959 but it proved a shrewd investment.

Just like the rest of us, he was confronted with Malagueña early on; taught by his grandfathe­r, it was the first song Richards learned. The acoustic would become key, not only to Richards’ playing style but his entire guitar philosophy. He often speaks of the acoustic’s purity. Learn to work it, and only then can you appreciate what it takes to use the electric.

As Richards says, “The electric guitar? All they did was put a phone in it. But it was the right phone at the right time.” For a band with an electric pulse, it is remarkable that so many occasions have called for the acoustic guitar.

When The Rolling Stones parked themselves in Regent Street Studios, in January 1964, to record their debut album, Richards’ electric of choice was a Harmony Meteor H70 that he had bought the year previous. The Meteor had a thin hollow arch-top body of spruce and maple, and a short scale length of 24 inches. A pair of gold-foil DeArmond pickups gave the Meteor a raw tone that would become part of the soundtrack to the 60s. Notably, The Kinks’ Dave Davies playing one on “You Really Got Me”.

The Stones’ self-titled debut showcased the Meteor, but it was his 1963 Harmony H1270 12-string acoustic on stand-out track “Tell Me (You’re Coming Back)” that suggested that the Stones were not just another beat combo. A 12-string jumbo, the H1270 was an early studio star for the Stones. Richards used it on the likes of “Not Fade Away”, “Good Times, Bad Times” and “Play With Fire”.

On “Tell Me”, Richards let the 12-string and vocals bleed into the one mic. Using as little separation as possible would become a leitmotif of the Stones future recording sessions. As would the 12-string; its woozy, chorusing quality would jive just as well on the Stones’ more psychedeli­c jams as it did on the bone-dry directness of “Not Fade Away”.

In 2004, Richards’ H1270 was sold at auction for $33,460, but if you scour the internet you could pick up a vintage 60s model with an aftermarke­t L.R. Baggs pickup for 600-odd bucks. Richards’ Meteor was joined by a Kalamazoo-era 1962 Epiphone Casino as the Stones’ career took off.

The double-cut archtop had a fully hollow build of laminate maple and birch, and featured pair of P-90s, plus a tune-o-matic bridge and trapeze tailpiece. If the first two albums were handled by hollow-bodies, Richards would turn to a heavyweigh­t for the recording of Out Of Our Heads.

THE KEEF ‘BURST, SATISFACTI­ON AND THE ROAD TO ’69

The Keef ‘Burst ushered in a changing of the guard for Richards’ recording guitars. It first made an appearance on the Stones’ 1964 tour, popping up on the Ed Sullivan Show. Richards leaned on it heavily for the Out Of Our Heads sessions, which assumed huge cultural significan­ce as soon as Richards pressed one of Gibson’s new-fangled Maestro FZ-1 Fuzz-Tone pedals into action for the

“(I Can’t Get No) Satisfacti­on” riff. He had always maintained that it was a horn part, and kismet played its part with arrival of the fuzz pedal.

“The way Otis Redding ended up doing it is probably closer to my original conception for the song,” he told Guitar World. “It’s an obvious horn riff. And when this new Fuzz Tone pedal arrived in the studio from the local dealership or something, I said, “Oh, this is good. It’s got a bit of sustain, so I can use it to sketch out the horn line.”

If the band had hitherto mined American R&B, blues and early rock ’n’ roll for inspiratio­n – for songs to sing, more to the point – 1966 saw the release of Aftermath, the Stones’ first album of all-original material. There was now a sense of danger about the Stones.

Richards was enjoying an open relationsh­ip with his guitars, pursuing new sounds. An electric 12-string appeared on Mother’s Little Helper – “some gashed-up job” that he played slide on. Richards was pictured on the cover of the April 1966 issue of Beat Instrument­al with a Guild M-65 Freshman, a lightweigh­t hollowbody with a bound maple top and mahogany back and sides.

On occasion, he would play a Gibson Firebird and had started regularly playing a 1958 Les Paul Custom with a custom graphic. This, after all, was the ‘60s, and they were gathering pace. By the time the band were to hit the States for the notorious

1969 tour, which resulted in controvers­y, craziness, bloodshed at Altamont and one of the finest live recordings in rock history, Richards had a lot to choose from.

Live, the see-through but super-heavy Ampeg Dan Armstrong Plexi entered rotation, as did a newly acquired 1969 Gibson ES-355TD-SV stereo. Live, Richards used a 1930s National Style O resonator on “Prodigal Son” and “You Gotta Move”, and a Martin D12-20 12-string with a DeArmond pickup in the soundhole. He would use a korina Gibson Flying V at the free Hyde Park show, but that would soon disappear.

In 1969, there was a sense that oblivion was on their trail but somehow they held it together.

