- Shawn Lane
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Shawn Lane
Photograph by Carl Johan GrimmarkBackground information Born March 21, 1963
Memphis, Tennessee, United StatesDied September 26, 2003 (aged 40)
Memphis, Tennessee, United StatesGenres Instrumental rock, jazz fusion, world fusion Occupations Musician, composer, producer Instruments Guitar, piano, keyboard Years active 1977–2003 Labels Warner Bros. Associated acts Jonas Hellborg, Black Oak Arkansas, Jeff Sipe, The Willys Website shawnlane.com Notable instruments Vigier Excalibur Shawn Lane (March 21, 1963 – September 26, 2003) was an American musician. Although piano was his first instrument, he quickly became a noted player in underground guitar circles and joined Black Oak Arkansas when he was just fourteen years old.
He is best known for his solo album Powers of Ten and his long stint with former John McLaughlin bassist Jonas Hellborg. Lane is also well known for his shredding skills. Guitar World magazine writes, "Few, if any, guitarists can play faster than Lane could, and his arpeggio sweeps and precision-picked lines blasted more rapid-fire notes than the average human mind could comprehend."[1]The Guitar World's July 2008 edition had an article about NPS clocking project which rated Shawn Lane as the fastest alternate picking guitarist to date, based on cleanliness, accuracy and fluency in advanced positions.[2]
Contents
Biography
Shawn Lane was born in Memphis, Tennessee. At the age of eight he accompanied his sisters on the piano, but did not play guitar seriously until he was ten. Lane progressed very rapidly on the guitar, and he found it to be his natural instrument. At thirteen, he began to practice heavily, developing his technical abilities. Word began to spread around Memphis about a talented young guitar player, and at fourteen he auditioned for the lead guitar spot in Black Oak Arkansas. Black Oak Arkansas had been a popular Southern rock band but at the time when Lane joined the band's popularity was declining. At age fifteen Lane saw Allan Holdsworth perform at a UK concert and was inspired to develop his own method of playing guitar. Shawn toured with Black Oak Arkansas for the next four years. As the original band members dropped out, Lane began recruiting players from his high school days and began to play a style closer to fusion than the country rock style for which the band was known.
At eighteen Shawn Lane was married and burnt out from touring with Black Oak Arkansas so he decided to take a break and learn more about music.[citation needed] Over the next eight years he studied music and composing on his own and mainly worked on playing piano.[citation needed] Much of the material on Powers of Ten was written on his piano as Lane considered it his main writing instrument.[3][4] He quickly developed his technique on keyboards as well, taking influence from pianists like Liszt, Tatum and Cziffra.[5] He began to create demo tapes which garnered interest from Warner Brothers Music and Lane was offered a recording contract. Except for one cover song, Lane wrote all the material and played all the instruments on his debut album. The album did well and earned several magazine awards.[6] During the production of the album Lane continued to play live shows and did session work. He also performed on the Mark Varney Project's Centrifugal Funk album along with Brett Garsed and Frank Gambale and began recording and performing with drummer, Sean Rickman.
Lane released two more solo albums following his debut. Powers of Ten Live!, recorded live in 1993, and The Tri-Tone Fascination.
When Lane met Jonas Hellborg a musical relationship was formed. They both enjoyed classical, rock, Pakistani, and Indian music. Lane and Hellborg played with drummer Jeff Sipe in a jam band commonly referred to as HLS (Hellborg, Lane, Sipe). Sipe was already well known in the jam band scene as the original drummer for Aquarium Rescue Unit, and helped HLS get exposure all over the world.[citation needed] Later, Lane and Hellborg formed an East-West fusion band with Indian musicians V. Selvaganesh and Umamahesh. In February 2003, Lane and Hellborg toured India with drummer Andrea Marchesini. Lane's last concert performance was at Smilefest in North Carolina with Hellborg and Jim Britt.
For many years in the '80s and '90s Shawn played in a Memphis bar band called The Willys.
Equipment
During the Powers of Ten years, Lane used an Ibanez Saber and Ghostrider, as well as a sunburst yellow Charvel 750XL. For amplification, he used Holmes Mississippi Bluesmaster amps—often four at a time set at various levels of delay from one another. He used multiple amps because he liked to play in quadraphonic. In addition to the Holmes, Shawn used a Westbury (later Nady) overdrive pedal. Later in his career with Hellborg, he used and endorsed Vigier guitars; specifically the Excalibur, of which a Shawn Lane signature model was made available in 2005. Throughout this time, Lane used various amplifiers. Lane used several Line 6 DL4 delay pedals at the same time. In 2003, a video was shot of him playing a Martin Backpacker guitar in Shillong, India.[7]
Death
Lane had psoriasis his whole life and also suffered from psoriatic arthritis from the age of about thirteen. This did not impair his playing but caused difficulty walking, and required treatment with steroids which seriously affected his weight—so much so that he weighed over three hundred pounds in the years before his death. He also smoked constantly. His friend Vijay Raj Singh, a noted physician and a multi-instrumentalist Indian musician, had moved from Memphis but had remained close to him during his final years. On September 26, 2003, Shawn died in a hospital in Memphis, shortly after being told that he would have to remain on medical oxygen the rest of his life. He is interred in the Memorial Park Cemetery in Memphis.
Discography
Solo
- 1992: West Side Boogie (promo single)[8]
- 1992: Powers of Ten
- 1999: The Tri-Tone Fascination
- 2001: Powers of Ten; Live!
With Jonas Hellborg
- 1995: Abstract Logic
- 1996: Temporal Analogues of Paradise
- 1997: Time Is the Enemy
- 1999: Zenhouse
- 2000: Good People in Times of Evil
- 2002: Personae
- 2003: Icon: A Transcontinental Gathering
Other album appearances
- 1984: U.S. Metal Vol. IV - Unsung Guitar Heroes - Stratosphere II (Shrapnel Records)
- 1995: Two Doors – Michael Shrieve
- 1998: Fission – Jens Johansson
- 2004: Richard Hallebeek Project – Richard Hallebeek with Brett Garsed and Lalle Larsson
References
- ^ 50 Fastest Guitarists of All Time". Guitar World.
- ^ <http://www.sporcle.com/games/blackmetal_54/fastestguitarests/results>
- ^ Requiem for a master. Guitar Player January 2004
- ^ Richard Hallebeek's interview with Shawn Lane.
- ^ Powers of Ten album sleeve
- ^ Guitar Player magazine. March 1993
- ^ "Shawn Lane acoustic Jamming with locals in Shillong, India". YouTube. 2008-02-14. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ENBw9F5kwhA&playnext=1&list=PL5A4699CE1ECD2E30&index=13. Retrieved 2011-07-10.
- ^ West Side Boogie (Promo Single) LaneWiki. Retrieved 2010-06-26.
External links
- Official website
- Shawn Lane interview
- Steppin Out, 2005 article in the Memphis Flyer
- Shawn Lane at Find a Grave
- Article in All About Jazz by Souvik Dutta
- Guitar Vigier Excalibur Shawn Lane Master
- Guitar Vigier Excalibur Shawn Lane
Live albums Powers of Ten; Live!With Jonas Hellborg Abstract Logic • Temporal Analogues of Paradise • Time Is the Enemy • Zenhouse • Good People in Times of Evil • Personae • Icon: A Transcontinental GatheringRelated articles Categories:- 1963 births
- 2003 deaths
- American rock guitarists
- People from Memphis, Tennessee
- Lead guitarists
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