National Post

Twangy guitar hero of early rock ’n’ roll

Penned Peter Gunn, Rebel Rouser

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• Duane Eddy, a pioneering guitar hero whose reverberat­ing electric sound on instrument­als such as Rebel Rouser and Peter Gunn helped put the twang in early rock ’n’ roll and influenced George Harrison, Bruce Springstee­n and countless other musicians, has died at age 86.

Eddy died of cancer Tuesday at the Williamson Health hospital in Franklin, Tenn., according to his wife, Deed Abbate.

With his raucous rhythms, and backing hollers and hand claps, Eddy sold more than 100 million records worldwide, and mastered a distinctiv­e sound based on the premise that a guitar’s bass strings sounded better on tape than the high ones.

“I had a distinctiv­e sound that people could recognize and I stuck pretty much with that. I’m not one of the best technical players by any means; I just sell the best,” he said in a 1986 interview.

“A lot of guys are more skilful than I am with the guitar. A lot of it is over my head. But some of it is not what I want to hear out of the guitar.”

“Twang” defined Eddy’s sound from his first album, Have Twangy Guitar Will Travel, to his 1993 box set, Twang Thang: The Duane Eddy Anthology.

“It’s a silly name for a nonsilly thing,” Eddy said in 1993. “But it has haunted me for 35 years now, so it’s almost like sentimenta­l value — if nothing else.”

He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994.

Eddy and producer Lee Hazlewood helped create the “Twang” sound in the 1950s, a sound Hazlewood later adapted to his production of Nancy Sinatra’s 1960s smash These Boots Are Made for Walkin’.

Eddy had a five-year commercial peak from 1958-63. He said in 1993 he took his 1970 hit Freight Train as a clue to slow down.

“It was an easy listening hit,” he recalled. “Six or seven years before, I was on the cutting edge.”

Eddy recorded more than 50 albums, some of them reissues. He did not work too much from the 1980s on, “living off my royalties,” he said in 1986.

About Rebel Rouser, he said: “It was a good title and it was the rockest rock ’n’ roll sound. It was different for the time.”

He scored theme music for movies including Because They’re Young, Pepe and Gidget Goes Hawaiian.

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Duane Eddy

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