Playlist: 1. 2:12 Red Pony 2. 10:19 The Death Of The Clayton Peacock 3. 15:35 In Christ There Is No East Or West 4. 23:54 Mark 1 15 Fahey's guitars in this video: Bacon and Day Senorita and Kona Hawaiian Guitar Tunings: Open Dm for Red Pony (actually, here it is lowered by half a tone like other tunings in this show, except the song for the slide guitar ), Open Gm for The Death Of The Clayton Peacock, standard tuning for In Christ There Is No East Or West and Drop D for Mark 1 15. Also, I have some Fahey stuff on my channel.
@@mileshess9089 first of all. 1:26 Laura says song name. I played all versions of this song. Main theme had the same chords and progressions. This song had a three incarnations - wine and roses, red pony and approaching of the disco void. It's all the same song, but with different first section and different speed.
Thank you interminably. He is an absolute wizard and to be able to visualize his magic is so, so special. Thank you for making this accessible to us all!
I just discovered John Fahey. I went away from listening to one of his songs almost feeling like I had heard a song with actual lyrics. His music really tells a story without words. It’s very colorful and expressive.
@@RivmicJust wanted to say thank you for mentioning Basho. I had never heard of him before your comment, just listened to Blue Crystal Fire, and it is one of the most beautiful songs I have heard. I am going to enjoy going through his discography :)
I met John in the 70's at The Ash Grove in Los Angeles and we talked about guitars briefly. He was connected to Henry Vestine and the Canned Heat, but much more than that ,he was a blues scholar and a kick ass guitarist , VERY DEEP. Read his books, He was a very nice person and I treasure those memories, People say he was eccentric. No, he was just very HUMAN.
After years of being teased with bits of clips, I had given up hope of finding the complete piece. There is so much going on here; what a genius. Thank you and bless you for doing this.
Make sure to do what I just did, save a copy of this to a hard drive using one of the many free programs online that allow one to save youtube videos to storage. This could disappear at any time, so better to save a copy, you never know, peace.
@@radishbeet2130 you can always find this interview in facebook. I'm not gonna delete this video. Maybe Stefan Grossman strike this video and my channel, but if you don't find this video someday, remember - it's not my fault! :)
@@RickyBlackwell_X "Maybe Stefan Grossman strike this video and my channel" Haha! When I saw Fahey play in Lexington he did make a brief quip about Grossman onstage LoL!
@@radishbeet2130 I say, I say ! Fancy encouraging people to contravene the TH-cam contract, in this shocking way ! Apart from anything else, if you were to download the video, you wouldn't get all the adverts in the middle ......................................................................................... !
I discovered him around 1969 as a 16 year old kid. It was the album covers. Without ever hearing him, something told me he was a unique and possibly great artist just from his album covers. I was not disappointed.
We grew up in Maryland and there were coffee shops hosting what we now call open mic nights, where she often played. John was her guitar hero! She learned some of his pieces and they are familiar to me when I hear them...(to self) "my sister played that too!" She passed away a year ago, but when we talked about playing our guitars, she always brought up John Fahey. She would absolutely love this post. Thanks for sharing.
I got a huge kick once, late '85 or early '86, pre-Chernobyl, anyway, when an American guy recognised the tune I was trying to play, sitting in the doorway of my split-windscreen VW camper in NZ, as John's "In Christ There Is No East Or West". Down there in the Antipodes, two Fahey lovers.
This just popped up in my TH-cam suggestions. Very cool! John plays as if it were in the late 1800s in Appalachia. Mysterious, beautiful, primitive and yet strangely perfect. Amazing! Thanks.
Been listening to John Fahey for over 40 years. Always felt Ol' John was exactly where he was supposed to be: Playing his Guitar! Authentic, Humble, Unique & Artistically Creative. Thanks for the Creative Inspiration.... Thanks Johnny ✝️💜🎸🎭☕🎶
Wow, what a treasure, thank you for this upload! Our dad played John's records and in 1969 John's music was the soundtrack as I was literally a barefoot boy running in the woods of W KY. Great memories.
Thank you so much for posting this. I absolutely love when he says that he's not too worried about what to call his music. He embodied so much idiosyncrasy with such love and reverence for his influences. . His style is a true musical mosaic. A sonic interpretation of cultural diaspora and influence. I've been listening to his work for years and it's only getting better with age. The more you listen, the deeper your understanding. Sometimes his blending of colors hits you in a very strange way, but, keep trying if you don't quite get it. It is so beautiful. One of those guitarists where you truly feel like the instrument is an extension of his body, mind, and spirit. Where the instrument is truly channeling him Like a six stringed radio antenna for the soul.
