Steve Morse brain fart

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TMatt142

TMatt142

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Ok, so my buddy calls me about a month ago and says...remember that guy, Steve Morse, the kinda hoosier looking dude, we always saw in the guitar magazines, know the name, never listened to his stuff. (Mainly the reason for that being both he and I have been in a holding pattern over everything Satriani, Vai, Pettrucci, Le Tekro, Schon, and Bettencourt, for like a decade. So he sends me a CD of Morses' stuff, some from solo stuff, Deep Purple, Living Loud....I've been living in a frigin cave!! Holy crap is he good, one of Pettruccis' influences so I'm told. So does anyone who actually isn't a cave-dweller, know of anything else this guy has done (I realize there is a lot of stuff, he's been around forever.)
 
The Dixie Dregs was his best-known stuff. Also toured with Kansas recently, I think. The dude is a scary guitarist.
 
I guess my favorite is probably his "High Tension Wires", which is one of his solo records. Just go to amazon.com and type in his name. You'll get several hits for his solo albums.

He's so talented that it kind of saddens me that he tours with rerun bands. He one of the few guys that plays with flawless technique and still somehow doesn't come off as pretentious. Maybe it's the hoosier look you mention :)
 
The guy also practices constantly. It's a real shame he didn't go further than he did. Very humble for a player of his caliber.
 
I saw him about 20 years ago at the Golden Bear in Huntington Beach CA.

IIRC it was just him solo electric.

I remember he did a stunning Strawberry Fields.
 
Dudes been rockin' for decades

Yeah the guy is totally amazing, especially the fact he's picking all those notes...not hammer ons!
I saw the Dixie Dregs do a Springfest gig at SIU University in like 79 or 80 that floored everyone, going from Hard rock to Jazz to Country chicken pickin' all at warp speed! Oh yeah it was in the same song too!! :eek:
 
Hi all!

I posted this elsewhere April of last year:

"There I was wearing my Robert Johnson Tee-shirt,first concert I've attended in a looong while. I ordered a ticket through the mail about a month ago.It was at the Theater of Living Arts on South Street in Philly. I got there very early and walked around.For those not familiar with South street in Philly, if you're ever in Philly , be sure to check it out....the section near the river front.

Anyway, i get there and see two people standing out front. I walk up and down a few blocks,come back and there's about twenty people lined up an hour before the gig even started.The venue is not very big, I guess there were about 3-500 people there at various times, but the number could have been larger.It was general admission...a concrete floor where people could stand, a small bar and a few stools and chairs in front of the mixer (where I decided to sit).Wait...who's that? Was that Steve? Yeah...he comes walking in carrying a guitar in a gig bag with three girls walking with him.To me this seemed very strange...he actually walked from the front door to back stage as if he were a concert goer.His hair is long again, past his shoulders.I'm surprised the girls weren't carrying the guitar for him...unless of course he wouldn't let them :-)



On the stage there are two drum kits, a bass rig that would make Adrian Belew envious, on the other side ther is keyboards, a Marshall amp head and a 51/50 head.

"Ladies and Geltlemen,the Steve Morse Band..." Steve on guitar, a drummer, and a bass player.They come on about 15 minutes late and start playing Mountain's "Mississippi Queen" into "Free Bird" and a couple of other recognizible tunes in a bid medley.

His playing was excellent.there were some things he did that I have done myself, but not in the same way.I am not talking about licks, more along the lines of effects. He was up picking while doing volume swells at the same time. My volume knob location makes this impossible. I thought of doing it with a pedal,but the way his guitar is set up, the knob is very close to the high E string. I've always wondered how Eric Johnson got his tone on the "cliffs" solo. I found out last night. Morse was playing single lines and using right hand index finger damping harmonics, causing the notes to sing out. I've done this before with one note at the end of a line, but it never occured to me to try a whole line this way. He didn't finger tap at all during this gig and he smiled a lot. I found this to be very "I'm just like any of you guys"-ish.Especially seeing him walking in carrying his own guitar. I got the distinct impression that,if given the chance, you could ask him anything about his playing and he'd explain away...no ego at all.

He actually broke a string,the high E, and STILL played is behind off on that particular tune. My jaw was on the floor. The wrap it up and take a break...lights come on.I go to rest room.

Lights dim, "Ladies and Gentlemen, The Dixie Dregs!!!" YEAH!!!!! Two bands in one night!! Same bass player, same Steve Morse, but a different drummer,a keyboard player, a violinist.They start playing "Cruise Control" and I stood up.

I first found out about steve and the Dregs through the reader's poll in Guitar Player years ago. He won overall best five years in a row. So, I went out and bought their recorc called " Unsung Heros" and Cruise Conrol was on it.I am not familiar with any other tune off the top of my head,so I was estatic when they played it and...also buzzed :-)

The violin player and Steve were trading licks a good portion of the time and that was awesome. The whole band was fantastic.They started playing Led Zeppelin's Kashmir in the middle of it. There weren't any vocals at all throughout the night. This band didn't need them.It seemed like Steve was a little more layed back when the Steve Mores band was playing, when he took the stage with the Dregs, he was...a blurr of the fret board. Not just flash, but tasteful licks you could probably humm at a slower speed.

Encor, the drummer comes out and does a spectacular solo...whoa,What's this? The other drummer comes out on the other kit and they trade off licks....then, they start finising eachother's licks. It was amazing. Then every member of BOTH bands comes out and plays,two drummers, keys, bass, violin, and Steve.

