āYou hear two notes and you know who it isā: Remembering rock ānā roll pioneer Duane Eddy
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Second only to writing the perfect song, it is perhaps the ultimate goal of any guitarist to forge a sound that is theirs alone. Duane Eddy, who died of cancer in April at the age of 86, certainly accomplished that.
And while the tag given to his methodology ā ātwangā ā had lightweight and frivolous connotations, the sound itself was anything but. āItās a silly name,ā the guitarist once said, āfor a non?silly thing.ā
The low-slung, mysterious, otherworldly tone ā played on the bass strings of his giant Gretsch archtop, clad in reverb and given a shiver by his Bigsby vibrato bar ā made the US guitaristās ocean-crossing instrumentals of the late-ā50s so evocative that even life in suburban Britain felt like a classic American movie.
As the essayist Michael Hill wrote when, decades later, Eddy was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame: āTwang came to represent a walk on the wild sideā¦ the sound of revved-up hot-rods, of rebels with or without a cause, an echo of the Wild West on the frontier of rock ānā roll.ā
Yet that illicit sound began with a flash of pure childhood innocence. Born in 1938 in Corning, New York, Eddy caught sight of the instrument for the first time at five years old when the family moved house.
āWe were down in the cellar and up against the wall was leaning a guitar,ā he told this writer in 2010. āMy dad showed me a few chords heād used for courting my mother. And I just fell in love with it.ā
Playing along with country records on the radio, then swerving into rock ānā roll after the epiphany of an Elvis concert, Eddy realised that āin some way, Iād have to do thatā. His high school years in Arizona were a parallel existence, with Eddy studying by day then gigging the local clubs by night.
But, at the age of 16, he bet the house on a music career, and shortly after came into the orbit of the established DJ, music publisher and songwriter Lee Hazlewood, who impressed Eddy with the fact he had co-written and produced Sanford Clarkās 1956 hit The Fool.
Together, the pair wrote and recorded 1958ās Moovinā And Groovinā: an irrepressible dancefloor-ready stomper, with Eddyās seismic pluck already in place, thanks to his philosophy that āthe low strings were more meaty-soundingā, the use of a modded Magnatone and the recent acquisition of a Gretsch Chet Atkins 6120.
āI started out with a Gibson Goldtop in 1954,ā Eddy told Total Guitar in 2011. āBut it didnāt have a Bigsby vibrato, so I walked into a music store one day and the guy showed me a $450 Gretsch.
āIt just nestled in my arms perfectly. The neck was a dream and it had a Bigsby. The guy gave me $65 for my Gibson and let me walk away with the Gretsch, even though I wasnāt old enough to sign the papers for the loan. Those were the days!ā
Think tank
Just as important was Hazlewoodās production masterstroke. In those early years, with echo chambers still a rarity outside the major cities, the veteran took a novel approach to the limitations of Phoenixās Audio Recorders.
āOur echo chamber was actually a 2,000-gallon water tank,ā Eddy told Guitarist in 2019. āWe went down to a Salt River junkyard and yelled into tanks that might work as a reverb chamber. Lee would go, āWhoop!ā and he got an echo out of them. He finally found one that he yelled into and he liked the echo, so they bought it for a couple of hundred bucks and trucked it up to the back of the studio.ā
Eddy credited Elvis Presley for opening the door ā āHe came along and showed us how to do itā ā but the guitarist followed him through in the late 50s with a markedly different approach.
Eschewing vocals in order to stand out from the pack, Eddyās album titles set out his modus operandi, often by way of a slightly laboured pun. Have āTwangyā Guitar Will Travel (1958). The āTwangsā The āThangā (1959). $1,000,000 Worth Of Twang (1960). Twistinā āNā Twanginā (1962). āTwangināā Up A Storm! (1963). The Biggest Twang Of All (1966).
Drop the needle on these records and the song formats were often similar, with Eddyās wiry lick typically kicking things off before a jangled acoustic rhythm guitar, handclaps and howling brass enter the fray.
āI kept those melodies simple,ā he told Classic Rock magazine. āA guy can pick up a guitar and play the first notes of Rebel-Rouser or Peter Gunn. Then youāre encouraged to go, āI might be able to do this.āā
On both sides of the Atlantic, many future greats did just that. āWhen I was 12, I remember hearing Moovinā And Groovinā,ā Creedence Clearwater Revivalās John Fogerty told Rolling Stone. āIt was unlike any other guitar Iād ever heard. It had this wonderful, huge, big sound, then he started twanging the strings. The sound was massive, the tone was perfect. Where he placed the notes made so much sense.ā
āHe was my first guitar idol with songs like Rebel-Rouser, Shazam! and Some Kinda Earthquake,ā added Deep Purpleās Ritchie Blackmore upon the news of Eddyās death.
