Guitar World

Luca Stricagnol­i

WHY THREE NECKS — AND MILLIONS OF YOUTUBE VIEWS — MIGHT JUST BE BETTER THAN ONE

- By Puneet Singh

IN THE CROWDED field of internet guitar players, standing out has become increasing­ly difficult. But for 29-year-old Luca Stricagnol­i, getting noticed has meant being true to himself.

The Italian-born acoustic fingerstyl­e virtuoso picked up the guitar at age 10 and studied classical until age 16, before putting it away entirely to focus on judo. When friends at the gym found out he used to play guitar, they introduced him to modern fingerstyl­e players on YouTube, with Andy McKee, an artist on CandyRat Records, forever shifting the paradigm.

“[Andy] was hitting the guitar, slapping it, doing tapping and weird things, and I was blown away,” Stricagnol­i says. “I finally took a guitar in my hands and started into the field of fingerstyl­e.”

The next few years found Stricagnol­i absorbing everything acoustic on the internet, propelling him to find novel ways to express himself. He sent CandyRat a video of himself playing the theme from The Last of the Mohicans on three guitars with a violin bow — and they published it on their YouTube page.

“It started to go to almost a million views,” Stricagnol­i says. “I had only published two videos before and was used to, like, 6,000 views. That was the beginning of everything.” To date the video has been viewed more than 13 million times.

His innovative, one-man-band style covers of everything from AC/DC’s “Thunderstr­uck” to Gorillaz’s “Clint Eastwood” played on a triple-neck acoustic, showcase another facet of his brilliance as a guitar inventor. Working with Italian luthier Davide Serracini, creator of a triple-neck acoustic that incorporat­es a standard, soprano and bass neck, Stricagnol­i designed an original tool to further his sonic landscapes on the acoustic.

Called the “Reverse Slide Neck,” it is an inverted, fretless neck with an attached slide that moves along two string binaries. It has three high-pitched strings to play melodies

“I want to leave a mark for the new wave of guitar players. Maybe one day — 20 or 30 years later — a guitarist says, ‘I play this weird way because of Luca Stricagnol­i.’ That would be a life goal”

with the slide or fingers and four lowerpitch­ed strings to play bass lines. The neck can be attached to the guitar magnetical­ly, giving Stricagnol­i the ability to simultaneo­usly play four different voices — melody, bass, slide and percussion — as seen in his YouTube cover of the Beatles’ “While My Guitar Gently Weeps.” Stricagnol­i and Serracini are developing a consumer version they hope will be available this year.

“My dream when I started getting into fingerstyl­e guitar was to bring my own contributi­on to the way guitar is played,” Stricagnol­i says. “I want to leave a mark for the new wave of guitar players, and maybe one day — 20 or 30 years later — a guitarist says, ‘I play this weird way because of Luca Stricagnol­i.’ That would be a life goal.”

 ??  ?? Luca Stricagnol­i's triple-necked guitar includes necks for standard, soprano and bass
Luca Stricagnol­i's triple-necked guitar includes necks for standard, soprano and bass

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