I agree. More you listen Fahey - deeper you go into his emotions. It's a strange thing, but in Fahey music we see a lot of dark emotions. Not in sunflower river blues of course, but in some pieces. Young people today can't understand major key in music. Major key can be melancholic, dark, sad or angry. And Fahey approved this.
Don’t worry too much! Us young people are getting there! Me and many of my friends take influence from John and plenty of other incredible guitarists whose messages seemingly transcend time 💫 - your local 22 year old
I have been casually listening to fahey for a while now and learned to play sunflower river blues, but man watching these live performances in their entirety has really opened me up to the breadth of john's creativity and uniqueness as an artist. There will never be another like him.
''One's Who'll Continue'' ''Now there are artist's who'll wrest us up & they'll place us into themselves & into their works. These are the One's Who'll Continue wresting us up... far & beyond their appointed rests in peace. Stay thirsty for these One's Who'll Continue - but even thirstier for the very Author of them all.'' ~Just another one of those many one's of we who's awaiting... Their Authors'✝Just⚖Return🪃 82922
A meeting of two icons of 1960s folk. Simply delightful banter between two very different people united by the guitar. Laura and John are a part of my musical past and seeing them together is special.
I was turned on to John's playing back in the early 70's by a friend I am about to send this link to, who will probably read this comment. I really appreciate this video giving a name to my style of play, which is also self-taught and not like anyone else, including John Fahey: American Primitive. I like that. Maybe it is time for an American Primitive movement.
Back in the 80's, I was in a music store and overheard a guitar lesson being conducted with someone learning how to fingerpick a country blues tune. I immediately knew that I wanted to learn how to play like this. I waited around until the lesson concluded so that I could ask the instructor if I might take lessons from him, which I did for less than a year before he moved away. He ended up turning me on to all kinds of awesome music I wasn't previously aware of, including the music of John Fahey. It's great to see this footage all these years later. Thank you for sharing!
I remember seeing this on television! Ms. Weber had a very good show and I learned a lot. I eventualy went on to learn a few Fahey tunes. Thanks for posting!
I used to have this on VHS! I started playing acoustic guitar instrumentals and when I discovered Fahey, it kinda gave me a template and permission to continue. Even though our styles are quite different, I still consider him a major influence.
Thanks for this. I had seen Red Pony as a clip from this, but the full interview is a lot more informative and instructive. I have been listening to Fahey on and off since 1971 but now I have some further clues as to how he made those sounds.
I had a dream drowned in alcohol and dreamt of john, and i watched his life from the beginning of his music to the end of his life, it was weird, it was very melancholic.
Great video. Fahey was one of my heroes when I started playing guitar in the late 60's as I was pretty good at Travis picking (and not much else), but it had that "just a little bit different" sound from the perfect folk/folk-rock sounds of the era. Thanks so much for posting this!
I've heard this referred as "Ragtime" style, and I can imagine the old after-dinner parties before the age of TV and radio, where the family would sit around in the parlor with guitar, mandolin, mandocello, and fiddle, and this was their source of entertainment for the night. It was a different time back then, and this music is an amazing throwback to that earlier age.
Great to see this! Thanks for posting. One of my favorite experiences in playing guitar was learning how to play John's The Last Steam Engine Train and In Christ There Is No East Or West. He was truly one of the greats and an inspiration to other guitar players. RIP
One thing i get out of this is John was a complete original, a bit defensive about being entirely self-taught and also did not read musical notation...but he did have a good grasp of real American folk and blues (he was an avid collector of original work) and he simply delved deeply into himself and took it to another level of excellence. He did not worry too much about how people viewed him and his style; which was a double edged sword which put some folks off, but others liked that he fearlessly went where others feared to tread. That may have accounted for the deep places he was able to go to in many of his songs. It was a conversation he was having with his muse and he resented that some were not willing to see the spider silk he created out of his love for something uniquely his own. There are few like him, afaik.
I wonder what happened to John's Bacon & Day guitar. This is a lovely timepiece. Ms Weber is a charmer and John seems very happy and at ease in this environment. thank you for uploading the whole programme. I'd like to see more of the Guitar Guitar show.
Artists like Fahey could never come to notice in the world of social media, PR presence and self-projection. An artist who came to international cult status because of a pressing of 57 copies of a self-produced vinyl LP in the late 1950s? We’ve stopped looking that hard for mysteries and enigmas.
