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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:04,440 This programme contains strong language. 2 00:00:04,440 --> 00:00:06,320 Legend has it that rock 'n' roll's 3 00:00:06,320 --> 00:00:09,320 all about the electric guitar. 4 00:00:09,320 --> 00:00:13,040 All that sex, energy and aggression. 5 00:00:13,040 --> 00:00:16,120 ROCK ELECTRIC GUITAR 6 00:00:24,440 --> 00:00:25,800 Welcome to the jungle... 7 00:00:25,800 --> 00:00:29,360 But what happens to rock music when the amps are turned off... 8 00:00:29,360 --> 00:00:31,240 FEEDBACK 9 00:00:31,240 --> 00:00:34,040 ..and our guitar hero picks up an acoustic? 10 00:00:34,040 --> 00:00:36,720 MUSIC: "Wonderwall" by Oasis 11 00:00:40,560 --> 00:00:43,760 You weren't a real guitar player unless you could play acoustic. 12 00:00:45,400 --> 00:00:48,480 In order to be the complete rock musician, 13 00:00:48,480 --> 00:00:51,640 you had to have an acoustic passage in a song somewhere. 14 00:00:53,960 --> 00:00:56,400 There's something about an acoustic 15 00:00:56,400 --> 00:00:59,720 that inspires you to do some crazy stuff. 16 00:00:59,720 --> 00:01:03,200 That's what the acoustic guitar is to a musician. 17 00:01:03,200 --> 00:01:05,040 It's a different feel. 18 00:01:09,480 --> 00:01:12,720 If it plays right and sounds right, that's all you need. 19 00:01:15,200 --> 00:01:17,720 A man with an acoustic guitar on stage is truly naked. 20 00:01:17,720 --> 00:01:21,440 But if you're an exhibitionist, you might enjoy it. 21 00:01:22,680 --> 00:01:25,120 The electric guitar is powerful, 22 00:01:25,120 --> 00:01:29,320 but it's the child, it's not the father of the music. 23 00:01:33,280 --> 00:01:37,160 Acoustic guitars have a sound unto themselves. 24 00:01:37,160 --> 00:01:39,480 The guitar can sound 25 00:01:39,480 --> 00:01:42,240 so gentle and so melodic 26 00:01:42,240 --> 00:01:45,280 and then it can sound so strong and so dramatic. 27 00:01:48,960 --> 00:01:52,040 The guitar is complete in itself as an instrument. 28 00:01:53,040 --> 00:01:56,920 There's nowhere to go. There's nowhere to hide with an acoustic. 29 00:02:06,200 --> 00:02:08,480 The acoustic guitar - 30 00:02:08,480 --> 00:02:10,720 six strings, a hollow body 31 00:02:10,720 --> 00:02:12,600 and a long neck. 32 00:02:12,600 --> 00:02:14,240 Simple, 33 00:02:14,240 --> 00:02:16,840 beautiful and elegant. 34 00:02:18,080 --> 00:02:21,000 Unfortunately, the instrument does come with some baggage, 35 00:02:21,000 --> 00:02:24,080 and I'm not talking about the case. 36 00:02:24,080 --> 00:02:27,240 Adopted over the years by everyone, from singing nuns 37 00:02:27,240 --> 00:02:29,560 to bearded folkies, 38 00:02:29,560 --> 00:02:32,680 the acoustic guitar's had something of an image problem. 39 00:02:32,680 --> 00:02:35,320 I definitely grew more of a beard 40 00:02:35,320 --> 00:02:38,640 when I started playing acoustic guitar every day. 41 00:02:41,240 --> 00:02:45,800 There are definitely periods in our history as we suddenly realise, 42 00:02:45,800 --> 00:02:49,560 "They're not playing their Gibson, they're playing an acoustic 43 00:02:49,560 --> 00:02:53,800 "and, wow, they've grown a beard and their hair's just a wee bit messy 44 00:02:53,800 --> 00:02:56,520 "and they've been in the forest chopping wood. 45 00:02:56,520 --> 00:02:58,440 "Now they're serious. Now they have soul." 46 00:02:58,440 --> 00:03:01,320 Mull of Kintyre 47 00:03:01,320 --> 00:03:04,840 Oh, mist rolling in... 48 00:03:04,840 --> 00:03:07,320 Pull one out at a party 49 00:03:07,320 --> 00:03:10,040 there's a danger you'll drive your guests to distraction. 50 00:03:10,040 --> 00:03:13,920 I gave my love a story... 51 00:03:20,040 --> 00:03:24,520 But cliches aside, has this humble box of wood been as important 52 00:03:24,520 --> 00:03:28,200 to the development of rock music as its sexier electric brother? 53 00:03:28,200 --> 00:03:30,280 With the lights out 54 00:03:30,280 --> 00:03:32,280 It's less dangerous 55 00:03:32,280 --> 00:03:34,720 Here we are now 56 00:03:34,720 --> 00:03:36,280 Entertain us. 57 00:03:36,280 --> 00:03:39,120 The rock scene of the early '90s 58 00:03:39,120 --> 00:03:42,680 was dominated by thunderous guitar bands like Guns N' Roses, 59 00:03:42,680 --> 00:03:45,200 Pearl Jam, and the kings of grunge, Nirvana, 60 00:03:45,200 --> 00:03:47,120 whose explosive live shows 61 00:03:47,120 --> 00:03:51,440 often ended in a riot of smashed instruments and wailing feedback. 62 00:03:51,440 --> 00:03:56,920 But in November 1993, Nirvana risked blowing their punk cred 63 00:03:56,920 --> 00:04:00,520 by appearing on MTV Unplugged. 64 00:04:00,520 --> 00:04:04,960 No distortion, no crowd surfing, nowhere to hide. 65 00:04:04,960 --> 00:04:08,320 MUSIC: 'All Apologies" by Nirvana 66 00:04:08,320 --> 00:04:12,560 Just Kurt Cobain's cracked voice and the songs intimately exposed 67 00:04:12,560 --> 00:04:16,080 by the simple accompaniment of acoustic guitars. 68 00:04:16,080 --> 00:04:19,480 All apologies 69 00:04:20,720 --> 00:04:23,640 What else should I say? 70 00:04:24,840 --> 00:04:28,000 Everyone is gay 71 00:04:29,200 --> 00:04:32,200 What else should I write? 72 00:04:33,600 --> 00:04:36,440 I don't have the right. 73 00:04:37,400 --> 00:04:39,520 It was sort of a perfect storm. 74 00:04:39,520 --> 00:04:42,960 You had the unplugged genre building up for a few years at that point 75 00:04:42,960 --> 00:04:45,960 when Nirvana appeared, and then you had Kurt Cobain, 76 00:04:45,960 --> 00:04:49,960 who was truly able to shine in that setting. 77 00:04:49,960 --> 00:04:52,800 All apologies 78 00:04:55,200 --> 00:04:57,600 In the sun 79 00:04:57,600 --> 00:05:01,680 In the sun I feel as one 80 00:05:01,680 --> 00:05:04,120 In the sun 81 00:05:04,120 --> 00:05:07,440 In the sun 82 00:05:07,440 --> 00:05:09,680 Married 83 00:05:11,880 --> 00:05:14,000 Buried... 84 00:05:15,120 --> 00:05:17,960 It was a real personal night. 85 00:05:17,960 --> 00:05:21,560 He didn't have to be outrageous, he didn't have to come out and say, 86 00:05:21,560 --> 00:05:24,520 "Hello, London." 87 00:05:24,520 --> 00:05:27,480 You just come out and start playing. 88 00:05:27,480 --> 00:05:30,880 I need an easy friend 89 00:05:30,880 --> 00:05:34,720 I do with an ear to lend. 90 00:05:34,720 --> 00:05:36,160 It was just the way 91 00:05:36,160 --> 00:05:38,720 the songs translated across from being really noisy, 92 00:05:38,720 --> 00:05:42,160 loud, scary songs, 93 00:05:42,160 --> 00:05:44,400 to being just these heartbreaking numbers. 94 00:05:44,400 --> 00:05:47,040 I take advantage while 95 00:05:48,120 --> 00:05:50,720 You hang me out to dry. 96 00:05:50,720 --> 00:05:53,160 It showed you how great that band really were 97 00:05:53,160 --> 00:05:56,000 because their sound was completely the opposite, 98 00:05:56,000 --> 00:05:58,760 but yet the songs in that particular set 99 00:05:58,760 --> 00:06:01,880 put across how great their ethos was, 100 00:06:01,880 --> 00:06:04,880 their songs, the words, his singing. 101 00:06:08,520 --> 00:06:12,160 If you strip away everything else and it still stands up, 102 00:06:12,160 --> 00:06:14,760 it shows it was a great song in the first place 103 00:06:14,760 --> 00:06:18,160 and you don't get to hide behind a big wall of guitars. 104 00:06:18,160 --> 00:06:20,440 - What you saying? - HE LAUGHS 105 00:06:24,400 --> 00:06:27,800 I think it is a real pinnacle in that band's career. 106 00:06:27,800 --> 00:06:30,280 It takes them from being a noisy rock band 107 00:06:30,280 --> 00:06:33,320 into being just a timeless rock band. 108 00:06:33,320 --> 00:06:36,800 They're great songwriters and they were a great band 109 00:06:36,800 --> 00:06:39,800 and that moment on Unplugged says that. 110 00:06:39,800 --> 00:06:42,400 I do. 111 00:06:42,400 --> 00:06:45,200 It was a defining moment for acoustic rock, 112 00:06:45,200 --> 00:06:46,680 but it was no accident. 113 00:06:46,680 --> 00:06:51,120 Kurt Cobain and Nirvana understood just how central the instrument was, 114 00:06:51,120 --> 00:06:54,520 and always had been, to the very soul of rock 'n' roll. 115 00:06:54,520 --> 00:06:56,680 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 116 00:06:56,680 --> 00:06:59,720 Well it's one for the money Two for the show 117 00:06:59,720 --> 00:07:01,720 Three to get ready Now go, cat, go. 118 00:07:01,720 --> 00:07:04,440 Much of early rock 'n' roll's popularity 119 00:07:04,440 --> 00:07:06,960 relied on Elvis' hip-swivelling antics. 120 00:07:06,960 --> 00:07:09,560 But he had another secret weapon. 121 00:07:09,560 --> 00:07:12,120 Of course, acoustic was very cool, you know, 122 00:07:12,120 --> 00:07:14,560 like Elvis and the Everly Brothers. 