Story goes that Roy was tapped for the Rolling Stones, but he turned the gig down. More than one guitar player has been called the “Greatest Unknown Guitar Player”, but none so much as Roy.
He hanged himself in a jail cell a couple of decades ago. Or, if you believe his wife, was murdered.
Saw Roy perform less than a year before he died. Great show, small venue - just a couple hundred people. Glad I had a chance to see him before he shuffled off. Can’t remember many details about the show. I remember the opening band was a local group that we alternately ignored or made fun of (amongst ourselves) while waiting for Roy. We did not enjoy them. I remember Roy broke a string, and I think he had to bum one off the opening act - but don’t quote me on that. Besides that, all I can remember is losing myself in the music. One of my fav tunes. Jump ahead to ~2:55 if you’re (the generic you) impatient and not enjoying the mellow intro, though I can’t imagine why you wouldn’t.
I remember him being featured often in Guitar Player when I was a teenager. In fact, all I had ever knowingly heard of him up till now was the flexi disc that they issued. Sadly, at the time, I wasn’t able to understand why he was such an amazing guitarist. Now, I need to go see if I can find that thing and listen again. He was wise to pass up the Rolling Stones, he was too good for them. Thanks.
Sometime in the early '80s, I was visiting Minneapolis with my two sisters. At supper we asked a waiter if there were any bars with live music near by. He mentioned a place and said there was a blues band that was pretty good. That was the first I ever heard of Roy Buchanan.
Oh, that’s an awesome story! “Where can we see some live music?” “Oh, there’s that place over there where Roy Buchanan’s playing, I hear he’s pretty good.”
I got to see Roy Buchanan perform live three times before his death. It was amazing what he could do with a Telecaster, an amp and his fingers. He rarely if ever used effects pedals or anything else to alter his sound, just the volume & tone controls and the pickup switch.
It is nice to finally have some decent videos of him in action. In addition to the Austin City Limits show, there is a DVD of a performance for German TV from 1985. They are both available from Amazon.
I know. He wasn’t even unknown to us non-musicians. It’s just an appellation stuck to him far too often.
In the early nineties I was a teen. The local independent record store guys noticed me when I started coming in and raiding their Dylan collection. My dad had turned me on, and I started my collection with the Dylan classics. I bought Biograph and Bootleg 1-3 early on. My best friend to this day remembers buying the “Beat Generation” box–a collection of poems, songs, and sundries from the 50s. When he brought it to the counter, the owner said “you and ***** are the only two who’ve looked at that box in six months, but I think the Dylan box sets are taking it out of him.”
It got to the point I would walk in and the evil fuckers* would queue up a CD. I’d make it halfway to the back of the store, hear what was playing, turn around and ask “what’s this?” Eventually I’d walk in, say “I have $150 to spend. Load me up!”(Yes, I trusted them that much.)
As a teen I liked blues, but didn’t understand them. Asked him to help me out, and he recommended Alligator’s 20th Anniversary collection as a starting point. I bought the (double cassette!) edition. On that collection was Roy Buchanan’s “Drowning on Dry Land.” I swear I’d never heard a guitar cry prior to that. I ran right out and bought “Sweet Dreams,” and am glad I did.
I was into the blues before that, but that 20th anniversary collection was a hell of a set. I think Johnny Winters & Albert Collins was on it as well, among many others.
Well, besides the greatness of Buchanan, I’ll humbly be the first one to offer two other great guitarists who appear too rarely in these kind of threads: James Burton and Clarence White. I’m sure that guitar folks know them, but since they are basically side men/session men, most people have heard them, but not heard of them. They are both key figures in laying the foundations for (Burton) and defining (White) country rock, but never were stars themselves.
:smack: Please forget my last post. I read the title as “The greatest unknown guitar players”. Now continue with the Roy Buchanan worship. He deserves it.
Buckethead used to be the epitome of “unknown” since he wore a mask and a KFC bucket while performing. He was in Guns and Roses for a while, and has 47 studio albums.
From Wikipedia:
Most of the guitarists I can think of that might be categorized as unknown, were actually just under-rated and not very popular either at the time, or in a pop-cultural sense. Stanley Jordan or John McLaughlin’s names may not ring a bell with most, but both were highly respected artists.
Buckethead is an established gunslinger esp after being tapped for GnR. He does nothing for me - not sure why.
Guthrie Govan is a gifted guitar player who isn’t well known and is fun to watch - plenty of YouTube out there.
Julian Lage is one of the best out there, and I have mentioned a few times. His track 233 Butler, I will try to attached a mobile link to a clip of him playing it solo - is astounding technically while, more importantly, sounds melodic and musical. The name is the address of a guitar store in Brooklyn, RetroFret, a favorite of mine…
The guitar is a 1930 or so Gibson L-5 archtop - swoon.