I think that's coming back - ironically, because social media is able to reach groups that are under-represented in the mass media of TV, radio, and mainstream streaming services. Wouldn't have even known about John Fahey if not for Reverb's article on famous guitarists' alternate tunings.
this is amazing, thanks for sharing! i've been watching clips for years, always curious about the full program! lol the host is wild. he corrects her after she mistakes sandy bull for him, and she says 'maybe, i may be wrong' XD
People don't recognize true talent, that's the consequence of being a pioneer of any form of art, just like Vincent Van Gogh; nobody saw any value in his paintings and only made pennies until he was gone and people got bored with the 'proper' traditional art, it wasn't until then did they find value in it. Just like Van Gogh and many other artists of their time, John expressed himself through the music rather than play it properly as if there is a right or wrong way to play music; art is purely expressional. Art and music Schools never teach that, even Laura said that the way he was playing the guitar with the way he had his thumb she would of corrected and told her students they aren't playing it right. It's a shame
@@WaterMeA-biscuit it’s nuanced though. I’ve heard artists disparage the public, often rightly so, that they don’t understand. Charlie Parker played too many notes as one example (though being a guitar player I sometimes think Joe Pass, Tal Farlow played too many notes Some artists can achieve both. For instance IMHO Stravinsky. He both out of the boxed it, was progressive and could move the not in the know
Thank you so much for posting this! I saw the show Guitar Guitar around when it aired and have always wanted to review it. To Me, side one of Fahey's Requia album was his best work which was from this period in 1967. Fahey was a musical and compositional genius. Probably inconsistent as a performer in concerts but who cares?!!
I went to concerts of his when the skies opened up and the angels sang. And other ones were he was too drunk to hold his guitar. He was a genius with serious mental illness.
@@bglrj I hear what you're saying! I only got to see him once here in Lexington Kentucky. He wore blue jeans that looked like he hadn't changed in 6 weeks and a plain ordinary white scuzzy t shirt. Upstairs in the club I was told he peed out the window. I'm still glad I got to see him. He didn't blow me away that night but heck it was John Fahey!
8:40. Flicks ash into the sound hole of the guitar. I was watching this on public TV out of Kansas City. I was just enamored with Ry Cooder , Fahey and any guitarist that could finger pick. Back then there was no internet, no rock on TV, even FM radio was considered so unimportant that alt formats were allowed, even encouraged. Fahey benefitted from that environment. He wasn’t commercial, but lord he could play! The host here was briefly important in the grand scheme of things. Salad days…
Amazing! Though I have a couple of Fahey’s albums, I have never SEEN either of these humans before! Ms. Weber is way fun, and Mr. Fahey is an ascended master of subtlety and nuance! For my fellow instrument geeks, I am fairly certain that this Bacon & Day guitar was made in the early 1930’s by the Oscar Schmidt Company of Jersey City, NJ. Quite elaborate and fancy, it may have been a one off, but more likely it was from a VERY small “batch” of high end instruments that were “jobber built” under sub-contract for the Bacon and Day Co. (which, at that time, unless I’m mistaken, was owned by Rhettberg and Lange). The Oscar Schmidt Company also prominently made “Stella” guitars and host of other brands, both their own and almost endless others! By “batch,” in reference to John’s “B&D,” I’d suggest that a dozen would be a huge over estimate, more likely in the range of 3-6 instruments TOTAL! I base that in part from the fact that in my own lifetime in fretted and stringed instruments (and paying attention!) I have never encountered, even in any way peripherally, another example of Mr. Fahey’s instrument! Note that, while a 14 fret to the body instrument, it still has the earlier slotted headstock design, a particular combination of features which, along with the prototypical “country & western” overall aesthetic (Jimmie Rodgers and all that!), would tend to indicate a date of manufacture of c.1933-35… In support of this thesis, if you can access a picture of the black “Sovereign” guitar on page 21 of Neil Harpe’s most wonderful, “The Stella Guitar Book, The Guitars of the Oscar Schmidt Company” (nh, 2004), it pretty well makes the case, at least to my own satisfaction… Does anyone know the current whereabouts of Fahey’s guitar (it being an example of a “ladder braced” masterpiece, not to mention it’s immense historicity!)… anybody know? - Ah, but I do tend to go on a bit in my “reclining” years, ‘mm? Well, as Dale and Roy would always sing… “Happy Trails to you, ‘til we Meet Again!” - “Recuerdos a todos,” Glenn aka Textoyevsky PS I can scarcely believe that spellcheck GAVE me “historicity!” (any evidence of “prior use?”… ‘d be curious, jus’ sayin’…) It was like a “grudge match”with some initial objections, but the crowd was with me and ultimately I won it on a close decision… “This is how we do it now…” - Namaste, GCB Jones
super reply & great info there sir - I too would love to know the whereabouts of Fahey's B&D, plus any other of his guitars - cheers from the Delta, & joy to the world
@@a_missippian Hey "a_missippian," Blessings on the Southland! Thanks for your response! I thought I edited this post, from here at the "East Dakota Home for the Cyber Challenged," but I have left erroneous info online! Mea Culpa, "my bad" bifocals! On closer inspection Fahey's "B&D" is a SOLID headstock guitar! Ugh, (think quickly!), the lavish inlay and narrow headstock profile threw off my cursory inspection! I believe I can stand by the rest of my assessment, however... write me if I'm wrong! My guess is most likely this guitar was stolen, as Mr. Fahey did some hard travelling, don't ya know! If it ever surfaces it should be worth a tidy packet! There's a biography of this amazing guitar innovator called, I believe, "The Dance of Death, the life of John Fahey, American Guitarist," by Steve Lowenthal. I intend to find it and read it, and I'm glad it's there! Best always, Glenn
That Kona guitar that John Fahey called "cheap" isn't cheap anymore. That's a $3000 guitar made in the 1920's by Hermann Weissenborn in Los Angeles. Made out of solid koa.
