| James
Byrd Interview
July 2006
James
Byrd is my all time favourite guitarist simple as that. However, to
many he is criminally unknown except for those
that may have heard Yngwie Malmsteen mention his name in interviews
(Yes a player Malmsteen has praised). To find out about Byrd's career
in detail I suggest you read our write up on him here, for those wishing
to get straight to the interview then an opening paragraph from that
profile should tell you everything you need to know - Byrd has one
of the purest tones you will hear and his entire catalogue screams
quality and is essential listening. His guitar work showcases what
the instrument is capable of in the right hands with his immense note
choice, clean speed picking, superb vibrato and original phrasing
- Byrd is "a players player" and anyone that takes the time
to investigate his music further will be blown away – (a baroque and
roll.com guarantee) - simply if you have yet to check out any of Byrd's
work then do asap.
James
many thanks for participating in this interview with Baroque &
Roll.
JB: Thank you
If
we can start bang up-to date and talk about your recently formed company
Byrd™Guitars.
Can you give us some background into why you started your own guitar
company, especially given the major endorsement deals you have had
in the past?
JB: It really didn’t start out that way. I mean,
I wasn’t intent on creating a company. It all started one day with
my frustration with my Strat’s ergonomics and in particular, a cut
I got on my right hand from a pickguard screw which had gone rusty
and presented a miniature razor from the chrome plate lifting. I was
actually recording solos for Crimes of Virtuosity when it happened,
and I realized there was actually blood smeared on the pickguard.
Pretty rock and roll really, but at the times, I was really pissed
about it. The studio can be a frustrating place sometimes, so I’m
sure that added to it. Later that day I was looking at my Strat and
wondering why it was the way it was. I mean I knew the history of
Fender very well, so it was rhetorical. All of a had a sudden realization
that of all people, I was actually in a very good position to design
my own guitar, and to finally have exactly what I’d always wanted.
The
Super Avianti ® really is a beautiful guitar to look at, yet is
quite unique as well, what led to the body design and headstock design?
JB: I’ve been associated with two instruments
in my professional career; the Gibson Flying V ®, and the Fender
Stratocaster ®. There were things I liked about both guitars,
but I’d settled on the Fender ® as being closest to giving me
everything. Two things I didn’t like about the Fender ® though,
were the lower body horn, and the headstock. The lower body horn was
put there for people who find sitting with the guitar over their right
leg, and not playing above the 10th fret to be among their priorities,
and although I liked the looks of the headstock, I knew it was actually
backwards from an engineering perspective; it’s design raised the
string tension on the highest strings dramatically. The only thing
I really liked about the Flying V ® were it’s lack of a body horn,
and it seemed to have some interesting acoustical properties as well.
I didn’t like the humbucking pickups or the controls and fixed bridge,
and it was also not well balanced on the strap. Now these were all
things I already knew, but really, the guitar’s design just came rushing
to me in one drawing; I took the basic ‘V’ shape, and added length
to the lower wing while shortening the upper wing to put the center
of gravity below the centerline and to make the right arm position
better, and I designed the headstock with the four higher strings
(D through E) in a left handed configuration to re-balance the string
tension and eliminate the need for string trees.
There
was really a lot more than that to it, but that was the initial concept.
I also decided that while I was at it, I’d try inlaying the pickguard
assembly into the face of the guitar to make it smoother, going back
to my original cut hand as inspiration. Obviously I also decided to
use better designed screws that were truly flush and wouldn’t rust.
When I finally had the first guitar in hand, I thought is played and
sounded brilliantly. The man who’d helped me build the first guitar
is a guy named Lynn Ellsworth, founder of Boogie Body ™ guitars. He
was something of a saint to me, and when we assembled the first guitar,
he really thought I was onto something and said so. It was then that
I sort of fell into the whole thing in a way I hadn’t intended, thinking
that my guitar had real potential for everyone of a particular playing
bent. All refinements of the design took place between 14 prototypes,
each one slightly more evolved than the previous. The headstock was
enlarged because it gave a better sound, the contours on the body
were refined from one to the next, and experiments with routing ended
up creating a large tone chamber. The neck joint went through 4 different
versions; the first being like a Strat ® with the metal plate
and four screws, then a square neck heel with a contour and four screws,
then an extended sculpted 5 bolt neck joint, and finally, a slightly
less extended contoured neck heel with four bolts. It was all a lot
of time spent evaluating comfort and performance.
