Guitar Player
February , 1994
"Making
single notes cry"
By Jas Obrecht
No
early-'70s guitarist came closer than Robin Trower to filling the void
left by Jimi's passing. During his journeyman days with Procol Harum,
Trower was more often compared to Clapton, although his "Whiskey Train"
and "Song For A Dreamer" were clearly Hendrix-influenced. After quitting
Harum, Trower emerged in '73 with his own power trio. TWICE REMOVED
FROM YESTERDAY brought him cult-status, while BRIDGE OF SIGHS, with its
massive sonic dreamscapes, made him a bona-fide guitar hero. During
his July '80 cover story, the soft spoken South Londoner acknowledged his
slow, bluesy tour de force "Bridge Of Sighs" as his "most soulful, creative,
and powerful piece of music," adding "It's impossible to play a run with
as much feeling as a single note. With a single note you can say a great
deal more. I'm into making single notes cry. I go for as much
feeling as I can, rather than show what I can do up and down the neck.
I don't play to show people ability. I'm interested in making music,
and music has nothing to do with your technical ability. The ability
to make music is a gift that you're born with; it's not something you can
learn."
Asked about criticisms that he sounded a bit TOO much like Jimi, Trower
responded: "Bullshit! Those people haven't heard Hendrix and they
haven't heard me, or else they wouldn't say that. Hendrix definitely
opened up a lot of doors. He rewrote the language of the electric
guitar. I felt, right or wrong, that there was no way you could move
forward without absorbing at least part of what he created. You had
to deal with it. But it wasn't until I started thinking about being
a guitar-bass-drums thing that I started to draw on what I'd absorbed from
him, because it was more of a challenge than I'd realized to fill that
kind of space."
Touring in support of his many '70s solo albums, Robin used new, high-actioned
maple-neck Strats, a Univox Univibe, an Arbiter Fuzz Face, a custom volume
booster, and a pair of Marshall 100-watt heads with factory-modified preamps
designed to increase output. During the early '80s Robin collaborated
with Jack Bruce, and since then has been back on his own, producing artists
like Brian Ferry and mesmerizing audiences with his mid-tempo rockers and
slow, smouldering blues.