Life is like a guitar; Tune. Play. Repeat.
Around age 11 or 12, I started playing jazz bass. From there, I went to electric bass and then guitar, which I kept up for a long time.
I sing a little bit. I got a guitar for my 16th birthday.
That it's a lot harder to make a keyboard sound not-cheesy than a guitar.
So I started to learn guitar right away.
I picked up a guitar, and I knew what I wanted to do.
I read and write classical piano and percussion, also guitar.
I'm the gun guy, a loud guitar Dirty Harry with a ponytail.
My guitars are my umbilical cord. They're directly wired into my head.
I did play every little note on the guitar on that record.
Cowboys had guitars. And they sang country 'cause they lived in the country.
It all comes down to the density of the wood. Every guitar's different.
When I first got a guitar, it was a Spanish, classical thing.
I actually write more on guitar than I do on piano.
All I do is sit at home and play guitar. That's seriously what I do.
I'm left handed, but my dad taught me to play guitar right-handed.
My dad was a musician. He was a singer and he played the guitar, so music was always around.
Guitar is great for a certain thing, but a piano is so much more expansive.
I went to see John Mayall at the Marquee, with Peter Green on guitar, and that was a particularly good gig.
You couldn't really like a bad guitar in 1960 'cause everybody was pretty good.
I don't mind sitting at home playing the guitar for a year as long as I'm making good films.