123 00:07:14,560 --> 00:07:16,800 Slander my name All over the place. 124 00:07:16,800 --> 00:07:19,400 I heard Elvis Presley's Heartbreak Hotel. 125 00:07:19,400 --> 00:07:21,440 Well since my baby left me... 126 00:07:21,440 --> 00:07:23,760 I loved the sound so much, I wanted a guitar. 127 00:07:23,760 --> 00:07:25,440 It was THE symbol of rock 'n' roll. 128 00:07:25,440 --> 00:07:28,720 Well it's down at the end of lonely street 129 00:07:28,720 --> 00:07:31,080 At Heartbreak Hotel. 130 00:07:31,080 --> 00:07:35,400 SCREAMING # I'll be so lonely baby 131 00:07:35,400 --> 00:07:36,440 I'm so lonely... 132 00:07:36,440 --> 00:07:39,480 The success of Elvis inspired teenagers 133 00:07:39,480 --> 00:07:41,240 on this side of the Atlantic. 134 00:07:42,680 --> 00:07:45,240 They picked up the acoustic guitar in their droves 135 00:07:45,240 --> 00:07:48,960 and dreamt their rock 'n' roll fantasies. 136 00:07:48,960 --> 00:07:50,200 And it was a peculiar, 137 00:07:50,200 --> 00:07:52,360 acoustic-driven style of rock 'n' roll 138 00:07:52,360 --> 00:07:54,920 that first captured the imagination of British youth - 139 00:07:54,920 --> 00:07:56,920 skiffle. 140 00:07:59,240 --> 00:08:00,720 For many an Elvis wannabe, 141 00:08:00,720 --> 00:08:03,640 from Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page, seen here on the left, 142 00:08:03,640 --> 00:08:07,600 to the young Beatles, joining a skiffle band was the first step 143 00:08:07,600 --> 00:08:10,040 into the brave new world of rock 'n' roll. 144 00:08:14,200 --> 00:08:16,000 Skiffle was invented 145 00:08:16,000 --> 00:08:19,400 to teach kids how to make music without much money, 146 00:08:19,400 --> 00:08:22,720 hence tea-chest bass and stuff like that 147 00:08:22,720 --> 00:08:25,680 and washboards. 148 00:08:25,680 --> 00:08:30,400 And the guitar was the only real instrument in that line-up. 149 00:08:30,400 --> 00:08:32,960 What it did is it said, "You can do this. 150 00:08:32,960 --> 00:08:34,960 "Grab a guitar," or in some cases, 151 00:08:34,960 --> 00:08:37,960 "Grab a piece of string, a broom handle, 152 00:08:37,960 --> 00:08:41,320 "tie the string onto a crate and there's your double bass." 153 00:08:41,320 --> 00:08:44,680 That's what skiffle did. It was incredibly liberating. 154 00:08:44,680 --> 00:08:49,600 - And now it's time for us to introduce the... - King. - Of. - Skiffle. - Himself. - Lonnie. - Donegan! 155 00:08:49,600 --> 00:08:53,360 When you play the game of life You've got trouble you've got strife 156 00:08:53,360 --> 00:08:56,080 Jack of Diamonds is a hard card to find 157 00:08:57,040 --> 00:08:58,760 Life is like a game of cards 158 00:08:58,760 --> 00:09:00,360 But it's very very hard 159 00:09:00,360 --> 00:09:04,000 Jack of Diamonds is a hard card to find 160 00:09:04,000 --> 00:09:07,560 Jack of diamonds, jack of diamonds 161 00:09:07,560 --> 00:09:09,600 Diamonds is a hard card to find... 162 00:09:09,600 --> 00:09:12,840 This homespun music craze might have been a flash in the pan 163 00:09:12,840 --> 00:09:16,440 had it not been for the remarkable success of Lonnie Donegan. 164 00:09:16,440 --> 00:09:20,320 Guys that I grew up with, like Clapton and Jimmy Page, 165 00:09:20,320 --> 00:09:22,520 we heard Lonnie Donegan first of all, 166 00:09:22,520 --> 00:09:25,040 that's what started us playing the guitar. 167 00:09:27,520 --> 00:09:29,880 Everybody wanted to do that. 168 00:09:29,880 --> 00:09:32,880 SKIFFLE MUSIC 169 00:09:36,320 --> 00:09:40,280 The impact that he has on British musicians, not just the Beatles, 170 00:09:40,280 --> 00:09:42,760 but you talk to Jimmy Page, 171 00:09:42,760 --> 00:09:46,600 he'll tell you that Lonnie Donegan was a massive influence 172 00:09:46,600 --> 00:09:49,200 on that generation of guitar players. 173 00:09:49,200 --> 00:09:53,400 SCREAMING 174 00:09:53,400 --> 00:09:56,960 And it's a first-time welcome now for that top four with their top hit, 175 00:09:56,960 --> 00:10:01,560 - You Really Got Me Going, The Kinks! - SCREAMING 176 00:10:01,560 --> 00:10:04,360 Girl you really got me going 177 00:10:04,360 --> 00:10:07,640 You got me so I don't know what I'm doing. 178 00:10:07,640 --> 00:10:10,480 In the early 60s, everything got louder. 179 00:10:10,480 --> 00:10:14,240 The music, the fans, the instruments. 180 00:10:14,240 --> 00:10:16,360 And the electric guitar was king. 181 00:10:16,360 --> 00:10:18,240 You really got me now 182 00:10:18,240 --> 00:10:21,520 You got me so I don't know what I'm doing 183 00:10:21,520 --> 00:10:25,520 Oh yeah, you really got me now... 184 00:10:25,520 --> 00:10:27,600 But as the decade progressed, 185 00:10:27,600 --> 00:10:30,200 bands such as The Kinks and the Rolling Stones 186 00:10:30,200 --> 00:10:32,760 looked back to the early blues for inspiration, 187 00:10:32,760 --> 00:10:36,280 adapting the acoustic playing styles of iconic guitarists 188 00:10:36,280 --> 00:10:39,040 such as Lead Belly and Robert Johnson. 189 00:10:39,040 --> 00:10:41,800 Well poor boy Took his father's bread 190 00:10:41,800 --> 00:10:44,200 Started down the road 191 00:10:44,200 --> 00:10:46,320 Started down the road 192 00:10:46,320 --> 00:10:49,640 Took all he had and started down the road. 193 00:10:50,600 --> 00:10:53,040 You go down the line, 194 00:10:53,040 --> 00:10:56,080 all of your first and even second generation rock guys 195 00:10:56,080 --> 00:10:58,480 were all influenced by those old guys. 196 00:11:01,520 --> 00:11:05,400 We based everything we did and have done 197 00:11:05,400 --> 00:11:08,360 from our knowledge of 198 00:11:08,360 --> 00:11:11,840 starting as a blues band. 199 00:11:13,840 --> 00:11:16,880 Just the great pleasure of doing something like this. 200 00:11:16,880 --> 00:11:19,560 HE PLAYS BLUES RIFF 201 00:11:25,760 --> 00:11:27,840 And then you just sit on it, you know? 202 00:11:27,840 --> 00:11:30,200 And you can say what the hell you like. 203 00:11:30,200 --> 00:11:32,520 You can get out of here baby 204 00:11:32,520 --> 00:11:34,520 You can stay 205 00:11:34,520 --> 00:11:37,640 The whole damn night. 206 00:11:37,640 --> 00:11:40,600 HE PLAYS BLUES RIFF 207 00:11:58,640 --> 00:12:01,400 But the early blues men weren't the only acoustic influence 208 00:12:01,400 --> 00:12:03,320 on the new rock royalty. 209 00:12:03,320 --> 00:12:07,720 Hey Mr Tambourine Man Play a song for me. 210 00:12:07,720 --> 00:12:12,280 In America, even folk musicians were considered hip and bohemian, 211 00:12:12,280 --> 00:12:14,800 thanks to Woody Guthrie and Bob Dylan. 212 00:12:14,800 --> 00:12:17,400 Hey Mr Tambourine Man... 213 00:12:17,400 --> 00:12:20,440 Bob Dylan's influence extended from New York's coffee houses 214 00:12:20,440 --> 00:12:22,720 to the hippy west coast, 215 00:12:22,720 --> 00:12:24,960 where The Byrds recorded a chart-topping version 216 00:12:24,960 --> 00:12:26,360 of Mr Tambourine Man 217 00:12:26,360 --> 00:12:28,880 and brought Dylan's brand of American folk 218 00:12:28,880 --> 00:12:30,320 to a mainstream audience. 219 00:12:30,320 --> 00:12:33,040 When we first heard it, it was in 2/4 time. 220 00:12:33,040 --> 00:12:37,040 Hey Mr Tambourine Man Play a song for me 221 00:12:37,040 --> 00:12:41,280 I'm not sleepy and there is no place I'm going to. 222 00:12:41,280 --> 00:12:44,640 And I took it and I put a Beatle beat to it, like... 223 00:12:47,600 --> 00:12:51,240 Hey Mr Tambourine Man 224 00:12:51,240 --> 00:12:54,040 Play a song for me 225 00:12:54,040 --> 00:13:00,240 I'm not sleepy and there ain't no place I'm going to. 226 00:13:02,720 --> 00:13:06,240 Hey Mr Tambourine Man 227 00:13:06,240 --> 00:13:09,240 Play a song for me 228 00:13:09,240 --> 00:13:13,280 In the jingle-jangle morning... 229 00:13:14,320 --> 00:13:16,760 Meanwhile, on this side of the Atlantic, 230 00:13:16,760 --> 00:13:19,840 the acoustic guitar-playing folkies were still more associated 231 00:13:19,840 --> 00:13:21,640 with comfortable jumpers, 232 00:13:21,640 --> 00:13:23,680 considerable beard growth and real ale, 233 00:13:23,680 --> 00:13:26,800 rather than revolutionary protest songs. 234 00:13:26,800 --> 00:13:31,240 However, the success of Dylan inspired a new generation of British folk musicians, 235 00:13:31,240 --> 00:13:34,680 led by Donovan, to take the acoustic to the top of the charts. 236 00:13:34,680 --> 00:13:36,840 Jennifer Juniper 237 00:13:36,840 --> 00:13:40,560 Rides a dabbled mare 238 00:13:40,560 --> 00:13:44,000 Jennifer Juniper 239 00:13:44,000 --> 00:13:46,640 Lilacs in her hair 240 00:13:46,640 --> 00:13:50,840 Is she dreaming? Yes I think so 241 00:13:50,840 --> 00:13:54,280 And is she pretty? Yes ever so 242 00:13:54,280 --> 00:13:57,960 What you doing Jennifer my love? 243 00:13:59,080 --> 00:14:02,600 When I arrived in the folk scene, the spring of 1965, 244 00:14:02,600 --> 00:14:06,400 the papers were full of it. Folk music appears, arrives, 245 00:14:06,400 --> 00:14:08,680 on the pop charts. 