To me he looks like an introvert, sensitive, Aspie kind of guy, having to live in a world where people seem hard and insensitive or dumb and uncaring. Ask me how I know. Bye-bye John and thanks for a glimpse into your world.
Playlist:
1. 2:12 Red Pony
2. 10:19 The Death Of The Clayton Peacock
3. 15:35 In Christ There Is No East Or West
4. 23:54 Mark 1 15
Fahey's guitars in this video: Bacon and Day Senorita and Kona Hawaiian Guitar
Tunings: Open Dm for Red Pony (actually, here it is lowered by half a tone like other tunings in this show, except the song for the slide guitar ), Open Gm for The Death Of The Clayton Peacock, standard tuning for In Christ There Is No East Or West and Drop D for Mark 1 15.
Also, I have some Fahey stuff on my channel.
Wonderful, God bless John Fahey
first song is wine and roses
@@mileshess9089 wine and roses and red pony it's the same song.
@@RickyBlackwell_X no it’s not look up red pony by john fahey on spotify right now it’s a completely different song
@@mileshess9089 first of all. 1:26 Laura says song name.
I played all versions of this song. Main theme had the same chords and progressions. This song had a three incarnations - wine and roses, red pony and approaching of the disco void. It's all the same song, but with different first section and different speed.
Thank you interminably. He is an absolute wizard and to be able to visualize his magic is so, so special. Thank you for making this accessible to us all!
I was a student at UCSD at this time and he would often sit on the lawn playing
totally in his own world.
This is the best comment I've ever read about John Fahey
You're kidding! Fahey was a mad man. In his madness, though, he was completely sober.
Correct because he was stoned out of his mind.
@@jeffhildreth9244 exactly 😂
I just discovered John Fahey. I went away from listening to one of his songs almost feeling like I had heard a song with actual lyrics. His music really tells a story without words. It’s very colorful and expressive.
Try Basho next
@@RivmicJust wanted to say thank you for mentioning Basho. I had never heard of him before your comment, just listened to Blue Crystal Fire, and it is one of the most beautiful songs I have heard. I am going to enjoy going through his discography :)
@@samjohnsonkb Glad I could help. I have many of his rare live performances as well as albums uploaded on my channel.
Let's just appreciate how wonderful it is that this video exists.
Marvellous stuff. From the heart to the heart. No need to think about it. Like nature it's there, beautiful and inspiring. Rare in more ways than one.
Wish more of Laura Weber's "Folk Guitar" series were available today. I still have the booklet and vinyl album.
my all time favourite player. special. timeless, unique. so much emotion in his playing. a talent beyond words
I met John in the 70's at The Ash Grove in Los Angeles and we talked about guitars briefly. He was connected to Henry Vestine and the Canned Heat, but much more than that ,he was a blues scholar and a kick ass guitarist , VERY DEEP. Read his books, He was a very nice person and I treasure those memories, People say he was eccentric. No, he was just very HUMAN.
He was just a regular guy. I heard a great interview (NPR?) years ago. He suffered from Epstein-Barre syndrome
After years of being teased with bits of clips, I had given up hope of finding the complete piece. There is so much going on here; what a genius. Thank you and bless you for doing this.
Make sure to do what I just did, save a copy of this to a hard drive using one of the many free programs online that allow one to save youtube videos to storage. This could disappear at any time, so better to save a copy, you never know, peace.
