James
Byrd is perhaps
the player out of all featured at Baroque & Roll that should be
more renowned than he is. His reputation by those that are familiar
with his work is right up at the upper echelon of the genre and he
has the honour of being the only guitarist Yngwie has given an uncompensated
endorsement to, calling Byrd, "One of the best European sounding
guitarists I have heard in years, he definitely has 'the vision' and
aims for each note and makes it count". Guitar For The Practising
Magazine (now known as Guitar One) listed Byrd in their one-off feature
"The 10 best guitarists you have never heard".
James
Byrd has one of the purest tones you will hear and his work scream
quality. 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".
Byrd's
roots extend back to when he was 9 years old, he had a guitar but
was not serious about the instrument until the day Jimi Hendrix died.
His first early influences were mostly blues players and within 5
years he was playing like an "old soul" wow-ing much older
audiences around the Washington State area. After this Byrd
began listening to players like Ritchie Blackmore, Uli Jon Roth (Scorpions
era), Al DiMeola, Neal Schon and Michael Schenker amongst others.
Byrd uses these players styles as a springboard to his own sound and
began honing his playing and song writing skills further still.
Aged
18 Byrd went on the road with a heavy metal cover band, performing
albums such as UFO's Strangers In The Night and Scorpion's Tokyo Tapes
note for note. This band won the "Northwest Battle Of The
Bands" and free studio recording time. As the band did
not have a single original song, they went in and just played covers
live. Byrd decided after a year in this band, he wanted out, but they
tried to get him to stay, so the soundman (who also wanted to go)
and Byrd took-off in the middle of the night.
In
1980, Byrd put together his first original band with original songs.
In late 1981 he moved to L.A. and spent a year there playing with
various bands at the usual places (Troubador, Perkins Palace etc.).
In late 1982, Byrd had had enough of L.A. and wanted to move back
to Seattle to work with two musicians he'd heard before he'd gone
to L.A. One was drummer Ken Mary, the other was vocalist Ted Pilot.
This was to become Fifth Angel.
The
band concentrated solely on writing, rehearsing and producing an album,
and then looked for a recording contract. By late 1983, Fifth
Angel was in Steve Lawson Productions with Terry Date recording "Fade
to Flames", "Fifth Angel", "In the Fallout",
and "Wings of Destiny". With this four song demo, about
a hundred tapes went out to record companies on a list. Shrapnel Records
was on the list, and Byrd felt that if nothing else, they'd sign him.
Mike Varney was on the phone after one listen to sign the project.
They got a pittance of an advance, but finished the album by cutting
five more tracks. The reviews were stellar, and Byrd began getting
endorsement offers and interviews. In 1987, Fifth Angel's reputation
as an act got them management with 'Concrete Marketing and Management',
and a seven-album deal on Epic/CBS who re-released "Fifth Angel"
in late 1987/early 1988. The seeds of destruction for Fifth Angel
were sown as soon as large sums of money looked likely. Byrd was out
of the band he'd created very shortly after the CBS agreement was
signed.
In 1988/89, Byrd returned to Shrapnel Records under his own name and
recorded James Byrd's Atlantis Rising. A lawsuit between Shrapnel
and their distributors left the album in a warehouse for an entire
year with no distribution, but still was advertised in major press
by Shrapnel. The album did extremely well in Japan and Europe, but
by the lawsuit severaly affected sales in the US. Musically
the album is an extension of the sound showed on the debut Fifth Angel
album, with strong vocal melodies and guitar solos from Byrd that
are a near perfect mix of fretboard finesse and melodic content.
Metal Hammer in Europe gave the album a 5 star review.
In 1993, Byrd recorded his first instrumental album Octoglomerate.
It was this album that brought Yngwie Malmsteen's introduction. Mike
Varney played Malmsteen some of the tracks over the phone, and Malmsteen
asked for the album. It was sent, and Mike Varney introduced the two
guitarists. 1993 also saw an introduction for Byrd to a long-time
hero and influence Frank Marino, a close friendship developed between
the pair. Frank's comments of praise about Byrd can be found in numerous
interviews by Marino.
