Made on July 10, 1992.
I released my first album in November of 1993.
A week after that I bought another Fender Telecaster from Long and McQuaid.
For some reason, I was never happy with my sound.
I couldn’t even spell EQ let alone EQ an amplifier.
In December of 1993, I was driving around Edmonton with Jackson Langley.
We were listening to a Duane Eddy box set he had bought that afternoon.
I don’t know.
Same as the written word.
The song “Rebel Rouser” had me from the first the first low E bend to the “baaa dup bup… baaa dup bup…” saxophone line.
On the cover, Duane Eddy was standing there as cool as the flip side of your pillow and slung low was an orange Gretch Country Gentleman.
Halloween orange.
Well that settled it.
I needed a hollow body electric guitar like Duane Goddamn Eddy’s and that’s all there was to it.
When out of the corner of my eye something orange caught my attention.
Could it be?
I drove home as fast as I could, I got my two Tele’s, my AC30 and traded them all in for the Gibson Tennessean and a Fender Twin.
(In hindsight, I wish I’d kept the G and L Telecaster, oh well.)
In early 1997, I was in desperate need of cash flow, so I pawned it.
In May of 1997, my brother Chris, along with the guys in the band (Dave, Derek and Ernie), my managers (Johnny and Alex), my tour manager (Ivo) and a bunch of other friends were all out at a restaurant on Whyte Ave in Edmonton having a “get together”.
It was my 29 birthday.
Dave, Derek and Ernie showed up late because they were playing music at a friends place and lost track of time.
They came straight from the “jam session” to the restaurant.
An hour or two later, the waitress came over carrying a guitar case and said that one of the guys in our “party” had left this guitar at coat check.
It looked like Dave’s brown Gibson SG case.
“Hey Dave, did you leave your guitar at coat check?”
“Nope, it’s not mine.”I looked back at the case.
I knew it looked familiar.
It was my Tennessean.