John Fahey TV interview 1978

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  • Опубликовано: 23 янв 2025

Комментарии • 55

  • @BroadcastsFromPoorFarm
    @BroadcastsFromPoorFarm 10 лет назад +81

    It's strange to finally see Fahey speak in such a lucid and articulate form.

    • @lucianotaroni4422
      @lucianotaroni4422 3 года назад +16

      It's the glasses

    • @danielstoddart
      @danielstoddart 2 года назад +12

      @@lucianotaroni4422 He could speak well when he wasn't drunk. I'm pretty sure this interview was filmed before the show. I'm guessing right before showtime he got loaded as usual.

  • @gachitadamunga2403
    @gachitadamunga2403 9 лет назад +41

    Any film makers out there looking for a fresh untouched subject for a documentary - this is it. He's not just another fascinating, underapreciated artist who deserves more recognition.

    • @TVLIES2YOU
      @TVLIES2YOU  9 лет назад +8

      Gachitadamunga There is a documentary about him and it's quite good: ruclips.net/video/3NoXyb9AjJw/видео.html

    • @AnthonyMonaghan
      @AnthonyMonaghan Год назад +1

      @@TVLIES2YOU It's excellent documentary. Small, unassuming, deferential and funny. Highly recommend it to anyone.

  • @MontyCantsin5
    @MontyCantsin5 10 лет назад +18

    Rhythm really is everything. So great to hear John Fahey talk about this in such an insightful way.

  • @alexyames3518
    @alexyames3518 10 лет назад +43

    For all the Fahey uploads, you are heroic, Sir. Probably more peeks behind the mask than In Search Of Blind Joe Death in these interviews. You have done the internet a massive service. Cheers!

    • @TVLIES2YOU
      @TVLIES2YOU  10 лет назад +8

      Thank you, this is exactly why I felt I needed to share these, lots of candid and funny insights into his very personal take on music and playing the guitar.

    • @FinalCurve
      @FinalCurve 10 лет назад +1

      TV LIES
      Ditto to what Alex Yames said. Thank you, TV Lies!!!!!!

    • @danielstoddart
      @danielstoddart 10 лет назад +2

      TV LIES Is the complete interview available? Is this all there is, or are there more clips?

    • @TVLIES2YOU
      @TVLIES2YOU  10 лет назад +2

      Daniel Stoddart I hope the rest will turn up some day but this is all I could find

  • @alanpiper2061
    @alanpiper2061 4 месяца назад

    What a great interview! I bought Transfiguration of Blind Joe Death when it came out in the UK in the early 70s. I’ve heard Fahey could be very difficult but here he’s really relaxed and speaks candidly and lucidly. Magic!!!

  • @1HandGuitar
    @1HandGuitar 10 лет назад +13

    U know I just heard of this guy tonight while watching A Clockwork Orange for the 200th time on TV. 1 of his albums is on the rack in the record store right next to 2001 space odessey soundtrack. What I've been missing!

    • @losnos79
      @losnos79 3 года назад +1

      thats amazing that is my favorite movie and I never knew that! Kubrick was a man of great taste

    • @1HandGuitar
      @1HandGuitar 3 года назад

      @@losnos79 yep he was a talented smart guy, like me.

  • @dreamofshrooms
    @dreamofshrooms 10 лет назад +9

    straight to the core, genius man....

  • @clumsystrummer
    @clumsystrummer 9 месяцев назад

    Would love to hear the complete interview. Just this clip reaffirms my acceptance and my being fine with my fanaticism of Mr. Fahey.

  • @michaelhaydn3493
    @michaelhaydn3493 6 лет назад +2

    Where I didn't 'know' John Fahey, I saw him live at the Hippodrome in Gainesville, Florida in 1985. I sought John out 'backstage' and we exchanged a few words. John wasn't allowing for an extensive, casual talk and that impressed me. I had bought one or two of John Fahey's guitar albums in the late '60s. I was at University in Ohio at the time. John Fahey played some part in rediscovering the late Bukka White ( Booker T. Washington White ). The late John Fahey and he had estabished his own 'Takoma' records.

  • @scaredypicker
    @scaredypicker 8 лет назад +23

    Musicality over technical prowess any day of the week! I think Fahey sells himself short though. He was a very technical guitarist too, but he still had a great feeling in his playing

  • @guitarsmasher13
    @guitarsmasher13 5 лет назад +25

    One day our culture will appreciate musicality completely over technical skill, cuz we will be more interested in the product of the imagination than the image of the artist

    • @asiangoofs4697
      @asiangoofs4697 4 года назад +1

      What? Technique is part of musicality

    • @guitarsmasher13
      @guitarsmasher13 4 года назад +4

      ​@@asiangoofs4697 I worded that poorly. I think a better word would have been songwriting instead of musicality, although it's a bit of both. I find John Fahey's music much more enjoyable than somebody like Eddie Van Halen even though their technical skills aren't even comparable. EVH takes the cake there, but it feels like his music exists solely to impress his audience and facilitate his image of some sort of guitar god, even if that's not intentional, while Fahey's music is very simple and accessible and it feels like he's really trying to express himself or some spiritual connection he has with his music.

    • @je7647
      @je7647 4 года назад +4

      ​@@guitarsmasher13 they aren't comparable, but I'd argue fahey is technically adept as evh in his own right. I agree with what you're getting at though.