@@radishbeet2130 you can always find this interview in facebook. I'm not gonna delete this video. Maybe Stefan Grossman strike this video and my channel, but if you don't find this video someday, remember - it's not my fault! :)
@@RickyBlackwell_X "Maybe Stefan Grossman strike this video and my channel" Haha! When I saw Fahey play in Lexington he did make a brief quip about Grossman onstage LoL!
Fahey played a song called The Death of Stefan Grossman.
@@radishbeet2130 I say, I say ! Fancy encouraging people to contravene the TH-cam contract, in this shocking way ! Apart from anything else, if you were to download the video, you wouldn't get all the adverts in the middle ......................................................................................... !
I discovered him around 1969 as a 16 year old kid. It was the album covers. Without ever hearing him, something told me he was a unique and possibly great artist just from his album covers. I was not disappointed.
We grew up in Maryland and there were coffee shops hosting what we now call open mic nights, where she often played. John was her guitar hero! She learned some of his pieces and they are familiar to me when I hear them...(to self) "my sister played that too!" She passed away a year ago, but when we talked about playing our guitars, she always brought up John Fahey. She would absolutely love this post.
Thanks for sharing.
I got a huge kick once, late '85 or early '86, pre-Chernobyl, anyway, when an American guy recognised the tune I was trying to play, sitting in the doorway of my split-windscreen VW camper in NZ, as John's "In Christ There Is No East Or West". Down there in the Antipodes, two Fahey lovers.
This just popped up in my TH-cam suggestions. Very cool! John plays as if it were in the late 1800s in Appalachia. Mysterious, beautiful, primitive and yet strangely perfect. Amazing! Thanks.
This man was a pioneer.
Been listening to John Fahey for over 40 years. Always felt Ol' John was exactly where he was supposed to be:
Playing his Guitar! Authentic, Humble, Unique & Artistically Creative.
Thanks for the Creative Inspiration....
Thanks Johnny ✝️💜🎸🎭☕🎶
Wow, what a treasure, thank you for this upload! Our dad played John's records and in 1969 John's music was the soundtrack as I was literally a barefoot boy running in the woods of W KY. Great memories.
I was given a John Fahey record in 1968. Such a wonderful memory.
I wore the record out.
Thank you so much for posting this. I absolutely love when he says that he's not too worried about what to call his music. He embodied so much idiosyncrasy with such love and reverence for his influences. . His style is a true musical mosaic. A sonic interpretation of cultural diaspora and influence. I've been listening to his work for years and it's only getting better with age. The more you listen, the deeper your understanding. Sometimes his blending of colors hits you in a very strange way, but, keep trying if you don't quite get it. It is so beautiful. One of those guitarists where you truly feel like the instrument is an extension of his body, mind, and spirit. Where the instrument is truly channeling him Like a six stringed radio antenna for the soul.
I agree. More you listen Fahey - deeper you go into his emotions. It's a strange thing, but in Fahey music we see a lot of dark emotions. Not in sunflower river blues of course, but in some pieces. Young people today can't understand major key in music. Major key can be melancholic, dark, sad or angry. And Fahey approved this.
Don’t worry too much! Us young people are getting there! Me and many of my friends take influence from John and plenty of other incredible guitarists whose messages seemingly transcend time 💫
- your local 22 year old
I have been casually listening to fahey for a while now and learned to play sunflower river blues, but man watching these live performances in their entirety has really opened me up to the breadth of john's creativity and uniqueness as an artist. There will never be another like him.
Fahey is amazing. What an interesting personality, and incredible artist. Good post, thank you
takes me back to the 60s. he was an inspiration then, but this is my first time seeing him live. what a treat
I used to play John’s version of In Christ There Is No East or West years ago. It is so cool to finally see him play it.
''One's Who'll Continue''
''Now there are artist's who'll wrest us up & they'll place us into themselves & into their works.
These are the One's Who'll Continue wresting us up... far & beyond their appointed rests in peace.
Stay thirsty for these One's Who'll Continue - but even thirstier for the very Author of them all.''
~Just another one of those many one's of we who's awaiting...
Their Authors'✝Just⚖Return🪃 82922
A meeting of two icons of 1960s folk. Simply delightful banter between two very different people united by the guitar. Laura and John are a part of my musical past and seeing them together is special.
What a beautiful person. I never met him but I love him and I love this.
I was turned on to John's playing back in the early 70's by a friend I am about to send this link to, who will probably read this comment. I really appreciate this video giving a name to my style of play, which is also self-taught and not like anyone else, including John Fahey: American Primitive. I like that. Maybe it is time for an American Primitive movement.