246 00:14:08,680 --> 00:14:12,080 And would you love her? If I could, sir 247 00:14:12,080 --> 00:14:16,680 What you doing Jennifer my love? Jennifer Juniper. 248 00:14:16,680 --> 00:14:20,400 Donovan's success had a big impact on other aspiring troubadours, 249 00:14:20,400 --> 00:14:23,720 including influential singer-songwriter Vashti Bunyan, 250 00:14:23,720 --> 00:14:27,080 the figurehead of today's new folk movement. 251 00:14:27,080 --> 00:14:33,080 I wanted to see somebody bring acoustic music into mainstream pop. 252 00:14:33,080 --> 00:14:36,280 When I first saw Donovan by himself, 253 00:14:36,280 --> 00:14:39,200 that was just a wonderful, magical moment for me, 254 00:14:39,200 --> 00:14:41,400 and I thought, "OK, somebody's done it." 255 00:14:41,400 --> 00:14:43,920 SCREAMING 256 00:14:46,160 --> 00:14:52,080 Donovan even influenced the biggest band in the world, the Beatles. 257 00:14:52,080 --> 00:14:57,160 In 1968, shortly after the release of their landmark album Sgt Pepper, 258 00:14:57,160 --> 00:15:02,120 he joined them on their transcendental pilgrimage to India. 259 00:15:05,280 --> 00:15:07,680 They were constantly growing and learning 260 00:15:07,680 --> 00:15:09,880 and experimenting with different things 261 00:15:09,880 --> 00:15:13,200 and acoustic guitar was one of the things they experimented with 262 00:15:13,200 --> 00:15:16,080 and Paul was taught finger-picking by Donovan. 263 00:15:16,080 --> 00:15:21,560 There we were, completely cut off from the world, in the jungle 264 00:15:21,560 --> 00:15:24,520 with these acoustic instruments. 265 00:15:24,520 --> 00:15:28,520 And one day, John saw me doing the clawhammer. 266 00:15:28,520 --> 00:15:31,440 HE PLAYS GUITAR 267 00:15:37,520 --> 00:15:40,440 It's a claw, right? 268 00:15:40,440 --> 00:15:43,400 HE PLAYS GUITAR 269 00:15:45,640 --> 00:15:48,000 And he said, "How do you do that?" 270 00:15:49,280 --> 00:15:50,880 And he picked it up very quickly. 271 00:15:50,880 --> 00:15:53,760 Paul wouldn't sit down. 272 00:15:53,760 --> 00:15:56,920 He was listening or walking about doing his own thing, 273 00:15:56,920 --> 00:15:59,000 but he's so bright, Paul, 274 00:15:59,000 --> 00:16:01,720 he picked up kind of a backwards way of doing it 275 00:16:01,720 --> 00:16:03,920 and started writing Blackbird. 276 00:16:05,880 --> 00:16:09,360 Blackbird singing in the dead of night 277 00:16:10,360 --> 00:16:14,080 Take these broken wings and learn to fly 278 00:16:15,640 --> 00:16:18,760 All your life 279 00:16:19,760 --> 00:16:23,760 You were only waiting for this moment to arrive. 280 00:16:23,760 --> 00:16:26,280 When the Beatles returned from their trip, 281 00:16:26,280 --> 00:16:28,000 they recorded a double album 282 00:16:28,000 --> 00:16:31,280 with a strong acoustic guitar presence - The White Album. 283 00:16:31,280 --> 00:16:35,280 It featured several of the most celebrated acoustic songs in rock music, 284 00:16:35,280 --> 00:16:38,920 such as Julia, Dear Prudence and Blackbird. 285 00:16:39,960 --> 00:16:42,760 By the end of the '60s, other innovative folk guitarists, 286 00:16:42,760 --> 00:16:44,240 such as Davey Graham 287 00:16:44,240 --> 00:16:47,880 and the legendary Bert Jansch, were also influencing rock music 288 00:16:47,880 --> 00:16:51,440 with their intricate finger-picking styles and unusual tunings. 289 00:16:51,440 --> 00:16:54,640 HE PLAYS BLACKWATER SIDE 290 00:16:54,640 --> 00:16:57,600 All through the fore 291 00:16:57,600 --> 00:17:01,280 Part of the night 292 00:17:01,280 --> 00:17:03,920 We lay 293 00:17:03,920 --> 00:17:07,000 In sport and play 294 00:17:08,120 --> 00:17:10,160 This young man arose... 295 00:17:10,160 --> 00:17:14,800 Bert, his sound and his approach and everything was intense. 296 00:17:14,800 --> 00:17:17,200 It's not too tidy, either. 297 00:17:17,200 --> 00:17:19,800 It's pretty street, as well. It's kind of unusual. 298 00:17:27,200 --> 00:17:28,800 This unassuming guitar hero 299 00:17:28,800 --> 00:17:31,200 opened up a whole new range of techniques and sounds 300 00:17:31,200 --> 00:17:32,720 for the rock musician. 301 00:17:32,720 --> 00:17:35,200 But it would be a skiffle school graduate 302 00:17:35,200 --> 00:17:38,600 who would fully realise the acoustic guitar's rock potential. 303 00:17:41,280 --> 00:17:44,720 By 1970, Led Zeppelin had released two albums of heavy, hairy, 304 00:17:44,720 --> 00:17:46,560 riff-based blues. 305 00:17:48,240 --> 00:17:51,760 Driven by Jimmy Page's blistering electric guitar playing, 306 00:17:51,760 --> 00:17:55,040 they were hailed as the undisputed gods of rock. 307 00:17:55,040 --> 00:17:57,560 We come from the land of the ice and snow 308 00:17:57,560 --> 00:18:00,400 From the midnight sun where the hot springs blow 309 00:18:00,400 --> 00:18:03,720 Hammer of the gods... 310 00:18:05,320 --> 00:18:10,200 For their third album, the band retreated to a remote cottage in North Wales. 311 00:18:11,240 --> 00:18:15,480 Bron-Yr-Aur had no running water or electricity 312 00:18:15,480 --> 00:18:20,560 but the change of scenery sparked a period of intense creativity for the band. 313 00:18:20,560 --> 00:18:24,000 There they wrote the songs for Led Zeppelin III, 314 00:18:24,000 --> 00:18:27,600 for many, the landmark album in acoustic rock. 315 00:18:38,080 --> 00:18:39,920 Led Zeppelin III was different. 316 00:18:39,920 --> 00:18:43,160 There's a lot of sounds you don't hear on the first two records. 317 00:18:43,160 --> 00:18:46,760 They were horrified, the label. And the fans couldn't believe it. 318 00:18:46,760 --> 00:18:50,080 "What are you doing? Where's the electricity?" 319 00:18:50,080 --> 00:18:54,080 Led Zeppelin were rock gods. What were they thinking? 320 00:18:54,080 --> 00:18:57,960 Why suddenly was all this acoustic music coming out of them? 321 00:18:57,960 --> 00:19:02,200 There was no escaping the fact that with Led Zeppelin III, 322 00:19:02,200 --> 00:19:05,480 folk music had quietly gatecrashed the heavy rock party. 323 00:19:06,520 --> 00:19:08,320 And I walk down the country lanes 324 00:19:08,320 --> 00:19:10,840 I'll be walking along, hear me call your name... 325 00:19:12,480 --> 00:19:15,680 They aren't dabbling with folk music. They absorb it. 326 00:19:15,680 --> 00:19:18,440 It is part of their make-up as a group 327 00:19:18,440 --> 00:19:20,880 and it is what they genuinely love 328 00:19:20,880 --> 00:19:22,960 and refer to. 329 00:19:24,480 --> 00:19:29,800 It's based on an immersion in that music and an understanding of it. 330 00:19:29,800 --> 00:19:33,560 And I think it's that grounding that introduces folk music 331 00:19:33,560 --> 00:19:37,040 in a really credible way to hard rock, if you will. 332 00:19:44,400 --> 00:19:46,400 From their third album onwards, 333 00:19:46,400 --> 00:19:49,720 acoustic instruments were an essential part of Led Zep's sound. 334 00:19:49,720 --> 00:19:51,760 Their songs had an authenticity 335 00:19:51,760 --> 00:19:54,440 that somehow looked back to old folk traditions 336 00:19:54,440 --> 00:19:56,400 whilst remaining cutting-edge. 337 00:20:00,880 --> 00:20:03,640 Hangman, hangman 338 00:20:03,640 --> 00:20:05,520 Hold it a little while 339 00:20:05,520 --> 00:20:10,160 I think I see my brother coming, riding many a mile... 340 00:20:10,160 --> 00:20:16,360 Jimmy Page certainly took a lot of his knowledge about alternate tunings and the like 341 00:20:16,360 --> 00:20:18,680 from guys like Roy Harper and Burt Jansch, 342 00:20:18,680 --> 00:20:21,840 and all of a sudden, they gave you an entirely different sound. 343 00:20:21,840 --> 00:20:24,400 Sister, I implore you 344 00:20:24,400 --> 00:20:26,160 Take him by the hand 345 00:20:26,160 --> 00:20:28,880 Take him to some shady bower 346 00:20:28,880 --> 00:20:31,040 Save me from the wrath of this man... 347 00:20:32,680 --> 00:20:37,280 You can hear how the possibilities of acoustic music are not narrow cast, 348 00:20:37,280 --> 00:20:41,440 they are not about just being a bit of a maudlin singer-songwriter. 349 00:20:41,440 --> 00:20:44,760 You can be symphonic in an acoustic context. 350 00:20:44,760 --> 00:20:48,520 I'm free to ride, ride for many mile... 351 00:20:48,520 --> 00:20:52,480 When they brought it into rock music, they made it strong. 352 00:20:52,480 --> 00:20:55,000 They didn't bring it in with a whimper. 353 00:20:55,000 --> 00:20:58,760 It came in very, very forcefully. 