Obviously
this site is aimed at neo-classical metal fans and being a pioneer
of the style why would you recommend the Super Avianti® to anyone
looking into potentially buying a new instrument?
JB: If you love a great Strat ® sound, plus
additional pickup combinations (it has seven), plus some really fat
sounds all it’s own, and more comfort from a performance based design,
this might be your holy grail. It has it’s priorities, first and foremost
being able to get around on the fret board unimpeded. Playing in the
upper neck areas is a joy, and even shifting your hand to play sweep
arpeggios at the 14th fret is easy on account of the complete access
to the last fret. So if you value the notion of nothing interfering
with anywhere you want to go on the neck, this is for you. But if
you’re someone who insists on sitting down with the guitar over your
right leg to play, you’re going to have an argument right away because
that was not the priority in the design. This was never my concern
because when I sit down to play, I play in the classical position
with the guitar between my legs. The Super Avianti ® is the most
comfortable guitar I’ve ever played sitting down, and because of the
body’s shape, I can actually take both hands of the instrument, and
it just stays there. It’s also designed to stay in tune during radical
tremolo abuse without a locking tremolo system. Because of my headstock
design, these things truly stay in tune when you use the trem.
The
custom scalloped neck work you do is again unique, what led to this
design and did you have a similar scallop on your previous Strats/ESP’s?
JB: My endorsement guitars has ordinary scalloping
if I requested the companies to scallop the necks, but the guitars
I did myself, I scalloped in what I thought was a better way; removing
wood exactly where your fingers are placed, as opposed to directly
in the middle of the fingerboard.
Tonally
what can this guitar do that you were unable to do with other guitars?
JB: Because of the scale length (25.5) and pickups
(single coil sized noiseless DiMarzio ® Virtual ® pickups
), the basic tonality is very much like a Strat. But it has more sustain,
and a fuller bottom end to the sound because of the body size and
shape, and the tone chambering. Because of the 2 additional pickup
combinations I added over the standard 5-way set-up, I can turn on
the neck pick and bridge pickup together, or all three pickups at
once. I also put the tone controls on the neck and the bridge instead
of the neck and the middle. As a result, I can get all the Stratty
sounds, plus Gibson ® like fatness, and with all 3 pickups on,
it gets a hollowish tone very similar to Brian May’s tone on ‘Bohemian
Rhapsody’. It’s just really versatile, playable, and as I said, it
stays in tune like a rock. Before I designed these guitars, all my
guitars had Floyd Rose ® locking tremolos on them. Now none of
my guitars have them. The sound is much better without the Floyd Rose
®.
Music,
you have been quiet since the release of the stunning ‘Byrd – Anthem’
back in 2002, can we expect any new music in the near future?
JB: Yes, but I’m sorry to say that I’m not immersed
in anything recording-wise at the moment. I went through a lot of
really difficult times between a spinal injury I suffered in 2001,
the artistic difficulties of 9-11, and the death of my Father in 2004,
just a bunch of negative stuff. So I’ve been taking a break from composing
and recording because I just don’t feel like dealing with certain
emotions for a while. The short answer is when I feel ready to pour
my heart into it, and right now, I don’t.
Going
back to ‘Anthem’, that release is in my top 3 all time favorites and
still a couple of hundred listens on inspires and speaks to me. Yet
it’s quite advanced from your earlier works such as Atlantis Rising
or The Apocalypse Chime. How do you view that album now looking back?
JB: Honestly, I can’t even listen to it. Making
that album was actually nothing short of hellish. I was on so many
narcotics for pain from my back injury, it was just a bad trip. It
was physically painful to even sit with the guitar, and it took forever
to record because the narcotics really effected my short term memory
badly. If I left off on something for more than a day, I’d have to
re-learn things, and the pain I was in made it very difficult to spend
more than 45 minutes at a time sitting in the studio (I was actually
in a wheel chair some of the time, and laid out on in bed the rest
of the time for several months). They had me on dilaudid morphine
and phentynol, a drug supposedly 10 times more powerful than heroin.