āI would always rush out and buy his long-playing records. My favourite all-time tune from him was The Lonely One. He was a brilliant guitarist in his own right. He was the first guitar player with that deep bass sound, which I loved.ā
Top Gunn
At the turn of the decade, Eddy seemed unassailable. NME crowned the American as World Musical Personality and Melody Maker declared him āthe first real guitar superstar of the rock ānā roll ageā, while he was notable as the first rock ānā roller honoured with a signature model, in the form of the Guild DE-400 and DE-500.
Between 1958 and 1963, no fewer than 16 of Eddyās singles charted in the Top 40, including the aforementioned Rebel-Rouser and Shazam!, plus Ramrod, Cannonball, Forty Miles Of Bad Road, Because Theyāre Young and, perhaps most famous, 1959ās Peter Gunn, his loping interpretation of Henry Manciniās detective-show theme tune.
āWe had 11 songs and Lee came out of the booth and said, āWell, what are we going to do for the 12th?āā Eddy recalled in Classic Rock. āSo we did Peter Gunn ā and it got to rocking. We finished this one take and we were breathing hard. We were playing so hard, just driving the stuffings out of it.ā
All the while, Eddyās work left its mark on the guitarists who followed on his heels. Revisit the languid phrases of Hank Marvin in The Shadows, or the brittle riff that opens The Beatlesā Day Tripper, then move onward through Bruce Springsteenās Born To Run, Blondieās Atomic, Chris Isaakās Wicked Game and even the fathoms-deep pulse of Angelo Badalamentiās Twin Peaks theme. Eddyās approach ā with its ghostly shimmer and acres of space ā looms over them all.
We did Peter Gunn ā and it got to rocking. We finished this one take and we were breathing hard. We were playing so hard, just driving the stuffings out of it
A more litigious songwriter might have angled for royalties. Yet Eddy was sanguine about hearing his influence (āThis is not a competition,ā he shrugged. āWe help each otherā) and gracious when another act borrowed a little too brazenly.
He insisted the heavily indebted Marvin ādid it in his own wayā, and even endorsed The Beach Boysā lift of his Moovinā and Groovinā lick for 1963ās Surfinā USA. āI was honoured and glad they borrowed it,ā Eddy told Total Guitar. āIt was like, āYou wanna borrow this jacket for your show? Go ahead!āā
Yet the new wave of bands who revered Eddy also inadvertently sounded his career death knell (at least for now).
āIn 1960, the charts in England were 95 per cent American, five per cent British,ā he told Classic Rock. āI went back at the end of ā63, and it was the opposite. And I thought, āWell, theyāre getting their own back.ā When The Beatles hit here, it died off for me. Iād had my five-year run, and I didnāt get upset about it. I thought, āWell, they can take it from hereā¦āā
By the late ā60s, Eddy had stepped back ā or perhaps been pushed ā from frontline action and worked more commonly on production or session work. But the ā70s rockabilly revival led listeners back to his classic material, before his 1986 collaboration with synth group Art of Noise birthed a UK Top 10 and Grammy-winning reboot of Peter Gunn.
āI was worried that all my old fans, the āpuristsā, would hate the record,ā Eddy told Blitz, ābut theyāve taken to it like a duck to water.ā
One of a kind
In the ā90s, Eddyās songs were regulars on movie soundtracks, with Rebel-Rouser featured as a carful of greasers try to plough down Forrest Gump, and his dust-blown Ravi Shankar collaboration, The Trembler, heard in video-nasty Natural Born Killers.
The guitarist rode that renewed profile all the way to the end. In 2017, The Black Keysā Dan Auerbach invited Eddy to guest on his Waiting on a Song album, and when this avowed Anglophile returned to the UK in 2018 to play three rare dates, Richard Hawley led the backup band.
āWhat a unique thing he created. Without singing a note in his entire life ā what a voice,ā said the Sheffield guitarist, who also co-produced Eddyās final studio release, 2011ās Road Trip.
āDuane sold 200 million albums, and he was the coolest guy. He was gentle and kind and all the things that you should be as a human being.ā
Indeed, while Eddyās music will be his chief legacy, it should also be noted what a decent, modest and good-humoured man he was. This writer remembers gaping as the trailblazing musician dismissed his career milestones as a āseries of accidentsā, and joked that he had managed only ā10 per centā of Elvisās record sales.
Far from believing the column inches proclaiming him a pioneer, Eddy once insisted his greatest contribution to music had been ānot singingā.
In 2018 came the first hints of trouble, as Eddy spoke of āovercoming a couple of medical issuesā. Even then, the guitarist insisted he couldnāt āget my mind aroundā entering his ninth decade, and his youthful demeanour meant it was a jolt to learn of his passing at Tennesseeās Williamson Health Hospital, just days after his 86th birthday.
āIām in shock,ā wrote Dave Davies of The Kinks. āDuane Eddy was one of my most important influences. I thought heād live forever.ā
The ā50sā originators are almost gone now, and we will not see their like again. Yet while that mighty Gretsch might have fallen silent, the acolytes of the Sultan of Twang will carry his sound forever onward.
āRest in peace, Duane Eddy,ā wrote Joe Bonamassa, alongside a photo of the masterās signature model. āA true pioneer and bona fide legend.ā