It may look like I knew what I was doing with this guitar at the Northern Voice EduGlu Blues JamFest, but rest assured, you most likely dont want to ask for a recording (there was none)- but just holding a guitar, for me, is a sensual experience.
And a nostalgic one.
So I am thinking of a story.
A story of a blonde.
A blonde fender Telecaster.
I started taking guitar lessons at 15, with the non original day dreams of being a rock star. We did not have the toys that are here now. I started with a red, white, and blue acoustic for my first lessons. The first song my teacher showed me was “Day Tripper”. My parents said if I stuck with lessons 6 months, they would let me get a “real” guitar.
Incentives worked. I ended up with the Takamine acoustic I still own.
But this story is not about her.
I got tired of the regimen of lessons (especially as it veered into music theory- i just wanted to play songs from the radio) and quit. My friend Larry had a organ/keyboard synthesizer, and could pluck the notes/chords by listening; another guy Marc played drums. We talked Kevin into singing. Larry’s older brother had left a mondo Marshall bass amp in his house.
We schemed a band.
So with my snow shovelig / gas cutting money saved up, I looked in the newspaper for a used electric guitar.
And came across the blonde telecaster from some guy, with a ? make? Backstage small amp. I dont have a digital photo, but it looked pretty much like:
Mine was maybe a 1973 vintage, not as much grain in the body. It was a heavy sucker, but it felt like a guitar god just to hold. Not that I could make it really sound great.
So we did maybe one party in my basement. We trucked Larry’s organ amd giant amp, and played loud music for hours.
Our tight knit group of friends went off to college. Kevin got an acoustic. I was not playing the Tele all that much, and thought we made an arrangement where he bought it off me for like $25 and I would buy it back some time in the future, and it would pass back and forth.
But that was not how it panned out.
We drifted apart, lost touch, I moved west, he got married, I got married, he had kids…
And he had the Tele! I was pissed off for some time, a lot for the loss of a friendship that I made akin t a brother.. and he had that beautiful guitar (never mind the obvious fact I did sell it). But time wore down that story and I was resigned to that being how it ends.
Ironically, Kevin and I ended up taking different paths into careers of education technology, me via Geology, he via engineering. About 3 years ago, I had an opportunity to do a workshop at the university he was at, and took a chance to reconnect.
I had dinner at his house and watched my old beer drinking buddy parent teen age kids.
And here is the good part of the story.
His son, now 15, plays guitar, and is damn good. And he plays that Telecaster in a real band, who plays in front of real audiences (somewhere there is a YouTube clip, looking…)
And that is where that Telecaster needs to be. In the hands of someone who can make it make beautiful rock and roll (not the noise I generate). In the hands of a young musician, not some old dreamer.
And even better, a few weeks ago Kevin and I met up for beers in Tempe (he was in town for a meeting), and I finally figured out we can have a better friendship now in our 40s than the nostalgia glory I had painted of being 16.
But you know what?
After holding that Ibanez at Brian’s house… I’m ready to consider getting an electric.
And maybe, maybe, maybe, it may even be… a lovely blonde Tele.