Back in the 80's, I was in a music store and overheard a guitar lesson being conducted with someone learning how to fingerpick a country blues tune. I immediately knew that I wanted to learn how to play like this. I waited around until the lesson concluded so that I could ask the instructor if I might take lessons from him, which I did for less than a year before he moved away. He ended up turning me on to all kinds of awesome music I wasn't previously aware of, including the music of John Fahey. It's great to see this footage all these years later. Thank you for sharing!
really cool to hear him talk, this man is a genius
A great original and a beautifully expressive player.
Laura Weber, "Folk Guitar." That takes me back. I watched every week. My first guitar lessons. I still have both of her books!
*Thank you for such a delightful post.*
Wow..Have I missed fahey for so many years..no one like him❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
What a such real interview, love it
Thank you - these outliers just experience differently with exceptional ears
I remember seeing this on television! Ms. Weber had a very good show and I learned a lot. I eventualy went on to learn a few Fahey tunes. Thanks for posting!
I used to have this on VHS! I started playing acoustic guitar instrumentals and when I discovered Fahey, it kinda gave me a template and permission to continue. Even though our styles are quite different, I still consider him a major influence.
Thanks for this. I had seen Red Pony as a clip from this, but the full interview is a lot more informative and instructive. I have been listening to Fahey on and off since 1971 but now I have some further clues as to how he made those sounds.
I had a dream drowned in alcohol and dreamt of john, and i watched his life from the beginning of his music to the end of his life, it was weird, it was very melancholic.
the playing together is so beautiful
Amazing. Brilliant. I like how he lights up a cigarette - and it becomes part of the show for a bit.
Great video. Fahey was one of my heroes when I started playing guitar in the late 60's as I was pretty good at Travis picking (and not much else), but it had that "just a little bit different" sound from the perfect folk/folk-rock sounds of the era. Thanks so much for posting this!
Thank you, I used to have the VHS of this... long lost.
I've heard this referred as "Ragtime" style, and I can imagine the old after-dinner parties before the age of TV and radio, where the family would sit around in the parlor with guitar, mandolin, mandocello, and fiddle, and this was their source of entertainment for the night. It was a different time back then, and this music is an amazing throwback to that earlier age.
I love this rendition of The death of the Clayton Peacock. Thanks for posting the complete video
22:22 - Oh, Sure sounds like alot like "Silent Lucidity" by Queensryche.. different key.
Great to see this! Thanks for posting. One of my favorite experiences in playing guitar was learning how to play John's The Last Steam Engine Train and In Christ There Is No East Or West. He was truly one of the greats and an inspiration to other guitar players. RIP
One thing i get out of this is John was a complete original, a bit defensive about being entirely self-taught and also did not read musical notation...but he did have a good grasp of real American folk and blues (he was an avid collector of original work) and he simply delved deeply into himself and took it to another level of excellence. He did not worry too much about how people viewed him and his style; which was a double edged sword which put some folks off, but others liked that he fearlessly went where others feared to tread. That may have accounted for the deep places he was able to go to in many of his songs. It was a conversation he was having with his muse and he resented that some were not willing to see the spider silk he created out of his love for something uniquely his own. There are few like him, afaik.
Thanks for posting this. I havent known about Fahey for long but his music is entrancing. Made my morning watching this
This is great, I couldn't ever get to see the full interview. Thanks!
Legend ! thank you so much for putting up the full video !
I wonder what happened to John's Bacon & Day guitar. This is a lovely timepiece. Ms Weber is a charmer and John seems very happy and at ease in this environment. thank you for uploading the whole programme. I'd like to see more of the Guitar Guitar show.
Apparently it was sold to Country Joe McDonald, who sold it to Steffan Grossman, who sold it to somebody in England, where I presume it still is!
I have his albums all the way back to the 60’s. He’s a favorite. Saw him live in St. Louis c. 1972. Nothing like his style.
Artists like Fahey could never come to notice in the world of social media, PR presence and self-projection. An artist who came to international cult status because of a pressing of 57 copies of a self-produced vinyl LP in the late 1950s? We’ve stopped looking that hard for mysteries and enigmas.
I think that's coming back - ironically, because social media is able to reach groups that are under-represented in the mass media of TV, radio, and mainstream streaming services. Wouldn't have even known about John Fahey if not for Reverb's article on famous guitarists' alternate tunings.
Killer stuff! RIP John
Love Fahey.
Discovered him about a year before this show aired. Saw him a few times.
Whatever happened to Sandy Bull?