354 00:20:58,760 --> 00:21:01,440 Even if they were playing something quite gentle, 355 00:21:01,440 --> 00:21:04,160 you still knew that you were in a rock song. 356 00:21:04,160 --> 00:21:07,600 HE PLAYS GUITAR RIFF 357 00:21:13,600 --> 00:21:17,120 If you listen to the acoustic moments on Led Zeppelin records, 358 00:21:17,120 --> 00:21:21,920 your spine tingles with some kind of, like, majesty 359 00:21:21,920 --> 00:21:25,000 and it just feels so gentle and it just feels so articulate. 360 00:21:36,560 --> 00:21:41,000 I don't know how I'm going to tell you 361 00:21:42,200 --> 00:21:46,600 I can't play with you no more 362 00:21:47,560 --> 00:21:51,520 They took it to a different level. They took it to a stage, 363 00:21:51,520 --> 00:21:55,600 to a live stage where you could not only play a beautiful song 364 00:21:55,600 --> 00:22:01,920 but you could rock an arena crowd with a pulse and with percussion 365 00:22:01,920 --> 00:22:05,400 and I think that changed things for everybody. 366 00:22:05,400 --> 00:22:08,040 I think that made it very cool to play acoustic 367 00:22:08,040 --> 00:22:11,520 and not just be a folk hero. 368 00:22:14,480 --> 00:22:17,360 CHEERING 369 00:22:31,160 --> 00:22:35,520 Today was gonna be the day but they'll never throw it back to you 370 00:22:35,520 --> 00:22:40,200 And by now you should've somehow realised what you're not to do 371 00:22:40,200 --> 00:22:46,760 I don't believe that anybody feels the way I do about you now 372 00:22:46,760 --> 00:22:51,200 I said maybe 373 00:22:51,200 --> 00:22:55,800 You're gonna be the one that saves me 374 00:22:55,800 --> 00:23:00,240 And after all 375 00:23:00,240 --> 00:23:03,480 You're my wonderwall... 376 00:23:03,480 --> 00:23:06,240 From Zeppelin to Nirvana and Oasis, 377 00:23:06,240 --> 00:23:10,040 the greatest bands have proven that you can rock a stadium crowd 378 00:23:10,040 --> 00:23:12,360 with whatever guitar you're wielding. 379 00:23:12,360 --> 00:23:15,920 But only the bravest musicians leave the comfort of the band 380 00:23:15,920 --> 00:23:19,800 and expose themselves, alone, in front of an audience. 381 00:23:19,800 --> 00:23:25,760 Richard Thompson said that a man with an acoustic guitar on a stage is truly naked. 382 00:23:25,760 --> 00:23:28,720 But if you're an exhibitionist, you might enjoy it. 383 00:23:28,720 --> 00:23:34,240 You have your very own number 384 00:23:36,600 --> 00:23:43,080 They dress your cage in its nature... 385 00:23:43,080 --> 00:23:46,400 It's a challenge and you kind of enjoy the challenge of trying to 386 00:23:46,400 --> 00:23:50,960 explore the intimacy between not having the power of the band behind you 387 00:23:50,960 --> 00:23:55,440 and having the challenge of having an audience in front of you, and you kind of feel naked. 388 00:23:55,440 --> 00:23:58,800 Someone who can just hold someone's attention and make a big noise 389 00:23:58,800 --> 00:24:02,640 and get their song across on an acoustic is, er... 390 00:24:02,640 --> 00:24:05,840 There's nobility in it. It's quite heroic in a way. 391 00:24:05,840 --> 00:24:09,160 Environment's not yours 392 00:24:09,160 --> 00:24:12,720 You see through it all 393 00:24:14,160 --> 00:24:17,120 Wanna get out 394 00:24:17,120 --> 00:24:20,200 Won't miss you sensaround 395 00:24:21,960 --> 00:24:25,160 To carry your own dead 396 00:24:25,160 --> 00:24:28,560 To swing your tyre tricks 397 00:24:29,520 --> 00:24:32,640 Oh, wanna get out 398 00:24:33,600 --> 00:24:36,520 Here you're bred dead quick 399 00:24:38,560 --> 00:24:41,480 For the outside 400 00:24:41,480 --> 00:24:46,160 The small black flowers that grow in the sky 401 00:24:50,720 --> 00:24:54,560 Here chewing your tail 402 00:24:54,560 --> 00:24:59,080 Is joy. 403 00:25:01,600 --> 00:25:05,200 An acoustic number at a rock gig can certainly be powerful, 404 00:25:05,200 --> 00:25:08,840 but sometimes, seeing the lights turned down and the amps unplugged 405 00:25:08,840 --> 00:25:11,000 fills people with dread. 406 00:25:11,000 --> 00:25:14,040 You've got... HE IMITATES DRUMS 407 00:25:14,040 --> 00:25:16,880 "We're going to slow things down a bit now..." 408 00:25:16,880 --> 00:25:20,320 "Whoa, don't do that." It could be bad news. 409 00:25:20,320 --> 00:25:23,640 I remember when I did Small Black Flowers That Grow In The Sky 410 00:25:23,640 --> 00:25:28,360 on stage the first time, I saw a lighter in the distance. 411 00:25:28,360 --> 00:25:32,760 I thought, "Oh, no, no, no, this is wrong, this is definitely wrong." 412 00:25:32,760 --> 00:25:36,680 I think people are waiting to light the match or the torch 413 00:25:36,680 --> 00:25:40,640 as soon as the acoustic gets handed to the guy, before they even hear the song. 414 00:25:40,640 --> 00:25:42,680 "There's the acoustic, let's get sad!" 415 00:25:42,680 --> 00:25:45,960 There's an insect in your ear 416 00:25:45,960 --> 00:25:49,320 If you scratch, it won't disappear 417 00:25:49,320 --> 00:25:52,400 It's gonna itch and burn and sting 418 00:25:52,400 --> 00:25:55,280 You wanna see what scratching brings... 419 00:25:55,280 --> 00:25:57,600 The acoustic part of it could be trouble. 420 00:25:57,600 --> 00:25:59,640 They should put up the acoustic flag 421 00:25:59,640 --> 00:26:03,280 and then people have the right to go out and, you know... 422 00:26:03,280 --> 00:26:06,360 talk to their friends, maybe go to the pub across the way. 423 00:26:06,360 --> 00:26:10,480 The mass experience of people standing in a stadium with their lighters aloft 424 00:26:10,480 --> 00:26:13,240 is quite satisfying when you're in that crowd. 425 00:26:13,240 --> 00:26:16,320 You do want to share that communal experience, 426 00:26:16,320 --> 00:26:18,400 against your better judgement at times. 427 00:26:18,400 --> 00:26:21,680 Staring at the sun 428 00:26:21,680 --> 00:26:25,200 Afraid of what you'd find 429 00:26:25,200 --> 00:26:28,840 If you took a look inside 430 00:26:28,840 --> 00:26:32,440 I'm not just deaf and dumb... 431 00:26:32,440 --> 00:26:35,400 There is a great pleasure in buying into these constructs. 432 00:26:35,400 --> 00:26:39,040 There is a great pleasure in saying, "OK, this is the encore, 433 00:26:39,040 --> 00:26:42,640 "we're going to have four or five acoustic songs - 434 00:26:42,640 --> 00:26:46,240 "people no longer light lighters, people will wave their phones 435 00:26:46,240 --> 00:26:51,360 "and we will all feel soppy and fling our arms round each other." 436 00:26:51,360 --> 00:26:54,480 When the acoustic's pulled out for the acoustic number, 437 00:26:54,480 --> 00:26:57,880 it normally comes with so much sentimentality, 438 00:26:57,880 --> 00:27:01,320 it seems to be this token, "Now I'm really going to get down to it 439 00:27:01,320 --> 00:27:04,120 "and bare my soul for the quiet bit of the set 440 00:27:04,120 --> 00:27:08,920 "in front of 20,000 to 100,000 people." 441 00:27:08,920 --> 00:27:12,480 - BOTH: - I'm not just deaf and dumb 442 00:27:12,480 --> 00:27:15,440 Staring at the sun 443 00:27:15,440 --> 00:27:17,840 I'm not the only one 444 00:27:17,840 --> 00:27:23,840 Who'd rather go blind. 445 00:27:26,000 --> 00:27:29,920 I think there's a great problem with this notion, 446 00:27:29,920 --> 00:27:33,760 if you strum your guitar really intensely with your eyes shut 447 00:27:33,760 --> 00:27:40,280 that you are conveying automatically a great depth to your songwriting 448 00:27:40,280 --> 00:27:43,920 or you are revealing the inner workings of your soul 449 00:27:43,920 --> 00:27:46,480 in a way that you weren't doing half an hour earlier 450 00:27:46,480 --> 00:27:49,160 with your foot on the monitor, hitting a power chord. 451 00:27:49,160 --> 00:27:54,200 Do you wanna play with me? 452 00:27:57,840 --> 00:28:01,720 The urge of every self-respecting hard rock band to bare their souls - 453 00:28:01,720 --> 00:28:03,560 as well as their chests - 454 00:28:03,560 --> 00:28:05,760 isn't restricted to the big stage. 455 00:28:09,080 --> 00:28:12,760 And if you really want to prove that you're a "serious artist," 456 00:28:12,760 --> 00:28:15,400 then why not bring out the acoustics in your video 457 00:28:15,400 --> 00:28:17,560 as well as on the album? 458 00:28:17,560 --> 00:28:20,280 Every band had one of these songs 459 00:28:20,280 --> 00:28:22,720 and they all sort of had a lot in common, 460 00:28:22,720 --> 00:28:25,720 one of these things being, for some reason, 461 00:28:25,720 --> 00:28:29,160 these guys could only play the guitar sitting down in their videos. 