Although Landreth is an extremely competent guitarist in the conventional form, he is most well-known for his slide playing. Landreth has developed a technique where he also frets notes and plays chords and chord fragments behind the slide while he plays. Landreth plays with the slide on his little finger, so that his other fingers have more room to fret behind the slide. He's also known for his unique right-hand technique, which involves tapping, slapping, and picking strings, using all of the fingers on his right hand.
Landreth has worked steadily for decades and amassed a following among his fans and peers. Eric Clapton has said he is "probably the most underestimated musician on the planet and also probably one of the most advanced.
Sonny Landreth's official website (Warning: Flash) is http://www.sonnylandreth.com.
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Sonny Landreth released his Newest CD: "From the Reach"!“This ninth album, is the first is released on his own Landfall label. On it, the Louisiana-based slide guitar wizard does something unprecedented in his body of work, as he collaborates with five of the greatest guitar players on the planet – Eric Clapton, Mark Knopfler, Robben Ford, Eric Johnson and Vince Gill – for some jaw-dropping performances. Also making a house call is legendary New Orleans pianist and singer Dr. John and iconic Gulf Coast troubadour Jimmy Buffett and also features Nadirah Shakoor (backing vocals) from Buffett discovery.
On the opener, “Blue Tarp Blues,” Sonny trades solos with Knopfler, and the aural contrast between Sonny’s shimmering slide and the Dire Straits leaders’ biting Strat is a textural treat. Clapton cuts loose on the following “When I Still Had You,” adding his soulful voice to the choruses as well. Slowhand then wails on “Storm Of Worry”, a spooky slow blues reminiscent of his Bluesbreakers era.
“The Milky Way Home” is a powerful instrumental rocker that features Eric Johnson on delectably distorted guitar passages that morph into his trademark violin-like sound. “The Goin’ On” shifts into a country rock groove, with Vince Gill and Sonny alternating guitar solos and lead vocals. Robben Ford brings his soulful tone and phrasing to “Way Past Long” and “Blue Angel (the latter with Gill on backing vocals), as Landreth swaps his trusty Strat for a Les Paul. Each of these performances is an extraordinary showcase of brilliant players reacting to each other in supremely inspired fashion.
“I’ve wanted to make this kind of record for a long time – to do an entire album that would feature some of my favorite players as special guests,” says Landreth, who’s as articulate as he is virtuosic. “And after all these years, I’ve gotten to become friends with them, so that addressed the question of, who do you ask? Every one of them wanted to do it, so that really fired me up.”
“The other thing was how to do it without it being yet another clichéd ‘duets’ album,” he continues. “Then I got the idea to write the songs specifically for each of the artists and that was the real hook for me, as a writer as well as a guitar player. I grew up listening to Eric and Mark, and these other players have influenced me along the way. Not only that, but we all came up listening to a lot of the same music, so we had common ground to work with. Once someone would say yeah, then I had to come up with songs that were worthy of them.”
Landreth spent a year writing these songs, and another year putting the album together—a logistical feat of some magnitude considering the fact that every one of the principals, including Landreth, spends considerable time on the road. The process for most of the recording involved two stages. After Landreth had a particular song written, he went in the studio with his band and longtime engineer Tony Daigle and completed the basic tracks, leaving space for the guests. Daigle then sent his mix of the tune to the guest to contribute his or her parts. (The exceptions were the tracks with Gill, which were cut face to face in Nashville, and the one featuring Dr. John, which was recorded in New Orleans.)
“I’d get back these fantastic solos, and I’d go, ‘Oh my God, I’ve gotta re-cut mine!” Sonny recalls with a laugh. He’s exaggerating, but he did take a second pass at a couple of his parts.
The final stereo mixes feature Landreth on the left and the other players on the right. “We did it to tap into the conversational aspect of it,” Sonny points out. Current technology brought virtually unlimited flexibility to the recording process, but in the end what matters is that the performances truly feel in the moment—even if that moment was actually separated by time and physical distance.
“That was of course the goal with these performances,” Sonny confirms. “They’ve gotta feel right. I was going for the essence of what about these fabulous musicians inspired me to begin with, and that’s what I honed in on. I was able to go, ‘This sounds like a lick he would do,’ and then write that into the arrangement. The guests then had a chance to flesh the concepts out. I really wanted to make sure we captured each of their individual voices on the guitar, and I feel like we did that.”