Cosmic.
Brilliant discovery, thanks for uploading
What a gift to my music world. Thanks for this.
John fa hey is well loved!!!!❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Lovin' this
what a treasure, thank you for posting this , Such a great sound . :) QC
this is amazing, thanks for sharing! i've been watching clips for years, always curious about the full program!
lol the host is wild. he corrects her after she mistakes sandy bull for him, and she says 'maybe, i may be wrong' XD
Wow this is amazing ! Thanks for posting
I came across John on some Guitar Sampler album around '71. Both tracks on there were a bit unusual, but amazingly beautiful. He was unique.
this is GOLD
And a guy this talented lived out of his car for a time
It happens to the best of us.
People don't recognize true talent, that's the consequence of being a pioneer of any form of art, just like Vincent Van Gogh; nobody saw any value in his paintings and only made pennies until he was gone and people got bored with the 'proper' traditional art, it wasn't until then did they find value in it. Just like Van Gogh and many other artists of their time, John expressed himself through the music rather than play it properly as if there is a right or wrong way to play music; art is purely expressional. Art and music Schools never teach that, even Laura said that the way he was playing the guitar with the way he had his thumb she would of corrected and told her students they aren't playing it right. It's a shame
@@WaterMeA-biscuit it’s nuanced though. I’ve heard artists disparage the public, often rightly so, that they don’t understand. Charlie Parker played too many notes as one example (though being a guitar player I sometimes think Joe Pass, Tal Farlow played too many notes
Some artists can achieve both. For instance IMHO Stravinsky. He both out of the boxed it, was progressive and could move the not in the know
thanks for this
Thank you so much for posting this! I saw the show Guitar Guitar around when it aired and have always wanted to review it. To Me, side one of Fahey's Requia album was his best work which was from this period in 1967. Fahey was a musical and compositional genius. Probably inconsistent as a performer in concerts but who cares?!!
I went to concerts of his when the skies opened up and the angels sang. And other ones were he was too drunk to hold his guitar. He was a genius with serious mental illness.
@@bglrj I hear what you're saying! I only got to see him once here in Lexington Kentucky. He wore blue jeans that looked like he hadn't changed in 6 weeks and a plain ordinary white scuzzy t shirt. Upstairs in the club I was told he peed out the window. I'm still glad I got to see him. He didn't blow me away that night but heck it was John Fahey!
You are so right about Requia. When the Catfish Is In Bloom is my favorite Fahey piece of all time.
At last the entire interview! Thank you so much!
Incredible!
I still have his 1966 Takoma 4 Great San Bernardino Birthday album I bought when it came out - Fahey's best!
That guitar is awesome, I’ve got a Bacon and Day senorita mandolin with Brazilian rosewood back and sides. I always think of John when I play it.
You are awesome, thank you
8:40. Flicks ash into the sound hole of the guitar. I was watching this on public TV out of Kansas City. I was just enamored with Ry Cooder , Fahey and any guitarist that could finger pick. Back then there was no internet, no rock on TV, even FM radio was considered so unimportant that alt formats were allowed, even encouraged. Fahey benefitted from that environment. He wasn’t commercial, but lord he could play! The host here was briefly important in the grand scheme of things. Salad days…
That would be "enamored of" not "enamored with" ..
Fahey.. because of Fred Gerlach..... No Gerlach.. no Fahey.
Wow! Thanks
What a treat!
Thank you for the vidéo
Finally! Thank you!
I love the way he just has a smoke midway through!
1960s was a relaxing period.
Oh the good old days just light one up regardless no matter what...
@@sh230968 yeah especially when there was that war going on in vietnam
stunning. Thanks for putting this up.
Just the right way of playing guitar self thought
And being self you get more inventive
Unmistakable sound.
Excellent
I listened to 20 versions of Farther Along and John's was by far the best and he was just fooling around.
Tremendous!
Thank you!
Amazing!
Though I have a couple of Fahey’s albums, I have never SEEN either of these humans before! Ms. Weber is way fun, and Mr. Fahey is an ascended master of subtlety and nuance!
For my fellow instrument geeks, I am fairly certain that this Bacon & Day guitar was made in the early 1930’s by the Oscar Schmidt Company of Jersey City, NJ. Quite elaborate and fancy, it may have been a one off, but more likely it was from a VERY small “batch” of high end instruments that were “jobber built” under sub-contract for the Bacon and Day Co. (which, at that time, unless I’m mistaken, was owned by Rhettberg and Lange). The Oscar Schmidt Company also prominently made “Stella” guitars and host of other brands, both their own and almost endless others!