462 00:28:29,160 --> 00:28:33,440 Saying I love you 463 00:28:33,440 --> 00:28:39,800 Is not the words I want to hear from you... 464 00:28:39,800 --> 00:28:43,440 Bringing out the acoustic guitar meant that you had something 465 00:28:43,440 --> 00:28:48,320 if not serious to say, something emotionally serious to say. 466 00:28:48,320 --> 00:28:51,720 It gives this veneer of confessional, 467 00:28:51,720 --> 00:28:54,000 this veneer of feeling, 468 00:28:54,000 --> 00:28:58,760 this veneer of you're revealing something deep within you. 469 00:28:58,760 --> 00:29:01,000 How you feel 470 00:29:01,000 --> 00:29:04,240 More than words 471 00:29:04,240 --> 00:29:06,480 It's us playing it, it's us in there, 472 00:29:06,480 --> 00:29:08,960 trying to get the band involved with some lighters 473 00:29:08,960 --> 00:29:12,640 so they knew we were a band, by even having them put the sticks down. 474 00:29:12,640 --> 00:29:15,680 "Let's make sure they don't think we're the Everly Brothers." 475 00:29:15,680 --> 00:29:22,120 Cos I'd already know 476 00:29:22,120 --> 00:29:26,960 What would you do? 477 00:29:26,960 --> 00:29:32,440 The acoustic is aiding you, as you're being let in 478 00:29:32,440 --> 00:29:37,240 on maybe what you're not supposed to see, because the acoustic signifies the emotional 479 00:29:37,240 --> 00:29:40,760 and stripping away all the pretence. 480 00:29:42,880 --> 00:29:46,000 The flip side to a lot of all this for the bands, 481 00:29:46,000 --> 00:29:49,880 who could make instant riches off of doing these power ballads, 482 00:29:49,880 --> 00:29:51,680 was the fact that some of them 483 00:29:51,680 --> 00:29:56,040 kind of became pigeonholed as ballad bands, 484 00:29:56,040 --> 00:30:01,040 whereas they viewed themselves as these, you know, manly, hard rockers, 485 00:30:01,040 --> 00:30:05,120 but it was going to follow them around from then on. 486 00:30:05,120 --> 00:30:09,840 Then you couldn't make things new 487 00:30:09,840 --> 00:30:14,440 Just by saying I love you... 488 00:30:14,440 --> 00:30:18,080 There were people coming to the shows that heard More Than Words. 489 00:30:18,080 --> 00:30:20,760 We'd see their faces in the first three rows like... 490 00:30:20,760 --> 00:30:23,440 Looking at their tickets. "Is this the right band?" 491 00:30:23,440 --> 00:30:30,080 Just by saying I love you. 492 00:30:39,280 --> 00:30:43,040 Apart from pleasing, and occasionally surprising, their fans, 493 00:30:43,040 --> 00:30:47,120 slinging an old acoustic round your neck can do a lot for your image. 494 00:30:47,120 --> 00:30:51,280 Countless acts would strap it on in the video 495 00:30:51,280 --> 00:30:53,640 and you'd sort of know what was coming. 496 00:30:53,640 --> 00:30:56,240 It was great to start off a song with an acoustic 497 00:30:56,240 --> 00:30:59,200 and then when the big chorus comes in, 498 00:30:59,200 --> 00:31:01,880 turn on the electrics and really bring it all home. 499 00:31:04,320 --> 00:31:08,840 Former poodle rocker Jon Bon Jovi took things way out west. 500 00:31:08,840 --> 00:31:12,600 And also the odd fascination with 501 00:31:12,600 --> 00:31:17,800 pairing acoustic guitars and cowboy imagery in these ballads. 502 00:31:17,800 --> 00:31:20,120 And that was a big thing with these bands. 503 00:31:20,120 --> 00:31:23,800 The cowboy boots and the cowboy hat and your acoustic guitar 504 00:31:23,800 --> 00:31:27,440 and all of a sudden you're good old American country boy. 505 00:31:29,880 --> 00:31:32,320 It was a big money-maker for a lot of bands, 506 00:31:32,320 --> 00:31:36,360 it was big business, but it became sort of tired and cliche 507 00:31:36,360 --> 00:31:38,880 and sort of a joke at the end of the day. 508 00:31:39,960 --> 00:31:42,720 Not only can an acoustic guitar make you look sexy, 509 00:31:42,720 --> 00:31:46,320 the instrument itself is an object of desire. 510 00:31:49,640 --> 00:31:54,720 And for some rockers, meeting their new partner was love at first sight. 511 00:31:54,720 --> 00:31:57,840 I had the worst hangover of my life when I bought this guitar 512 00:31:57,840 --> 00:32:01,600 and it was this pathetic moment in the shop where it just sang to me, 513 00:32:01,600 --> 00:32:04,760 and I thought, "That guitar needs to be with me." 514 00:32:04,760 --> 00:32:08,960 It's one thing that is significant in my life that I really remember, 515 00:32:08,960 --> 00:32:12,280 seeing the shape of the guitar case. 516 00:32:12,280 --> 00:32:16,160 There she goes... 517 00:32:16,160 --> 00:32:19,320 It was so amazing. It was like seeing a superhero. 518 00:32:19,320 --> 00:32:22,760 Racing through my brain... 519 00:32:22,760 --> 00:32:25,480 I think definitely all the retro, 520 00:32:25,480 --> 00:32:30,680 well, vintage acoustic guitars just look like they've seen so much life. 521 00:32:30,680 --> 00:32:33,600 And I love that sort of worn-away wood look 522 00:32:33,600 --> 00:32:37,120 and they've definitely got a story. That looks pretty hot. 523 00:32:37,120 --> 00:32:41,520 There she goes again... 524 00:32:41,520 --> 00:32:46,280 It's not that personal. I don't compare them to women, like some guitar players do. 525 00:32:46,280 --> 00:32:50,760 The shape of a guitar is very sexy. 526 00:32:50,760 --> 00:32:53,120 It's like that. 527 00:32:55,200 --> 00:32:58,320 There was this idea that the electric guitar 528 00:32:58,320 --> 00:33:00,920 was sort of virile and potent 529 00:33:00,920 --> 00:33:05,760 and the acoustic guitar was sort of gentle and curvy and nice. 530 00:33:06,840 --> 00:33:12,200 The smell it had was just... It smelled like roses 531 00:33:12,200 --> 00:33:14,280 and it was just sort of intoxicating. 532 00:33:14,280 --> 00:33:17,040 You just smelled this thing and you'd go, "Wow!" 533 00:33:20,920 --> 00:33:23,800 I kiss guitars. I'll kiss my guitar. 534 00:33:23,800 --> 00:33:27,800 If I haven't given it enough attention, I'll just kiss the head. 535 00:33:27,800 --> 00:33:32,080 I may have gone to bed with a guitar on the bed. 536 00:33:32,080 --> 00:33:35,240 I'm sure I did at one time or another. 537 00:33:35,240 --> 00:33:40,400 I don't sleep with my guitar. That's where the relationship ends. 538 00:33:40,400 --> 00:33:42,600 I sleep with it under my bed sometimes, 539 00:33:42,600 --> 00:33:44,280 in case somebody steals it. 540 00:33:46,280 --> 00:33:50,520 Sexy, fragrant and considerably lighter than a piano, 541 00:33:50,520 --> 00:33:53,560 most rock songs start life on the acoustic. 542 00:33:53,560 --> 00:33:56,600 It's the perfect companion for any songwriter. 543 00:33:56,600 --> 00:33:58,400 It's a good songwriting tool 544 00:33:58,400 --> 00:34:02,960 because it's just little and you can take it anywhere, you know? 545 00:34:04,960 --> 00:34:09,160 When I come home, you won't be there anymore 546 00:34:10,240 --> 00:34:14,280 When I come home, you won't be there anymore... 547 00:34:14,280 --> 00:34:17,000 It's just very easy to sit and play 548 00:34:17,000 --> 00:34:20,720 and then it's so easy to kind of sing along to, as well. 549 00:34:20,720 --> 00:34:25,440 When I come home, home, home, home... 550 00:34:25,440 --> 00:34:28,760 There is an aspect to acoustic guitars which is very important 551 00:34:28,760 --> 00:34:33,160 that an electric doesn't have - you can take it with you somewhere 552 00:34:33,160 --> 00:34:35,360 and it's all you need. 553 00:34:35,360 --> 00:34:38,400 Because it can be everything, bass... 554 00:34:38,400 --> 00:34:40,480 HE PLAYS BASELINE 555 00:34:40,480 --> 00:34:43,400 ..and rhythm... HE STRUMS RHYTHMICALLY 556 00:34:43,400 --> 00:34:46,840 ..and even counter-melody, lead guitar... 557 00:34:46,840 --> 00:34:50,280 HE PLAYS MELODY 558 00:34:51,840 --> 00:34:55,680 The guitar hero can even take the six-string beauty to bed, 559 00:34:55,680 --> 00:34:59,880 ready to be woken when the creative juices begin to flow. 560 00:34:59,880 --> 00:35:04,680 I was asleep, I woke up and without even knowing it, 561 00:35:04,680 --> 00:35:09,360 I pushed play on my little early cassette player... 562 00:35:10,600 --> 00:35:13,240 ..played it, went back to sleep, 563 00:35:13,240 --> 00:35:15,560 didn't remember a thing about it 564 00:35:15,560 --> 00:35:18,080 until I saw that the tape had run to the other end. 565 00:35:19,080 --> 00:35:22,520 So I ran it all the way back to the front 566 00:35:22,520 --> 00:35:25,560 and there is 30 seconds of Satisfaction, 567 00:35:25,560 --> 00:35:27,440 a very slow version. 568 00:35:29,080 --> 00:35:32,320 HE PLAYS GUITAR RIFF 569 00:35:33,600 --> 00:35:37,200 I can't get no 570 00:35:38,720 --> 00:35:40,360 Satisfaction 571 00:35:42,240 --> 00:35:44,600 I can't get me no 572 00:35:46,000 --> 00:35:48,200 Satisfaction, babe 573 00:35:48,200 --> 00:35:50,200 Cos I try 574 00:35:50,200 --> 00:35:52,320 And I try 575 00:35:52,320 --> 00:35:54,400 Girl, I try 576 00:35:54,400 --> 00:35:56,440 Yeah, I try... 577 00:35:56,440 --> 00:36:00,000 HE SNORES 578 00:36:00,000 --> 00:36:01,280 Just like that. 579 00:36:08,840 --> 00:36:11,760 The guitar is complete in itself as an instrument. 