Guitar Tricks Insider June/July Edition | Page 24

SOUND ADVICE Sound Advice k c i r t a P s n o m Sim ers) h t o r B ie b o o D (The BY JOHN STIX T he Doobie Brothers will forever be linked with the San Francisco sound – a sound that had also spawned The Grateful Dead, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Big Brother and the Holding Company, Jefferson Airplane, and The Moby Grape. But Patrick Simmons, a founding member/guitarist and composer of favorites like “Black Water” and “Echoes of Love,” has an even stronger link to folk giants like Doc Watson, Rev. Gary Davis, and The Kingston Trio. Here he talks about his early days with the guitar and gives us some sound advice on exploring beyond what you know. I think you are an acoustic folk picker who picked up an electric. That’s absolutely true. Except that I based my guitar playing originally in country guitar. I started on acoustic. Then I started playing electric soon after because my neighbors were these people in a country western band. They all had old Harmony guitars with an F-hole archtop – the most uncomfortable guitars to play. They used Black Diamond strings, which were like telephone wires. The strings were up a mile off the board. Talk about calluses. I started playing electric 24 DIGITAL EDITION JUNE/JULY