I’d glad someone likes the album because I just have this association
with physical pain, 9-11 anxiety and frustration with the recording
album that almost makes me sick to listen to it today.
Compositionally
it’s immense and your guitar work is the icing on the cake to many
degrees. Was the material written with guitar in mind foremost and
did you approach for that album differ radically from your previous
works?
JB: Everything was composed apart from the guitar.
I think the pain that holding the guitar created probably made that
decision easy to make, but yes, the guitar was intended to be entirely
supported as opposed to being the support. I composed everything on
the keyboard, and that too added a lot to the frustration of making
the album because I’m not a keyboard player; I’d have the lines in
my head (what there was of it anyway!), and then have to learn them
on the keyboards. I recorded all the orchestration as single lines.
If you hear 30 violins and cellos, it was 30 single note recordings
of each sample. Plus I was doing some of the engineering by myself.
Try keeping track of that when you’re drugged into numb oblivion (don’t).
But the good thing is, I’ve learned I’d make a lousy drug addict.
I hate the way that stuff made me feel, the way they affected me,
and although it took me months to taper off all the medications because
of the physical addiction, I’m not someone who’s ever going to end
up hooked on narcotics. I’d rather stick pins in my eyes than be on
them again.
You
have a large back catalogue of material. What album gave you the most
headaches from start to finish and does that in anyway detract from
your attachment to the album?
JB: Well I think I’ve answered that one haven’t
I.
Your
growth as a musician is quite clear to anyone that listens to your
back catalogue. But how do you feel you have grown as a musician/artist
over your career?
JB: I wish I could answer that, I really do.
It’s one of the things I’m trying to figure out right now. I’ve “grown”
to the point of being sick of even hearing my own music. That’s the
truth. I’m so self-critical, I’ve criticized myself right out of wanting
to make an album at the moment. You know I’ve changed directions within
my direction so many times, and it’s really because my relationship
with music is a love-hate affair. Once I’ve gone in a particular direction,
I’m just always dissatisfied and feel like there must be something
“more”. I know it’s actually a liability commercially because people
naturally want the second album they purchase from an artist, to have
some bearing on the previous one. And a lot of people do that, in
fact most try to do that. Well, I did that one time with Anthem, deliberately
picking up on where I’d left off conceptually with Flying Beyond the
9, and it’s hard to be objective on account of the other factors,
but now I’m just tired of the whole approach right now. I’m trying
to figure out what’s left within what I consider my musical parameters.
I don’t really care for progressive Jazz, but honestly, I’m just kind
of at the point where I wish there were more than 12 notes to work
with, you know? I’ve got so many different approaches to music in
me, many of them things I’ve never recorded (like big-band stuff,
traditional blues and rockabilly) but making an album requires a certain
unification of focus. That’s why I’m taking a break, that and the
other reasons I mentioned. Obviously commercial considerations have
little to do with what I’ve been about musically or I’d never have
bothered to make the albums I make. Sometimes you just have to question
everything and stew for a while, and that’s where I am right now.
Over the last few years you
have also appeared on a few tribute albums, your working of Uli Jon
Roth’s ‘Still So Many Lives Away’ stood out a million miles from any
other on the Uli tribute, what do you try to do when doing a cover
version?
JB: You really think so? That’s nice of you
to say. I didn’t see the point in playing Uli’s solo note for note.
If someone really wanted to hear that, well, they can just listen
to the original. And Uli played a truly brilliant solo in my opinion.
I’ve never seen the point of becoming a human tape recorder on these
tribute albums. That’s what most guys do I know, but my feeling is
why do it at all if you’re going to do that. I just tried to take
the vibe, and work within what I considered it’s wider intent, with
my own choice of notes. To maybe play something in the same spirit,
but not the same notes.
You
recently contributed to a Frank Marino tribute; can you tell the readers
how that came about?