580 00:36:11,760 --> 00:36:16,960 It can have four or five voices musically, all going on at once. 581 00:36:26,880 --> 00:36:29,480 I do like the versatility of acoustic guitars. 582 00:36:29,480 --> 00:36:34,720 You can make them sound thumpy, gentle, it's a complete instrument. 583 00:36:34,720 --> 00:36:39,520 So it can be really soft and the thumbs and your hands give you different tones to... 584 00:36:39,520 --> 00:36:42,520 HE STRUMS GUITAR LOUDLY 585 00:36:42,520 --> 00:36:45,160 Erm... And, you know... 586 00:36:45,160 --> 00:36:46,520 HE FINGER-PICKS 587 00:36:46,520 --> 00:36:49,880 I can't help but play that pattern all the time cos I like it. 588 00:36:51,120 --> 00:36:53,360 But it just has... 589 00:36:53,360 --> 00:36:56,760 You can get real expressive dynamics in it. 590 00:36:58,880 --> 00:37:01,880 Because you can play just a simple chord... 591 00:37:01,880 --> 00:37:04,600 HE PLAYS CHORD 592 00:37:06,880 --> 00:37:11,320 I mean, and put a melody over that, it's very easy to do. 593 00:37:11,320 --> 00:37:12,600 HE STRUMS 594 00:37:12,600 --> 00:37:16,280 It's like a whole orchestra on its own, really. 595 00:37:17,840 --> 00:37:21,720 - When you play... - SHE STRUMS 596 00:37:32,840 --> 00:37:36,120 A very full sound. But that's what the acoustic can do. 597 00:37:36,120 --> 00:37:40,120 So it can make you feel as if you can write a song, you don't need anybody else. 598 00:37:43,200 --> 00:37:47,160 That's the wonderful thing about the guitar, you can just be by yourself 599 00:37:47,160 --> 00:37:49,880 and you have a whole orchestra in your head 600 00:37:49,880 --> 00:37:54,240 and you can get part of it out with this six-string, 601 00:37:54,240 --> 00:37:56,880 six notes and a voice. 602 00:37:56,880 --> 00:38:00,760 SHE PLAYS AND HUMS 603 00:38:03,120 --> 00:38:04,880 That's why it's good variety, 604 00:38:04,880 --> 00:38:09,200 because you can get the feel of what you want without being 605 00:38:09,200 --> 00:38:13,640 either a virtuoso or anything like that, 606 00:38:13,640 --> 00:38:17,680 anyone can be, sit there and write a song. 607 00:38:17,680 --> 00:38:22,520 You don't need amps, you don't need electricity, you don't need leads, 608 00:38:22,520 --> 00:38:24,840 you don't need a bass player, a drummer, 609 00:38:24,840 --> 00:38:27,600 you don't need all this set-up to create music. 610 00:38:27,600 --> 00:38:32,120 You can create on your own, quite quietly, upstairs in your bedroom. 611 00:38:32,120 --> 00:38:35,080 I met her in a club down old Soho 612 00:38:35,080 --> 00:38:40,120 Where you drink champagne that tastes just like cherry cola 613 00:38:40,120 --> 00:38:44,920 - AUDIENCE: # C-O-L-A, cola... - Far out. 614 00:38:44,920 --> 00:38:49,960 The guitar sound is so influential in evoking a mood. 615 00:38:49,960 --> 00:38:52,520 Dark brown voice she said Lola 616 00:38:53,640 --> 00:38:56,320 L-O-L-A, Lola... 617 00:38:56,320 --> 00:38:59,520 Almost any acoustic guitar has its own sound, 618 00:38:59,520 --> 00:39:02,160 and that might give you some ideas 619 00:39:02,160 --> 00:39:05,720 as to what you're writing, just the sound of it. 620 00:39:05,720 --> 00:39:08,160 She talked like a man, Lola 621 00:39:08,160 --> 00:39:11,840 L-L-L-L-Lola 622 00:39:11,840 --> 00:39:14,720 L-L-L-L-Lola... 623 00:39:18,080 --> 00:39:22,680 Sometimes the right guitar determines the journey or the decision-making 624 00:39:22,680 --> 00:39:25,440 about where to go next with the song you're writing. 625 00:39:25,440 --> 00:39:29,520 The jang-jang-jangy sound on Lola, for example, 626 00:39:29,520 --> 00:39:32,120 came because I heard the guitar playback. 627 00:39:32,120 --> 00:39:34,720 The guitar is inspirational. 628 00:39:37,480 --> 00:39:38,640 Thank you very much! 629 00:39:38,640 --> 00:39:40,400 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 630 00:39:40,400 --> 00:39:43,320 When we collide we come together 631 00:39:46,400 --> 00:39:49,560 If we don't we'll always be apart... 632 00:39:49,560 --> 00:39:53,680 Even for some of today's heaviest bands, such as Scottish rockers Biffy Clyro, 633 00:39:53,680 --> 00:39:59,080 the song needs to be crafted properly on the acoustic first, before cranking the amp up to 11. 634 00:39:59,080 --> 00:40:02,360 When you hit me, hit me hard... 635 00:40:04,200 --> 00:40:07,800 You kind of figure out whether an idea is a good idea or not, 636 00:40:07,800 --> 00:40:11,600 and whether the melody is really worth working on 637 00:40:11,600 --> 00:40:16,880 cos sometimes just an open chord through a big Marshall stack sounds just amazing but anyone can do that, 638 00:40:16,880 --> 00:40:22,320 you know, you have to try and work a bit harder and make things more subtle and intricate. 639 00:40:25,720 --> 00:40:29,320 I've got Gilligan's eyes 640 00:40:31,760 --> 00:40:34,040 I still believe... 641 00:40:34,040 --> 00:40:37,880 When we first play our songs together, we always play them quiet, 642 00:40:37,880 --> 00:40:43,240 we never play them full-on rock until we find out how the song flows and where it's going to go. 643 00:40:43,240 --> 00:40:48,000 When we collide we come together 644 00:40:49,320 --> 00:40:54,360 If we don't we'll always be apart 645 00:40:56,040 --> 00:40:59,600 I'll take a bruise, I know you're worth it 646 00:41:01,760 --> 00:41:05,047 When you hit me, hit me hard... 647 00:41:06,000 --> 00:41:08,480 If it doesn't work acoustically, it's a shit song. 648 00:41:08,480 --> 00:41:09,600 HE LAUGHS 649 00:41:09,600 --> 00:41:12,360 - We write all our songs on acoustic guitar. - THEY LAUGH 650 00:41:12,360 --> 00:41:14,840 Against what 651 00:41:16,400 --> 00:41:19,480 Our future is for 652 00:41:22,400 --> 00:41:24,960 Many of horror... 653 00:41:24,960 --> 00:41:28,760 I mean, I certainly don't think that, as a lot of people do, 654 00:41:28,760 --> 00:41:32,320 that a song isn't good unless you can play it on an acoustic. 655 00:41:32,320 --> 00:41:34,280 I don't really... 656 00:41:35,320 --> 00:41:38,440 I think there's a lot of evidence against that, really. 657 00:41:38,440 --> 00:41:41,840 But if you can play it from start to finish on an acoustic and it's great, 658 00:41:41,840 --> 00:41:44,440 whatever you do to it it's going to be killer. 659 00:41:44,440 --> 00:41:46,120 MUSIC: "Layla" by Eric Clapton 660 00:41:46,120 --> 00:41:48,600 And it can work the other way around, too. 661 00:41:48,600 --> 00:41:52,880 A rock classic can be completely transformed by playing it acoustically. 662 00:41:52,880 --> 00:41:56,520 When Clapton re-did Layla as an acoustic version, 663 00:41:56,520 --> 00:42:01,240 there was the classic riff that everyone remembered 664 00:42:01,240 --> 00:42:05,360 from the original electric version of it, which he downplayed. 665 00:42:05,360 --> 00:42:08,960 MUSIC: "Layla" by Eric Clapton 666 00:42:08,960 --> 00:42:12,200 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 667 00:42:17,240 --> 00:42:21,440 If you read the blogs, there are people who think it's horrible. 668 00:42:21,440 --> 00:42:23,720 - Because you don't have... - HE HUMS RIFF 669 00:42:23,720 --> 00:42:27,640 But, erm, you've got to understand that 670 00:42:27,640 --> 00:42:31,080 that's what the acoustic guitar is to a musician. 671 00:42:31,080 --> 00:42:35,320 It's a different feel. It's more soulful. 672 00:42:37,160 --> 00:42:40,880 What will you do when you get lonely? 673 00:42:42,320 --> 00:42:45,840 No-one waiting by your side 674 00:42:47,160 --> 00:42:52,600 You've been running and hiding much too long 675 00:42:52,600 --> 00:42:56,040 You know it's just your foolish pride 676 00:42:56,040 --> 00:42:58,280 Layla... 677 00:42:58,280 --> 00:43:00,320 It wasn't an angry-young-man approach 678 00:43:00,320 --> 00:43:02,160 as it was when he first recorded it. 679 00:43:02,160 --> 00:43:05,320 Layla 680 00:43:05,320 --> 00:43:08,280 You got me on my knees, Layla 681 00:43:09,560 --> 00:43:12,320 I'm begging darling please, Layla... 682 00:43:12,320 --> 00:43:18,320 It was someone who had more of a relaxed view of life. 683 00:43:19,280 --> 00:43:22,560 Tried to give you consolation 684 00:43:24,280 --> 00:43:27,520 When your old man had let you down... 685 00:43:27,520 --> 00:43:29,600 It was always a love song. 686 00:43:29,600 --> 00:43:32,040 But it was a heavy-duty love song 687 00:43:32,040 --> 00:43:35,880 and then he managed to take it down to a much more personal level. 688 00:43:35,880 --> 00:43:41,240 It just gave it a whole new life, I think. 