    • @gerardobarrientos3154
      @gerardobarrientos3154 2 года назад +2

      @@guitarsmasher13 eddie van hallen no es superior a john fahey en técnica ni nada ni john fahey superior a el los dos son de estilos muy diferentes y cada uno es muy bueno en su estilo en cuanto a lo demas si comparto contigo con lo de la espiritualidad y todo obio john fahey transmite algo enorme con su música

    • @kennethnick3213
      @kennethnick3213 Год назад

      ​@@asiangoofs4697He never said technical skill wasn't musicality. I think he's just saying that people will stop focusing on how a person moves their fingers and if it's cool looking or fast and instead focus completely on the music itself. It's not about image but sound. I always feel like a really technical, fast, and flashy guitar players are like magicians; they're distracting you with this physically showy technical stuff from the actual sound of the music and people just stare in awe about the physical image of their moving fingers rather than the sound of what is being played.

  • @ryangunwitch-black
    @ryangunwitch-black Год назад +3

    Gonna go play guitar now!

  • @deefjohnholler
    @deefjohnholler 10 лет назад +1

    i've never seen this. thank you!!!!

  • @andrewpearson1903
    @andrewpearson1903 6 лет назад +10

    "Most of 'em weren't any good, but a few of 'em were great" is record collecting in a nutshell. 😂 Props to this courageous dude for telling the truth about our habit

    • @andrewpearson1903
      @andrewpearson1903 6 лет назад +5

      Also, a note: the banjo comes from Africa. The slaves imported to the US brought the instrument design with them

  • @deniscassiere
    @deniscassiere 8 лет назад +4

    2:47 i think this is the most useful advise a musician could ever receive

  • @JakobSpooner
    @JakobSpooner 10 лет назад +2

    awesome guy

  • @danielschaeffer1294
    @danielschaeffer1294 6 лет назад +7

    The Briish guitarists he's presumably referring to, Bert Jansch and John Renbourn, did a lot of transposing of Lute music onto steel string guitar, which is why they sound "stately," though Jansch could play some really fine jazz-influenced blues. (As witness his influence on Jimmy Page.) But he never got into down-and-dirty Delta slide.

  • @thomasbellino1569
    @thomasbellino1569 10 лет назад +4

    Fahey is awesome

  • @jeffreysims3831
    @jeffreysims3831 3 года назад +7

    I've always had a theory that modern electronic dance music is the logical successor to Fahey's music
    It's all based on that driving and shifting rhythm. What Fahey tried to capture was the early dance halls, with a solo guitarist banging out as much sound as possible, just getting the crowd going and not concerned any sophisticated melody or chord structure, just a background sound to having a helluva good time.

  • @lowdownshakinchill
    @lowdownshakinchill 10 лет назад +10

    Hell yes, Blind Joe Death droppin some serious wisdom

  • @deenibeeni3938
    @deenibeeni3938 10 лет назад +25

    While he was talking about "spurious notes," I was reminded of the quote "Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away" (Antoine de Saint-Exupery). Most of the time less is definitely more.
    Pretty irritating to hear that guy call Leo Kottke one of Fahey's influences, when Fahey is the one who found Kottke & got his third record made (the first one to actually sell).

  • @pupusaslordking5617
    @pupusaslordking5617 3 года назад +3

    i didnt know tom cruise and john fahey were friends !

  • @alexyoungen
    @alexyoungen 10 лет назад +1

    Does anybody know the Monroe albums he's referring to?

    • @TVLIES2YOU
      @TVLIES2YOU  10 лет назад +4

      Fahey first exposure was 'Blue Yodel #7' and it's his favourite Monroe song: Blue Yodel No.7 - Bill Monroe and his Bluegrass Boys 1941

  • @charliewecker
    @charliewecker 10 лет назад +4

    Wow. Thanks for uploading this.
    ...Also, that journalist blows. Bringing up Kottke around King Fahey..tisk tisk.

    • @joshisanonymous
      @joshisanonymous 10 лет назад +3

      I've only found two interviews with Fahey on RUclips, but both ask about Kottke, and his response is about the same both times. It must've been annoying being asked about the guy he signed in his own interviews, particularly this one where the interviewer doesn't even acknowledge that the influence could've went the other way.

    • @TVLIES2YOU
      @TVLIES2YOU  10 лет назад +4

      joshisanonymous There was some influence both ways, they liked eachother a lot, Kottke covered quite a few of Fahey's songs and Fahey used some of Kottke's licks and bits like Death By Reputation. I have to agree with Fahey though: that the faster Kottke style (listen to The Last Steam Engine Train for example) doesn't have the grace and soul Fahey's version has for me, but it is exciting hearing Kottke doing his version at breakneck speed too.

    • @JamesScottGuitar
      @JamesScottGuitar 10 лет назад +6

      TV LIES and shall we not forget Robbie Basho...who was pretty influential on Kottke as well.

  • @bralingii1635
    @bralingii1635 5 месяцев назад

    I believe Kottke cites Fahey as an influence.

  • @HalfManThirdBiscuit
    @HalfManThirdBiscuit 7 лет назад +3

    not a musician myself, but this clip helps explain why I'm not more of a fan of someone like Geoff Achison. He's technically a marvel, a genius!, but I get no feeling from his playing. It's completely hollow emotionally.

  • @lipby
    @lipby 5 лет назад +1

    He looks like an English professor

    • @je7647
      @je7647 4 года назад +2

      he was. read this thesis on charley patton

  • @hearingroom
    @hearingroom 10 лет назад +6

    Tom Cruise has done a great job pretending to be American!

  • @robertanderson4913
    @robertanderson4913 4 года назад

    yes! , i too; am much more familiar with fahey as a grumpy old drunk !