JB: I’ve known Frank for ten years now, and
before we became friends, I was a huge fan of him growing up. Frank
introduced me to the guy who runs his website (http://www.mahoganyrush.com)
because I was needing some help with my first website. His name is
Willy Parsons, otherwise known as “Wild Willy” (http://www.wildwilly.com/)
. He’s actually a stand-up comedian in LA and right now he’s in the
finals of “The last comic standing” on NBC (http://www.nbc.com/Last_Comic_Standing)
. Willy is really responsible for bringing Frank Marino back into
the public eye through his web site. Anyway, over the years of knowing
Willy, at some point we started discussing the idea of doing a tribute
album for Frank. Willy found a financial backer in LA who put up the
production money, and I helped Willy decide who we’d try to get on
the album.
Getting
back to guitar you have the finest vibrato out there and alter it
to suit the mood, how long did it take for you to realise you had
a unique vibrato – often seen as the players fingerprint.
JB: It was actually hearing a player who had
a brilliant vibrato that made me nearly obsessive about developing
my own. This goes back a very long way, probably further than most
people know, but it was hearing Paul Kossoff of Free that first spun
my head. I was in awe of his vibrato. I had it nailed by the time
I was 15, and from there, it was a matter of realizing that there
were several other vibratos that could be studied and eventually made
into a lexicon. Robin Trower was another one, but his was almost the
same as Paul Kossoff’s. Hendrix also had a remarkable vibrato at times,
and I loved his slow-hand vibrato on the studio side of ‘Voodoo ‘Chile’.
Then of course there was Blackmore. And then Micheal Schenker. Let’s
just say, that I was a connoisseur of the subject. I eventually came
to regard different approaches to vibrato, the same way I regarded
modes or even notes; why just use the same one all the time? Of course
there were other things which came into the mix like using the tremolo.
And there’s also length-wise classical vibrato which I use all the
time too. That has a whole different sound to it because you’re not
only going above the pitch, but below it as well. And sometimes I
actually combine using the vibrato arm, and lengthwise classical hand
vibrato at the same time. It's extremely tricky to do, but it has
a wholly unique sound to it. That’s what I did on the intro to “Goodbye
my Love” (Crimes of Virtuosity) along with the volume swells.
Your
use of speed is also more selective than many other players in the
neo-classical genre, what do you aim for when it comes to solo time?
JB: It really isn’t a conscious thing, it just
evolves as I familiarize myself with the music.
What
is your most challenging lead break recorded to date?
JB: That’s really hard to answer because when
I first record them, they’re all challenging. The only way to answer
that is to think in terms of having to go back and exactly play them
note for note. Some of them are more structured than others, so it’s
easier to go back and know exactly what I was doing. But some of those
structures are physically insane.
I
see you also recently launched your own myspace page. What do you
think of the myspace phenomena and can you see it going the same way
as the original mp3.com?
JB: I think it’s hilarious! I mean really, think
about it. What IS it? It’s a lot like a bunch of people congregating
in some empty field for no reason. Why am I there? Because everyone
else is there; I can’t even remember how I got there! It doesn’t really
do anything. It’s just a social cluster-fuck. It’s a bunch of people
all standing in the same place, and I don’t think a single one of
them could tell you why they’re there other than the fact that everyone
else is also there. Maybe it’s like some guy on a sidewalk who decides
to stand there and look up and point, you know? Pretty soon there’s
a crowd all standing there looking up and pointing at the sky. People
are strange and have a herd mentality. As to any comparison to MP3,
I don’t know. People are also opportunists, so I’m sure that eventually
someone’s going to try to make more money out of it for the shareholders.
I guess the bottom line is that it’s a nice place to put pictures
and music for now, but like MP3, I wouldn’t ever pay for the privilege
if the owners get greedy. I’m just there because it’s there, and it
allows me to engage in shameless self-promotion free of bandwidth
charge. Does anyone really need a better reason than that?
James,
many thanks for your time.
James
Byrd Links
http://www.jamesbyrd.com
http://www.byrdguitars.com
http://www.myspace.com/guitaristjamesbyrd
|