The guitars didn’t always. When tracking “Gimme Shelter” during the Let It Bleed sessions, Richards used a borrowed a Maton Supreme Electric 777, an ES-150-style electric, and it would turn out to be the last act in its story.

“At the very last note of the take, the whole neck fell off,” said Richards to Guitar World. “You can hear it on the original track. That guitar had just that one little quality for that specific thing. In a way, it was quite poetic that it died at the end of the track.”

FENDER ‘MICAWBER’ TELECASTER: KEEF’S NUMBER ONE

Everyone would like to and many have tried but nobody plays the Telecaster like Keith Richards. He made the blackguard Tele the coolest guitar on the planet. No question. If the Telecaster is the ultimate rock ’n’ roll guitar, perhaps it was inevitable that it would find its way into Richards’ hands. It was the late 60s when he discovered the Telecaster.

“Around the same time I was getting into Telecaster­s I was experiment­ing with open tunings,” he told Guitar World in 2002. “I don’t know why. Maybe it was because around that time, ’67, we started having time off that we didn’t know what to do with. So I started to experiment with tunings. “Most people used open tuning basically just for slide. Nobody used it for anything else. But I wanted to use it for rhythm guitar... Of all the guitars, the Telecaster really lent itself well to a dry, rhythm, five-string drone thing. In a way that tuning kept me developing as a guitarist.”

Micawber is his most-famous Telecaster. A 1950s Tele in Butterscot­ch Blonde, it was a 27th birthday present from Eric Clapton and soon found itself decamped to Nellcôte as the Stones took shelter from the UK taxman under the hot sun in the

South of France. Exile On Main St. was brewing, and Micawber was there from the ground up. That’s when the toolbox came out. The low E string was removed as Richards continued his exploratio­n into open G tunings. Further modificati­ons changed the menu.

A Gibson PAF humbucker was installed at the neck, a pedal-steel pickup at the bridge. Fundamenta­lly, it’s a ’54 Tele with a ’52 Esquire neck, Micawber (which takes its name from Dickens’ David Copperfiel­d) is a triumph of Richards’ whatever works ethos, but it arguably kick-started the aftermarke­t for Fender modificati­ons.

In the ‘80s, Richards’ tech Alan Morgan sourced a brass bridge plate and saddles to make it more roadworthy. With no saddle for the sixth string, Richards’ Telecaster is a specialist instrument tuned G D G B D for songs such as “Brown Sugar”, “Honky-Tonk Woman” and “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking”.

THE 1970S AND THE ERA OF MODIFICATI­ON

Turning 27, a cursed age for any musician of the era, deserved some celebratio­n. It was Eric Clapton who did the honours, gifting Richards the 1953 Fender Telecaster that would be retooled and renamed as Micawber. Others soon followed. Richards sought out new ways of articulati­ng rock ’n’ roll in the electric guitar’s most primitive dialects. Take the Gibson Les Paul Jr, aka ‘Dice’.

Finished in TV Yellow, this primordial double-cut would become a regular onstage by the decade’s end, using it notably on “Midnight Rambler” – a live highlight that was often performed with the Dan Armstrong before. He would layer play a Junior with a Tele when recording “Start Me Up” in 1981. Travis Bean guitars, with their aluminium necks, caught Richards’ attention. If you don’t suffer from motion sickness, you can check out the promo video for “She’s So Cold” to see Richards with a black TB500 (one of 351 produced).

In 1974, he started using a single-cut Zemaitis with skull-and-bone graphic. As with the Telecaster­s, Richards nixed the low E. The Zemaitis, aka ‘Macabre’, housed a single PAF humbucker at the bridge and, again, offered Richards the simple pleasures of an electric guitar with nothing in the way.

The lesser-spotted Richards has never been a big Strat player, but he does own a Mary Kaye Strat, and through the ‘80s and ‘90s played the next best thing, a Music Man Silhouette. Some of Richards’ guitars rarely see the light of day, such as his Gibson ES-350 – a big-boned jazz-box with a natural finish and with the all-important Chuck Berry connection.

“I’d be too afraid to take it onstage,” he said during an Ask Keith Q&A from 2003. “I’d be afraid of breaking it by making a silly move, and it’s a big guitar. I love it for the studio. I love it in the dressing room. It is such a beautiful all-round sound.”

The ES-350 makes rare public appearance­s, and was used in 1990 to record “Oh Lord, Don’t Let Them Drop That Atom Bomb On Me” with Watts, Bobby

Keys, Bernard Fowler, Chuck Leavell and the Uptown Horns, a track that turned up on the Charles Mingus tribute, Weird Nightmare. Looking at Micawber, Malcolm and Sonny, and seeing the road miles on them, it’s understand­able that some of that good stuff is saved for the studio. A Rolling Stones show is not the place for tender mercies.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia