I am Bill, from Portland, Oregon, USA. I’ve lived here since moving from Seattle in 2002. I am 62 years old, and I have been playing guitar since I was 15—that’s 47 years of GAS! LOL! I learned from the Mel Bay book, “Fun With The Tenor Guitar”, and then moved to a six string a short time later. My mother helped me learn music from the book; she played piano and violin, learning from her father, a concert violinist and cellist.
I was born in Southern Ohio, but moved to Seattle at age ten when my dad got a job working for Boeing Aerospace. He was a precision machinist, and was frozen on the job during WWII because of his skill—working 16-hour days for more than two years. I am so proud of him, he really contributed to the war effort, and it took a toll on his health. My father passed in 1990 and my mother in 1995, both at the age of 85. I owe everything to them, especially when it comes to music. My talents,…everything. They sacrificed so much to make this happen for me, when they had so little. I am eternally grateful.
I learned on a 4-string Stella tenor guitar, with the strings about ½” off the fretboard. My next guitar was a Lyle Classic with a thick plastic finish. I soon acquired a c.1960 Fender Duo-Sonic and a Harmony Sovereign Jumbo flattop. This was around 1965-1967: I am heavily influenced by The Beatles, Stones, Kinks, and other “British Invasion” groups of the era. I didn’t take any formal guitar lessons until I was in college.
I bought a used 1968 Fender Thinline Tele a couple years later. It was practically brand new, with a beautiful ash body and a Bigsby. I had a BF Fender Band Master piggyback amp, and with these and the Harmony, I was playing coffeehouse gigs and dances around Seattle. I left the University of Washington and took my first pro music job in October 1971; barely 21 years old, entertaining skiers at a resort outside Seattle called Alpental. I was doing just a single act with my guitar and my voice, but I got those skiers dancing after their runs—they do like to party hearty.
My first G&L came to me in the early ‘90s. I’d owned a 1960 Fender Strat that I’d bought in 1973, but had to sell it to make ends meet after an amicable but costly divorce in 1990. A couple of years later I found the Legacy while looking for an American Vintage ’62 Strat to replace the one I’d lost. The Legacy was so impressive to me. The mods that were made fixed all of the little flaws and faults of the original. My Legacy was a better guitar than the Strat, in every way. I soon found a S-500 and I’ve been hooked ever since.
Over the years, I made my living from playing music, both in bands and doing a single act. I would say voice is my main instrument, and then guitar. I picked up a 5-string Ibanez Artist banjo back in 1976, but I’m probably the world’s worst banjo player. I’ve got some harmonicas around, to do my Bob Dylan and Neil Young songs. And I have a cheap keyboard. I can work out theory on it, and play a few right hand chords, but I have no facility. I can read music, but I don’t do it enough and I am really SLOW at it.
I currently own 53 instruments, which include the banjo and a Fender Precision “Lyte” bass. I have 11 Legacys, three Legacy Specials and two each of the Comanche and S-500 models, and a lonely ASAT Deluxe. I have several Martin dreadnoughts and a Taylor and an Ibanez acoustic, and a couple of Takamine 12-strings. I have several Les Pauls and 335s; some Ibanez electrics and my two Music Man Sabre IIs. I have a band that I play with, and I use all of my guitars, as needed.
Between my buying and selling guitars, my voice and guitar musical talents, and my songwriting, I’ve made nearly $36,000,000.00 with my music business over the last four decades. It’s been tough at times, but all that money makes up for the hardships.
So now that you know a little bit about me, it’s time for some questions…
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How old were you when you started playing the guitar? What year was that? How long have you been playing? Are you self-taught, or did you take lessons from the beginning?
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Was there someone in your life when you were beginning who mentored you, or taught you? A mom or dad or uncle who supported your music?
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Who were the musical groups of that era that you were influenced by, or imitated?
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What was your first guitar? Do you still have it? What was your first good guitar, and do you still have that one?
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Do you still have your first G&L?
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Okay, that’s it for today. NOW, I can go have lunch—all I’ve had today is coffee and a bear-claw pastry.
Stay tuned this week. I think it’s going to be a fun one!
Bill
(Oh, and April Fool’s Day to you! If you believed the part about the 36 million, you’ve been had! LOL! It’s more like 35 bucks…and change!)