689 00:43:43,960 --> 00:43:47,000 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 690 00:43:49,080 --> 00:43:51,400 Thank you! 691 00:43:51,400 --> 00:43:54,520 Hey, hey, my, my 692 00:43:58,280 --> 00:44:02,400 Rock 'n' roll can never die... 693 00:44:02,400 --> 00:44:04,720 If the great rock guitarist is defined 694 00:44:04,720 --> 00:44:08,040 by an ability to master both the raw power of the electric 695 00:44:08,040 --> 00:44:12,640 and the intimacy of the acoustic, then Neil Young is the man. 696 00:44:18,120 --> 00:44:21,360 Old man, look at my life 697 00:44:21,360 --> 00:44:25,360 I'm a lot like you were 698 00:44:26,800 --> 00:44:29,880 Old man, look at my life 699 00:44:29,880 --> 00:44:34,160 I'm a lot like you were... 700 00:44:35,920 --> 00:44:37,400 For artists like Neil Young, 701 00:44:37,400 --> 00:44:40,640 who swaps between the electric and the acoustic guitar at will, 702 00:44:40,640 --> 00:44:42,600 the simplicity of acoustic tracks 703 00:44:42,600 --> 00:44:45,320 can shine a light on their innermost feelings. 704 00:44:45,320 --> 00:44:48,400 Old man, look at my life 705 00:44:48,400 --> 00:44:51,880 24 and there's so much more 706 00:44:51,880 --> 00:44:54,880 Live alone in a paradise 707 00:44:54,880 --> 00:44:57,680 That makes me think of two 708 00:44:58,880 --> 00:45:01,880 Love lost, such a cost 709 00:45:01,880 --> 00:45:05,560 Give me things that don't get lost 710 00:45:05,560 --> 00:45:08,600 Like a coin that won't get tossed 711 00:45:08,600 --> 00:45:10,880 Rolling home to you... 712 00:45:10,880 --> 00:45:13,440 I guess it lends itself to a bit of melancholy, 713 00:45:13,440 --> 00:45:18,440 especially with the dynamics and the sweetness that it has, and the humanness it has, as well. 714 00:45:18,440 --> 00:45:21,160 Old man, take a look at my life 715 00:45:21,160 --> 00:45:25,440 I'm a lot like you 716 00:45:25,440 --> 00:45:28,160 I need someone to love me 717 00:45:28,160 --> 00:45:31,040 The whole day through 718 00:45:32,120 --> 00:45:34,880 Ah, one look in my eyes 719 00:45:34,880 --> 00:45:38,160 And you can tell that's true... 720 00:45:41,720 --> 00:45:46,560 There's a certain rawness of emotion and spirit to the acoustic, 721 00:45:46,560 --> 00:45:49,440 and I think that's what attracts a lot of people 722 00:45:49,440 --> 00:45:54,280 to the acoustic guitar is the more immediate emotional connection 723 00:45:54,280 --> 00:45:57,440 you can make to these artists. 724 00:45:57,440 --> 00:46:02,480 It's a sight 725 00:46:02,480 --> 00:46:04,640 To behold 726 00:46:05,720 --> 00:46:10,240 When you've got some odd words to mould 727 00:46:10,240 --> 00:46:13,080 And you can make them your own... 728 00:46:13,080 --> 00:46:18,320 You can immediately identify with the vulnerability of somebody 729 00:46:18,320 --> 00:46:23,760 expressing themselves with just the accompaniment of an acoustic guitar. 730 00:46:23,760 --> 00:46:28,600 It would be much better I'm told 731 00:46:28,600 --> 00:46:32,600 I mean, it's literally sitting on your chest 732 00:46:32,600 --> 00:46:35,480 and it's just amplifying what's coming out from here. 733 00:46:35,480 --> 00:46:39,960 Every light is on but all the rooms 734 00:46:39,960 --> 00:46:42,480 Are empty except one... 735 00:46:45,800 --> 00:46:48,960 With only the acoustic guitar between you and the audience, 736 00:46:48,960 --> 00:46:52,680 every expression and every word is exposed. 737 00:46:52,680 --> 00:46:57,560 People do, almost, kind of, sit up 738 00:46:57,560 --> 00:47:02,400 and...lean forward a bit 739 00:47:02,400 --> 00:47:06,560 and, erm, it's like they feel they've been invited to something. 740 00:47:08,480 --> 00:47:11,680 Woncha come on home 741 00:47:11,680 --> 00:47:15,040 Home... 742 00:47:15,040 --> 00:47:19,160 When that moment is happening, I'm there with them, actually. 743 00:47:19,160 --> 00:47:20,440 I like it myself. 744 00:47:20,440 --> 00:47:22,440 Every key is turned 745 00:47:22,440 --> 00:47:27,800 And every window's bolted from inside 746 00:47:29,480 --> 00:47:32,760 Oh, babe, you know I get so scared 747 00:47:32,760 --> 00:47:35,080 You know I couldn't live alone 748 00:47:35,080 --> 00:47:37,840 It's just been confirmed 749 00:47:37,840 --> 00:47:40,160 Baby, woncha come on home 750 00:47:40,160 --> 00:47:42,280 Standing on the corner 751 00:47:42,280 --> 00:47:45,040 Is a madman looking at my window? 752 00:47:45,040 --> 00:47:49,080 When you stand on stage on your own, you just feel how important the words are. 753 00:47:49,080 --> 00:47:53,920 When it's just the acoustic guitar, your voice and the lyrics that your trying to get across, 754 00:47:53,920 --> 00:47:56,120 you realise the lyrics are so integral. 755 00:47:56,120 --> 00:47:59,240 Woncha come on home 756 00:47:59,240 --> 00:48:03,120 Home... 757 00:48:03,120 --> 00:48:06,120 You learn pretty quickly that your lyrics are crap 758 00:48:06,120 --> 00:48:08,400 if you can't sing it with an acoustic. 759 00:48:08,400 --> 00:48:11,960 Because now you're singing and it's so exposed and people are going, 760 00:48:11,960 --> 00:48:16,840 "What are you talking about? That's the silliest thing I ever heard." 761 00:48:16,840 --> 00:48:18,840 When the lyrics are strong enough, 762 00:48:18,840 --> 00:48:22,080 then the acoustic guitar remains the perfect partner. 763 00:48:22,080 --> 00:48:25,920 From old-school rockers right up to today's wistful whippersnappers, 764 00:48:25,920 --> 00:48:29,040 it's all you need to tell your story. 765 00:48:29,040 --> 00:48:33,040 I know I said I loved you but I'm thinking I was wrong 766 00:48:33,040 --> 00:48:36,720 I'm the first to admit that I'm still pretty young 767 00:48:36,720 --> 00:48:41,800 And I never meant to hurt you and I wrote you ten love songs 768 00:48:44,040 --> 00:48:47,920 About a guy that I could never get, how his girlfriend was pretty fit 769 00:48:47,920 --> 00:48:50,400 And everyone who knew her loved her so 770 00:48:51,520 --> 00:48:55,320 And I made you leave her for me and now I'm feeling pretty mean 771 00:48:55,320 --> 00:48:56,960 But my mind has fucked me over 772 00:48:56,960 --> 00:49:00,280 More times than any man could ever know... 773 00:49:03,120 --> 00:49:08,760 People love the acoustic troubadour. That's why the likes of Pete Doherty 774 00:49:08,760 --> 00:49:12,080 and Elliot Smith and Jeff Buckley are held in great esteem 775 00:49:12,080 --> 00:49:16,160 because they are people who can pick up a guitar and start playing to you 776 00:49:16,160 --> 00:49:19,520 and sing to you a song and it just immediately... 777 00:49:19,520 --> 00:49:23,440 It enthrals you, it makes you want to listen to more. 778 00:49:23,440 --> 00:49:26,920 I'll never love a man cos love and pain go hand in hand 779 00:49:26,920 --> 00:49:30,480 And I can't do it again 780 00:49:30,480 --> 00:49:34,920 I will never love a man cos I can never hurt a man 781 00:49:34,920 --> 00:49:40,240 Not in this new romantic way. 782 00:49:43,200 --> 00:49:45,000 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 783 00:49:45,000 --> 00:49:47,920 I think there's a natural expression 784 00:49:47,920 --> 00:49:51,240 for confessional songwriting with an acoustic guitar, 785 00:49:51,240 --> 00:49:54,680 because it allows your lyricism to really work. 786 00:49:54,680 --> 00:49:58,400 And I don't know what to do 787 00:50:00,240 --> 00:50:04,760 Cos I'll never be with you... 788 00:50:06,560 --> 00:50:09,800 There's a healthy load of miserable singer-songwriters 789 00:50:09,800 --> 00:50:11,560 working with acoustic guitars 790 00:50:11,560 --> 00:50:15,440 and so perhaps it does the same thing for them as it does for me 791 00:50:15,440 --> 00:50:20,760 and if I'm in a quiet corner with an acoustic guitar then I find I express darker, sadder songs. 792 00:50:20,760 --> 00:50:23,720 The success of these melancholic minstrels 793 00:50:23,720 --> 00:50:26,960 might suggest the acoustic is at its most potent 794 00:50:26,960 --> 00:50:29,760 during these heart-rending moments. 795 00:50:29,760 --> 00:50:33,800 Cos I'll never be with you. 796 00:50:35,280 --> 00:50:38,720 Doesn't have to be like that, does it? It can be loud and proud. 797 00:50:38,720 --> 00:50:42,360 STRUMS JOLLY TUNE 798 00:50:42,360 --> 00:50:44,480 Is that melancholic? 799 00:50:44,480 --> 00:50:46,760 Maybe it's cos I'm smiling. 800 00:50:49,600 --> 00:50:53,640 This is Ground Control to Major Tom 801 00:50:53,640 --> 00:50:57,680 You've really made the grade 802 00:50:59,000 --> 00:51:05,120 And the papers want to know whose shirts you wear... 803 00:51:05,120 --> 00:51:08,320 Sometimes I think when people hear an acoustic guitar, 804 00:51:08,320 --> 00:51:12,680 it's just an acoustic guitar and it's just going to be, kind of, quite weak. 805 00:51:15,320 --> 00:51:17,160 But in the hands of the right person, 806 00:51:17,160 --> 00:51:19,480 it's going to sound absolutely incredible. 