1995 brought the recording and release of another instrumental album:
Son of Man. Yngwie Malmsteen granted his only uncompensated
endorsement of another guitarists work for "Son of Man".
Several mentions in major guitar magazines by Malmsteen of Byrd as
"A great guitarist" created additional press, culminating
in inclusion of a feature article in Guitar (GFTPM) Magazine in 1996;
"The Ten Best Guitarists You've Never Heard Of". The
album was a huge critical success with many publications calling it
one of the finest instrumental releases in the history of guitar music.
Any self respecting neo-classical fan should track down a copy of
this album.
1996 brought the release of The James Byrd Group - The Apocalypse
Chime with vocalist Robert Mason [Lynch Mob / Cry Of Love]. This
was to be Byrd's fulfilment of his last contract to Shrapnel Records
and possessed a strong collection of tracks marred slightly by a weak
mix (Byrd states that Shrapnel gave him $1000 to do the album).
In 1997, Byrd returned to the Atlantis Rising name with a new label
-JVC Japan, Mascot Europe-and line up. The new album James
Byrd's Atlantis Rising - Crimes of Virtuosity
was released in 1998 in Japan and Europe. The album gained extremely
strong reviews but sadly label promotion was lacking for this superb
album. Many high profile magazine articles did follow e.g. Young Guitar,
Burn etc.
In
2000 James made Crimes Of Virtuosity available on mp3.com.
Repackaged and remastered the album was a big success, featuring the
Japanese 'C.O.V.' bonus track 'Shot Down In Flames', and the previously
unreleased guitar/orchestra instrumental 'Byrd's Bolero' [whose recording
predates Yngwie Malmsteen's Concerto by some 3 years], both were worthy
additions from the Byrd vaults. Several tracks from the album scored
highly on the mp3 charts, "Metatron 444" was #2 for 9 straight
weeks and was still in the Top 20 after 6+ months!
From
here Byrd hooked up with European label Lion Music initially for a
solo on the Jason Becker tribute album Warmth In The Wilderness. Byrd's
solo is
one of the most unique on the entire double cd with his tone and style
being instantly recognisable.
May 29th 2001 saw the release of Byrd - Flying Beyond The 9
on Lion Music. The album set new standard for Byrd's career in song
writing, production and guitar work. Press reviews were the nothing
short of stunning and was Byrd's strongest band based effort to date.
Summer 2002 saw the release of Byrd's strongest release to date -
Byrd - Anthem.
This album saw the sound of 'Flying Beyond The 9' built upon with
a return to the slightly guitar heavier approach of earlier albums.
Vocals melodies were again an integral part of the sound and this
side of the album shows Byrd's ability to pen timeless memorable melodies
and hooks. Symphonic orchestrations were again heavily used and the
production of the album is something to savour with Byrd's best guitar
work and tone to date.
July 2003 saw Lion Music release Beyond Inspiration - A Tribute
To Uli Jon Roth. James contributed the track 'So Many Lives Away'.
Many reviews of the album have called this track the highlight, its
also the first track to hear the sonic possibilites of Byrd's revamped
'Strange Particle Productions' home studio. The guitar tone is especially
strong on this track.
2004 saw Byrd play a guest solo on the Lion Music Jimi Hendrix tribute
album The Spirit Live On Vol 2. Byrd contributes a solo to
the track Burning Of The Midnight Lamp which showcases his blues guitar
ability.
For the past few years James Byrd has been honing his own take on
the electric guitar. The company was officially launched in
April 2005 which sees the Super Avianti guitar marketed to the public
- for more information see the Byrd Guitars website.
Guitars
Byrd Guitars Super Avianti - Artist Edition
Amps
Marshall 1987 50 watt plexi head.
Marshall 8x10" vintage cabinet.
Effects
Dod 250 Overdrive Preamp
Ibanez TS-9 Tubescreamer
Vox Valvetone
Dunlop Wah
Recommended
Releases