In one of two delightful changes of pace to the album’s six-string focus, Dr. John brings the requisite gris-gris to “Howlin’ Moon” with his trademark rollicking piano and harmonies, on which he’s joined by Jimmy Buffett. “Although the central idea of the record was playing with my guitar heroes, I wanted to be open to the unexpected as well,” Sonny explains. “I’d written ‘Howlin’ Moon’ a long time ago, and I always had Dr. John in mind for it. Then we took it a step further with Jimmy’s vocal and the vibe was perfect.”
As for the rest, “Let It Fly,” a slice of exotica so warm that sweat drips off it, features backing vocals from Buffett discovery Nadirah Shakoor. The title of “Uberesso,” a blistering instrumental from Landreth and his band, was inspired by Sonny’s passion for espresso. The album closes with the metaphysical ballad “Universe,” as Gill adds his glorious voice to the goosebump finale.
Anchoring the grooves is Landreth’s touring rhythm section featuring longtime musical partner Dave Ranson on bass and Mike Burch on drums. Steve Conn, another regular, is on keyboards. Sam Broussard plays acoustic guitar on “Universe” and “Let It Fly.”
As for the intriguing album title, “I thought about it a lot,” says Sonny. “One of the most interesting things to me in the songwriting process is letting it cook and bubble and see what comes up to the top. As I was writing these songs, the word ‘reach’ kept coming up, and ‘reach’ is a pretty powerful word. Aside from the obvious meanings, it can refer to a body of water. And the water imagery kept appearing as well, so it’s like this is what came up out of this whole project for me. What would happen if I invited all these people; where would this take me? I literally reached out to them, and they graciously came on board. Then there was the impact locally of Hurricane Katrina. So the title is the result of all of the above. It’s coming from an honest place.”
The same could be said of everything this one-of-a-kind artist has done in his single-minded career.
Source:-- Bud Scoppa
http://vetril.blogspot.com/2008/05/sonny-landreth-new-cd-from-reach.html
Landreth was born February 1, 1951, in Canton, MS, and his family lived in Jackson, MS, for a few years before settling in Lafayette, LA. Landreth, who still lives in southwest Louisiana, began playing guitar after a long tenure with the trumpet. His earliest inspiration came from Scotty Moore, the guitarist from Elvis Presley's band, but as time went on, he learned from the recordings of musicians and groups like Chet Atkins and the Ventures. As a teen, Landreth began playing out with his friends in their parents' houses.
"They would ping-pong us from one house to another, and though we were all awful at first, as time went on we got pretty good. It's an evolutionary process, just like songwriting is," Landreth explained in an interview on his 44th birthday in 1995. After his first professional gig with accordionist Clifton Chenier in the 1970s (where he was the only White guy in the Red Beans and Rice Revue for awhile), Landreth struck out on his own, but not before he recorded two albums for the Blues Unlimited label out of Crowley, LA, Blues Attack in 1981 and Way Down in Louisiana in 1985. If anyone is living proof of the need to press on in spite of obstacles, it is Landreth.
The second of those two albums got him noticed by some record executives in Nashville, which in turn led to his recording and touring work with John Hiatt. That led to still more work with John Mayall, who recorded Landreth's radio-ready "Congo Square." More recently, he's worked with New Orleans bandleader and pianist Allen Toussaint (who guests on several tracks on South of I-10, as does Dire Straits guitarist Mark Knopfler). In the last years he was on tour with guitarist, composer and singer Hank Shizzoe.
On Landreth's brilliant albums for Zoo, the lyrics draw the listener in to the sights, sounds, smells and heat of southwest Louisiana, and a strong sense of place is evident in many of Landreth's songs. Although his style is completely his own and his singing is more than adequate, Landreth admits that writers like William Faulkner have had a big influence on his lyric writing. The fact that it's taken so long for academics at American universities to recognize the great body of poetry that blues is concerns Landreth as well. Robert Johnson is Landreth's big hero when it comes to guitar playing. "When I finally discovered Robert Johnson, it all came together for me," Landreth said, noting that he also closely studied the recordings of Skip James, Mississippi John Hurt and Charley Patton.