One of the best gigs I've ever seen and definitely one of the best guitar type gigs I've ever seen. I've seen Yngwie Malmsteen twice up close, Al Dimeola, Larry Coryell and Kenny Burrelei (sp?) on stage playing together,Steve Howe with GTR...all were good, but seeing Steve Morse in a small venue, watching him walk off the street right through the audience instead of arriving back stage, carrying his guitar, smiling...tossing guitar picks out to the crowd after each set,it just made me feel like he wasn't a guitar god... well...it seemed like he didn't think so anyway. Incredible...


If you get a chance to see him tour, I would highly recomend it.Even if guitar is not your thing, seeing anyone who knows their instrument as well as he does,who can play as many styles as he does, is fun to watch.

J.P.
 
There was an issue of Guitar World a couple months ago, I think it was the Jimmy Page cover, that has a CD ROM featuring Steve Morse, playing in his studio. Awesome player!
 
I got to meet Steve Morse back in the mid 80's. He was very humble and a genuinely nice guy. No rock star attitude, which is amazing considering the talent that he has. I've seen Malmsteen, Vai and Eric Johnson play live and I would have to say Steve Morse was the most impressive.
 
sweetpeee said:
Hi all!

I posted this elsewhere April of last year:

...On the stage there are two drum kits, a bass rig that would make Adrian Belew envious...

Why would Belew be envious? Would he want to play his Strat through it? ;^)
 
I saw Steve Morse play at The Bayou (R.I.P.) about a dozen years ago, and he knocked my socks off. The band he had with him were no slouches, either.
 
MadAudio said:
I saw Steve Morse play at The Bayou (R.I.P.) about a dozen years ago, and he knocked my socks off. The band he had with him were no slouches, either.

The Bayou in Baton Rouge? On Chimes Street right off the LSU campus?
 
I went to one of his clinics at an east coast Guitar and String instrument Expo quite a few years ago. Really a superior guitarist and a laid back guy. He changed into his commercial airline pilot uniform in the bathroom right after the clinic and left to go to work.
 
The Dixie Dregs is a no-brainer. He played on two Kansas albums: "Power" and "In the Spirit of Things". I like 'em (the latter one being better), but this might not be for everyone, as they are a bit commercial.

Yeah, this guy absolutely smokes. I don't think there's anything I can say about him that hasn't been said. One of the best for sure.
 
Yeah, he actually became an airline pilot for a few years then did a gig for Skynyrd and realized he wanted to play guitar full time again. So he quit the airline gig and started jamming again (and grew his hair long again).

In the early 80's Steve won Guitar Player Mag's Best Overall Guitarist five years straight and won him a spot in their gallery of the greats.
 
A very impressive player indeed. I was fortunate enough to spend a little time with Steve Morse one summer several years ago, although he only picked up the guitar once during that time-in a basement with about four people in the room, one of whom played the drums. I remember watching in awe as he would flip the pickup selector back and forth in the middle of a blazing lead line. Wild stuff.

Other than his ability to send a guitar home crying to it's mommy, he was just a normal guy. Very personable, normal,, and quite likeable. It seems he has gotten lots of recognition from guitar players, but never broken into the mainstream.
 
Absolutely wonderful guitarist and one of my greatest influences during the past 20 years. No "holding pattern" about him. He keeps growing and stretching in many ways, as you no doubt know if you've followed his adventures through the years. I've seen him at least 20 times, many in recent years, attended the clinics he offers (yes, he practices scales like crazy), and talked with him after many shows. He's the real deal: killer picker, great composer, hard worker, and as humble as they come. In fact, he obviously loves to help lesser guitarists, like me, any chance he gets.

I live in central California and catch him nearly every year with the SM Band or Dregs at the very small Ventura Theater. Fortunately for me, his family lives here now, so he plays around here regularly and always hangs out in the lobby for a chat after each show. I've never seen him with Kansas or DP, but I can't fault him for doing what it takes to bring in some extra money. We've all been there. The main thing, for me, is that he's never stopped writing, recording, and performing his own alternative stuff, which crosses styles and screams with creativity. Technically brilliant with blazing speed, sure, but he can also take one note and make it bleed with passion. I love this guy.

J.
 
ggunn said:
The Bayou in Baton Rouge? On Chimes Street right off the LSU campus?
No, The Bayou in Washington, D.C., specifically Georgetown. That club's no longer there.
 
ggunn said:
The Bayou in Baton Rouge? On Chimes Street right off the LSU campus?

no, the Bayou was a club in Georgetown (DC), on the corner of Wisconsin and K streets, if memory serves. it was a GREAT place to see a show--acoustics were fantastic for a live venue. i saw a number of shows there in the early/mid 90's. they tore the Bayou down and it's now a parking garage, IIRC.

i saw the Dregs open for Dream Theater at the 930 Club (also in DC) on the Scenes From a Memory tour. The dregs were awesome (as was DT). a fine display of wanking all night long. :D

never met steve, but i did have a good long chat with Rod Morgenstein (dregs drummer) after a "Jazz is Dead" show in Richmond one night ("jazz is dead" was band with Jimmy Herring doing instrumental jazzy versions of grateful dead tunes). what a great, humble guy. gave me some good advice on double-kick playing technique as well as a drumstick. :p


cheers,
wade
 
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