Illinois Entertainer June 2014 | Page 63

range of influences from bluegrass, to blues, to vintage funk, even a little classical guitar all threaded together with a healthy respect for the groove. Skye has been featured in magazines such as Guitar Player, Acoustic Guitar, Jazziz, Jazz Improv, 20th Century Guitar, and others. His music has been on National Public Radio (NPR) and PBS television. Born in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, Skye taught himself to play when he was seven years old. At the end of 1970s, his family relocated to the Bay Area and Skye started taking classical guitar lessons. "I wanted to learn rock tunes as well, which my father wouldn't pay for, so in seventh grade I earned money to pay for extra lessons cleaning fish tanks in local dental offices. My teacher showed me tunes by Cream, The Allman Brothers, and Led Zeppelin, but he also turned me onto jazz guys like Joe Pass, Kenny Burrell, and Tal Farlow and that kind of took over." "In addition to jazz and blues, I was very into the contemporary acoustic fingerstyle guys like Michael Hedges, William Ackerman, and in particular, Alex De Grassi. I still played some electric guitar in high school and college, but increasingly, it was all about my acoustic guitar." By the '90s, living in San Francisco, Skye performed in his own blues band, played jazz gigs, and started a seven piece vintage groove jazz group. In 2000, when Skye just by chance heard flat picking great David Grier on the trio record with Matt Flinner and Todd Phillips, the last piece of his musical style came together. "I had a vague awareness of bluegrass, Tony Rice, David Grisman, and others. But