John Fogerty's Determination Pays Off on Guitar
Some of my earliest memories of really connecting with music come from a Creedence Clearwater Revival Chronicle Vol. 1: The 20 Greatest Hits CD that my mother owned, and usually it started with a guitar lick. The riffs that John Fogerty wrote with Creedence were so iconic and natural that I never gave any thought to his skill with his instrument. But according to this interview in The Tennessean, even after all of his success he felt guilty about his guitar playing and how he never reached the level of his inspiration, Chet Atkins. Disproving the old-dogs-can't-learn-new-tricks theory, he spent almost two decades practicing and now feels like he can jam with Buddy Miller -- who contributed to Fogerty's The Blue Ridge Rangers Rides Again album -- without having to apologize first. That's pretty amazing, if you ask me, and shows what determination can do. Needless to say, I am pumped to see what he's got this Sunday at the Ryman. Maybe it will be something like this trailer from his concert DVD, Comin' Down the Road.





Shadow. says:
Caught a request live performance of John a few weeks ago on PBS. The man is as good as ever.
solongsowrong says:
I watched it, too. The Mainstreamers might be interested to know that Keith Urban was one of the callers. Course, not that many of them will be reading this.
D Trotter says:
Just imagine if John has been playing with people like Buddy Miller (and a better record company and manager)when he was with Creedence. I’m not sure those records could have been better, but John never has had anyone of comparable genius to support his vision.
D Trotter says:
Until now.