FOR SPECIAL VIDEOS See Also:
Youtube channel: "Sonny Landreth's Specials": http://www.youtube.com/user/WilliamMusicEater
Love and Glory
Sonny Landreth Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
After one of his tales left her pretty head a spinning
As if to awake from some weaving dream
Lifting her spirit till it's busting at the seam
"Your free falling reveries, sir, rescue me
From the deep end of doubt that puts vision to sleep
But do your wild thoughts simply break formation
"Ma'am, I have no delusions of prescient truth
And I call to account without prophecy or proof
But I propose a course from a simple observation:
Some roads are paved with conversation
'Cause it takes two sides of a story
To make a tale of love and glory."
Evangeline turned to Spider-Gris
And said, "The drag of apprehension is releasing me
You have shared a wealth of information
With pearls of wisdom and infectious revelation
That two sides of a story
Can make a tale of love and glory."
Try to follow the bliss every step of the mile
Don't break the trance
After all, what better way to wear the while
Won't you take this dance?
He gazed into the palm of her outstretched hand
As if to read the future of a noble plan
Then looked into her eyes making welcome to the heart
And heard a door open that had kept them each apart
It takes two sides of a story
To make a tale of love and glory
It takes two sides of a story
To make a tale of love and glory
The song "Love and Glory" by Sonny Landreth is a beautiful story of two people, Spider-Gris and Evangeline, and their journey to find love and happiness. The song begins with Spider-Gris catching Evangeline smiling after one of his tales, leaving her spellbound. She admits that his imaginative stories have been able to lift her spirits and release her from the worries that had been bogging her down. She wonders whether his thoughts are only a figment of his wild imagination or do they have a deeper meaning.
Spider-Gris, in turn, tells her that he makes no claims to see the future or have any psychic abilities. He offers her a simple observation that some roads in life are made of conversations. They both agree that it takes two people to make a story of love and glory, and their conversation leads them to discover an unexplored bond between each other. They both realize that they have been apprehensive about the future, but they decide to follow their hearts and live in the moment.
The song conveys a beautiful message that life is all about taking chances, dreaming, and finding love. Sometimes, all it takes is a conversation to make that happen. The song takes us on a romantic journey, and the beautiful lyrics and melody create an atmosphere that is full of warmth and hope.
Line by Line Meaning
Spider-Gris caught Evangeline grinning
Spider-Gris noticed Evangeline smiling
After one of his tales left her pretty head a spinning
After listening to one of his stories, she was left dazed and confused
As if to awake from some weaving dream
She felt like she was waking up from a dream
Lifting her spirit till it's busting at the seam
His words made her feel uplifted and happy
"Your free falling reveries, sir, rescue me
She tells him that his imaginative stories save her
From the deep end of doubt that puts vision to sleep
His stories help her overcome her doubts and lack of imagination
But do your wild thoughts simply break formation
She questions if his ideas are just random and chaotic
On a wing and a prayer or sure navigation?"
She asks if there is any direction behind his creativity or if it's just luck
"Ma'am, I have no delusions of prescient truth
He admits that he doesn't have special knowledge or insight
And I call to account without prophecy or proof
He can only speak from his personal experience and observations
But I propose a course from a simple observation:
He suggests a basic idea based on what he's noticed
Some roads are paved with conversation
He thinks that communication is important in relationships
'Cause it takes two sides of a story
A good relationship requires both people to contribute
To make a tale of love and glory."
Together, they can create a story of love and success
Evangeline turned to Spider-Gris
She looks at him directly
And said, "The drag of apprehension is releasing me
She states that she no longer feels scared or worried
You have shared a wealth of information
She thanks him for all the advice and insights he's given her
With pearls of wisdom and infectious revelation
She thinks his advice is valuable and contagious
That two sides of a story
Being open to different perspectives
Can make a tale of love and glory."
Leads to a successful and happy relationship
Try to follow the bliss every step of the mile
He advises her to always stay positive
Don't break the trance
Keep the happiness and positive feeling going
After all, what better way to wear the while
What's better than enjoying life?
Won't you take this dance?
Will you enjoy this moment with me?
He gazed into the palm of her outstretched hand
He looks at her hand
As if to read the future of a noble plan
He is imagining a bright future with her
Then looked into her eyes making welcome to the heart
Now he's looking at her eyes and expressing love
And heard a door open that had kept them each apart
Their relationship is improving and a barrier is lifted
It takes two sides of a story
He repeats that both people need to be involved
To make a tale of love and glory
Once again, they can create a happy and successful relationship
Writer(s): Sonny Landreth
Contributed by Caroline W. Suggest a correction in the comments below.