Total Guitar

CEDRIC BURNSIDE

- Words Ellie Rogers Photo Abraham Rowe

Aged just 13, Cedric Burnside was immersed in playing blues music with his grandfathe­r, aka “Big Daddy” - the legendary R.L. Burnside. Now commander-inchief of the second generation of Hill Country Blues, the younger Burnside’s latest album,

I Be Trying, encapsulat­es the past, present and future of a whole genre in a way that only he could. “It’s who I am,” Cedric says. “This Hill Country Blues stuff is definitely not new to me. I was born with it in my blood.”

I Be Trying plays as if it could have been made 50 years ago. He explains: “The old styles stuck with me - things my Grandaddy played on the porch. That old feel will always be in me.” But the record’s authentic sound quality is also owing to Cedric’s raw approach towards gear: “It’s not that I don’t like pedals,” he says. “It’s just that for the music I do, I haven’t really needed it. I have one pedal: a boost just to turn my volume up. I have no effects, no wah, no nothing like that. I don’t use a pick because it doesn’t feel natural.”

On an album produced with refreshing sparsity, Cedric’s idiosyncra­tic playing and vocals shine through, intertwini­ng against a backdrop of mesmeric polyrhythm­s and a refusal of familiar progressio­ns. He explains, “Hill Country Blues does not use the 1-4-5 hardly ever. It’s off the beaten path, it’s unorthodox, it’s unpredicta­ble. But it’s also hypnotic and funky and driven.”

As for guitars, Cedric is open-minded: “To be honest with you, I have no real preference as to what guitar I use as long as it sounds good.” On the record, we hear a Fender Stratocast­er, an old Gibson (model unknown) that was hanging on the wall of the studio and a one-off Les Paul-style guitar with a solid mahogany body and P-90-esque pickups - a unique instrument made by brain-surgeon-come-luthier, Mike Aronson. “He found a whole piece of wood,” Cedric says, “and he just made it to my liking. I told him I really love a big neck - almost like an acoustic - so he made it with that feel.”

This carefree detachment to the tools of his trade leaves room for remembranc­e of where the music really comes from. Says Cedric: “I have to thank my Big Daddy for just about everything, because he opened the door for the Burnside family. It’s something I’m going to do until I leave this world and I’m honoured and really proud to keep it going.”

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