By “batch,” in reference to John’s “B&D,” I’d suggest that a dozen would be a huge over estimate, more likely in the range of 3-6 instruments TOTAL! I base that in part from the fact that in my own lifetime in fretted and stringed instruments (and paying attention!) I have never encountered, even in any way peripherally, another example of Mr. Fahey’s instrument! Note that, while a 14 fret to the body instrument, it still has the earlier slotted headstock design, a particular combination of features which, along with the prototypical “country & western” overall aesthetic (Jimmie Rodgers and all that!), would tend to indicate a date of manufacture of c.1933-35…
In support of this thesis, if you can access a picture of the black “Sovereign” guitar on page 21 of Neil Harpe’s most wonderful, “The Stella Guitar Book, The Guitars of the Oscar Schmidt Company” (nh, 2004), it pretty well makes the case, at least to my own satisfaction…
Does anyone know the current whereabouts of Fahey’s guitar (it being an example of a “ladder braced”
masterpiece, not to mention it’s immense historicity!)… anybody know?
- Ah, but I do tend to go on a bit in my “reclining” years, ‘mm? Well, as Dale and Roy would always sing…
“Happy Trails to you, ‘til we Meet Again!”
- “Recuerdos a todos,”
Glenn
aka Textoyevsky
PS I can scarcely believe that spellcheck GAVE me “historicity!” (any evidence of “prior use?”… ‘d be curious, jus’ sayin’…)
It was like a “grudge match”with some initial objections, but the crowd was with me and ultimately I won it on a close decision… “This is how we do it now…”
- Namaste, GCB Jones
super reply & great info there sir - I too would love to know the whereabouts of Fahey's B&D, plus any other of his guitars - cheers from the Delta, & joy to the world
@@a_missippian Hey "a_missippian," Blessings on the Southland! Thanks for your response!
I thought I edited this post, from here at the "East Dakota Home for the Cyber Challenged," but I have left erroneous info online! Mea Culpa, "my bad" bifocals! On closer inspection Fahey's "B&D" is a SOLID headstock guitar! Ugh, (think quickly!), the lavish inlay and narrow headstock profile threw off my cursory inspection!
I believe I can stand by the rest of my assessment, however... write me if I'm wrong!
My guess is most likely this guitar was stolen, as Mr. Fahey did some hard travelling, don't ya know! If it ever surfaces it should be worth a tidy packet!
There's a biography of this amazing guitar innovator called, I believe, "The Dance of Death, the life of John Fahey, American Guitarist," by Steve Lowenthal. I intend to find it and read it, and I'm glad it's there!
Best always,
Glenn
Saw this when i was kid.
omg! thank you so much. what a beautiful guy and great musician
That Kona guitar that John Fahey called "cheap" isn't cheap anymore. That's a $3000 guitar made in the 1920's by Hermann Weissenborn in Los Angeles. Made out of solid koa.
Guitars like wine. Only better with years, so it's okay.
Played a Kona brand for 3000 in Nashville a few days ago...John Fahey's Poor Boy.
Weissenborn's are the holy grail of acoustic lap steels nowadays.
Wow..❤
John was a gifted musician and I think greatly influenced by Merle Travis
and his picking style.
He was more influenced by Mississippi John Hurt, Charlie Patton, Bukka White etc than Merle Travis. I'm sure he was aware of Merle Travis too though.
Imagine, in 2022, a guest on a US public TV show lighting up a cigarette on the set, and the host acting completely nonchalant about it.
Legendary. Thanks!!!
I would just like to thank John Fahey for hipping me to open C tuning
This is excellent!
Anyone know what song there playing at 14:29 ?
I guess it's Farther Along by Hank Williams
Thanks !
whats the name of the song he plays at 23:08 ?
It's a part from Mark 1 15 he played next. Also, this part is present in "When the springtime comes again"
Watch timecodes, bro!
Interesting the main refrain chord sounds a lot like "Silent Lucidity" by Queensryche...wonder if they "borrowed" that chord riff from "Mark"...
12:27 Can't help but think John was rarely not sad.
He was a trickster, so we really can't know what he thinks
To me he looks like an introvert, sensitive, Aspie kind of guy, having to live in a world where people seem hard and insensitive or dumb and uncaring. Ask me how I know. Bye-bye John and thanks for a glimpse into your world.
oh the days when you could light up a smoke everywhere
Pure genius!
The interview is awkward. She's never heard a song speed up?! Awesome guitar and he handled her with gloves. Hard to play with gloves on.
Fahey was a magician.
I just learned he did and sold a bunch of paintings later in his life.