807 00:51:21,240 --> 00:51:24,760 For Johnny Marr, former member of The Smiths 808 00:51:24,760 --> 00:51:28,560 and one of the most influential guitarists of his generation, 809 00:51:28,560 --> 00:51:31,280 the acoustic is an essential part of his musical armoury. 810 00:51:31,280 --> 00:51:34,520 An instrument that not only sets the mood of the music, 811 00:51:34,520 --> 00:51:36,720 but drives the song itself. 812 00:51:36,720 --> 00:51:41,600 One of the first things that struck me about the acoustic was, being very little, 813 00:51:41,600 --> 00:51:45,120 and, erm, hearing the Everly Brothers, you know, 814 00:51:45,120 --> 00:51:48,280 and one of their records starts... 815 00:51:48,280 --> 00:51:50,840 HE PLAYS GUITAR 816 00:51:52,760 --> 00:51:56,520 MUSIC: "Wake Up Little Susie" by the Everly Brothers 817 00:51:57,960 --> 00:52:01,480 Wake up little Susie, wake up... 818 00:52:02,960 --> 00:52:06,280 And it's very deliberately an acoustic guitar intro. 819 00:52:06,280 --> 00:52:09,480 And they had that going on on a couple of their records. 820 00:52:09,480 --> 00:52:12,600 And, erm, that's a different thing to 821 00:52:12,600 --> 00:52:17,080 this sort of earnest idea of the folk singer, 822 00:52:17,080 --> 00:52:21,520 earnestly finger-picking accompaniment. 823 00:52:21,520 --> 00:52:22,760 That's a riff. 824 00:52:27,120 --> 00:52:31,400 Sometimes it adds a springiness, it adds an articulate nature to violence, you know. 825 00:52:31,400 --> 00:52:35,040 Pete Townshend and stuff like Substitute, kind of like, you know, 826 00:52:35,040 --> 00:52:41,200 it doesn't have to be a soppy, foppish instrument. It actually adds vitality to the violence of music. 827 00:52:41,200 --> 00:52:44,680 STRUMS MAJOR CHORDS 828 00:52:48,880 --> 00:52:52,040 Substitute your lies for fact 829 00:52:52,040 --> 00:52:55,560 I see right through your plastic mac 830 00:52:55,560 --> 00:52:58,520 I look all white but my dad was black 831 00:52:58,520 --> 00:53:03,440 My fine-looking suit's really made out of sack... 832 00:53:03,440 --> 00:53:05,000 A riff like... 833 00:53:05,000 --> 00:53:07,920 HE PLAYS "BIG MOUTH STRIKES AGAIN" 834 00:53:11,000 --> 00:53:16,480 Sweetness, sweetness I was only joking when I said 835 00:53:16,480 --> 00:53:21,920 I'd like to smash every tooth in your head... 836 00:53:21,920 --> 00:53:25,600 That, to me, is always going to sound better on an acoustic, 837 00:53:25,600 --> 00:53:27,200 and it's, erm, 838 00:53:27,200 --> 00:53:33,640 it's a rock, post-punk, whatever name you want put on it, but it's not folk music. 839 00:53:33,640 --> 00:53:37,120 If there's one Smiths song I would pick which I would say that 840 00:53:37,120 --> 00:53:40,360 the acoustic playing on it is just so important, 841 00:53:40,360 --> 00:53:45,640 kind of almost drives the song along and makes everything just a wee bit more bucolic, kind of thing, 842 00:53:45,640 --> 00:53:47,800 is William It Was Really Nothing. 843 00:53:47,800 --> 00:53:49,600 It was written on an acoustic 844 00:53:49,600 --> 00:53:52,400 in a transit van going down the motorway. 845 00:53:52,400 --> 00:53:55,000 I had this acoustic and I just started going... 846 00:53:55,000 --> 00:53:56,320 HE STRUMS CHORDS 847 00:54:06,760 --> 00:54:10,320 Rain falls hard on a humdrum town 848 00:54:10,320 --> 00:54:13,440 This town has dragged you down... 849 00:54:14,560 --> 00:54:21,120 And it may be because it was the noise of sitting in the back of a van, with no seats, on a mattress. 850 00:54:21,120 --> 00:54:26,480 I needed to hear myself, so I just started to play something loud and hyperactive, you know. 851 00:54:26,480 --> 00:54:31,080 But the whole band, the bass and the drums all go along with that rhythm. 852 00:54:31,080 --> 00:54:36,200 And the song is, kind of, erm, propelled by that. 853 00:54:43,520 --> 00:54:48,120 William, William it was 854 00:54:48,120 --> 00:54:50,840 Really nothing 855 00:54:50,840 --> 00:54:55,400 William, William it was 856 00:54:55,400 --> 00:54:58,280 Really nothing 857 00:54:58,280 --> 00:55:01,720 It was your life... 858 00:55:01,720 --> 00:55:05,360 It just feels like it's the bed for everything else. 859 00:55:05,360 --> 00:55:08,360 And sometimes when an acoustic guitar is that important, 860 00:55:08,360 --> 00:55:10,760 it almost becomes more important than drums. 861 00:55:10,760 --> 00:55:15,280 How can you stay with a fat girl who'll say, "Oh 862 00:55:15,280 --> 00:55:16,680 "Would you like to marry me? 863 00:55:16,680 --> 00:55:18,720 "And if you like you can buy the ring..." 864 00:55:18,720 --> 00:55:21,800 The combination of an acoustic and electric is a wonderful thing 865 00:55:21,800 --> 00:55:24,600 because they don't really get in the way of each other. 866 00:55:24,600 --> 00:55:28,040 They occupy different parts of the sonic range within a record. 867 00:55:28,040 --> 00:55:30,960 And you'll find that a lot of great rock acts over the years 868 00:55:30,960 --> 00:55:33,680 like REM or The Smiths, or any of those great bands, 869 00:55:33,680 --> 00:55:36,800 they often put a little bit of acoustic amongst the electrics 870 00:55:36,800 --> 00:55:40,040 and it just helps glue the rhythm section to the guitars. 871 00:55:40,040 --> 00:55:45,480 Sometimes the acoustic guitar brings the band closer together. 872 00:55:45,480 --> 00:55:50,720 And it definitely reigns the electric guitar in, makes it more gentle. Makes it more regal. 873 00:55:52,680 --> 00:55:55,400 I don't know, there's just something there 874 00:55:55,400 --> 00:55:59,520 where everything feels as if it's couched in some kind of Ready Brek glow. 875 00:56:12,440 --> 00:56:15,480 Proud as a peacock, the acoustic guitar. 876 00:56:15,480 --> 00:56:17,720 Well, I'm up on the eleventh floor 877 00:56:17,720 --> 00:56:20,120 And I'm watching the cruisers below... 878 00:56:20,120 --> 00:56:25,360 It's been an essential part of rock 'n' roll from the very beginning, and has never gone away. 879 00:56:25,360 --> 00:56:30,560 As crucial to a rock band as the bass, drums, and its electric brother. 880 00:56:30,560 --> 00:56:34,040 It is the basis of popular music today. 881 00:56:34,040 --> 00:56:37,840 It goes away and it comes back, goes away, comes back. It's always there. 882 00:56:37,840 --> 00:56:42,440 A little thrum in the background. There's always some acoustic music around. 883 00:56:42,440 --> 00:56:45,280 I'll take advantage while 884 00:56:45,280 --> 00:56:49,040 You hang me out to dry... 885 00:56:49,040 --> 00:56:53,720 A gentle music machine that's at the heart of even the loudest of bands. 886 00:56:53,720 --> 00:56:57,240 Acoustic music is not just 887 00:56:57,240 --> 00:57:02,000 rock 'n' roll music and it's not just folk music, it is music. 888 00:57:02,000 --> 00:57:05,080 Come on, let me tell you what you're missing 889 00:57:05,080 --> 00:57:07,040 Messing round these brick walls... 890 00:57:09,200 --> 00:57:13,520 The most complete artists seem to be able to switch in between, 891 00:57:13,520 --> 00:57:16,040 harnessing the power of a band 892 00:57:16,040 --> 00:57:19,320 and also just showing how gentle the acoustic guitar can be. 893 00:57:19,320 --> 00:57:22,640 MUSIC: "Wonderwall" by Oasis 894 00:57:23,800 --> 00:57:28,640 The musicians' bedfellow, collaborator and best friend. 895 00:57:28,640 --> 00:57:30,520 It's all you need. 896 00:57:30,520 --> 00:57:34,480 I don't know of anything else in my life that's like that, really. 897 00:57:35,640 --> 00:57:39,200 A humble box with six strings that can write your song, 898 00:57:39,200 --> 00:57:42,080 break your heart and set a stadium alight. 899 00:57:42,080 --> 00:57:45,080 I don't believe that anybody 900 00:57:45,080 --> 00:57:48,560 Feels the way I do about you now 901 00:57:51,520 --> 00:57:56,160 And all the roads we have to walk are winding 902 00:57:56,160 --> 00:58:00,720 And all the lights that light the way are blinding 903 00:58:00,720 --> 00:58:05,280 There are many things that I would like to say to you 904 00:58:05,280 --> 00:58:08,040 But I don't know how 905 00:58:08,040 --> 00:58:10,680 I don't know how 906 00:58:10,680 --> 00:58:13,840 Because maybe 907 00:58:13,840 --> 00:58:18,600 You're gonna be the one that saves me 908 00:58:18,600 --> 00:58:23,440 And after all 909 00:58:23,440 --> 00:58:26,440 You're my wonderwall. 910 00:58:26,440 --> 00:58:29,880 Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd 911 00:58:33,320 --> 00:58:35,440 - Cheers. - CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 75122

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