He Knows How To Pick 'Em
Concert Review - David Grier 9/9/06, Albany, NY
By Glenn Weiser
Available online at Celticguitarmusic.com.
Metroland, September 14, 2006
David Grier at the Linda
David Grier
Linda Norris Auditorium,
Albany, Sept 9
"Nashville cats play clean as country water, Nashville cats play wild as mountain dew," sang John Sebastian Jr. of the Lovin' Spoonful back in 1966. Four decades on, the Music City is still sporting pickers of arresting skill, as the Nashville-based solo acoustic guitarist David Grier proved to about 75 listeners in a dazzling set of 15 instrumentals at WAMC's Linda Norris Auditorium last Saturday night.
You might call Grier a hereditary picker - his father Lamar played banjo for bluegrass patriarch Bill Monroe right around the time John Sebastian was extolling the musical prowess of those talented Tennesseans. The elder Grier also played guitar, and, considering it more versatile than the banjo, began giving his son pointers on the instrument when David was 6. Grier had a country musician's dream childhood: hanging out backstage at the Grand Ole Opry, riding on Bill Monroe's bus with his dad, and getting underfoot at picking parties boasting the best players in bluegrass. Now, at 44, his acclaimed flatpicking ranks with that of acoustic icons Tony Rice, Doc Watson and Norman Blake. In addition to performing solo, he also currently handles the guitar chores for the band Psychograss.
WAMC's advance radio billing had described Grier as a bluegrass guitarist,
but that proved somewhat misleading-he only played one actual bluegrass number,
a medley of two Bill Monroe songs, all night. What the crowd got instead was
a well-chosen offering of old-time fiddle tunes, pop hits, Americana, and his
own unique if not idiosyncratic compositions. And his fleet, fluid playing
couldn't have been better.
Dressed in a red-checkered shirt and jeans and playing a gorgeous sounding
1946 Martin D-28, the bespectacled, shaven-headed Grier introduced his opener,
Have You Ever Been To England with a coffeehouse-style spiel in his twangy
drawl. The uptempo tune started out like a minor-key reel, but soon went further
afield as he bounced the melody in between the treble and bass and then embellished
it with crosspicking, a technique in which a guitar imitates a banjo picking
pattern (a famous example of this is the beginning of The Monkee's The Last
Train to Clarksville).
Next was another original, a folky, lyrical waltz entitled High Top Princess
Cove. For this, Grier used a technique known as hybrid picking or 'fake fingerpicking'
in which the guitarist sounds the bass strings with the pick and plucks the
treble strings with the his middle and ring fingers. This allows the player
to mix passages that sound like fingerpicking with flatpicking runs. Grier
would use this technique effectively later with other slow tunes.
After another self-penned piece he described as "moody" and marked
by descending bass line reminiscent of a late-period Beatles song, he pulled
out the first of several fiddle tunes, Black Mountain Rag. In his hands, a
old Appalachian breakdown became akin to a jazz standard-he'd play the melody
straight the first time through, and then conjure up variations using devices
like playing bluegrass licks based on the harmonic progression, up-the-neck
chords alternating with open bass strings, and even key changes.
Several more showpieces later, Grier closed with the Bill Monroe tunes, Crossing
the Cumberlands and Old Ebenezer Scrooge. He then encored with a tranquil
version the old-time tune Bonaparte's Retreat, followed by another fiddle
tune, Little Rabbit, in which he sped up the tempo to warp drive, finishing
on the Bonneville Salt Flats of gitpickin' glory.
Fortunately, WAMC taped what was as fine of an acoustic guitar show as you're
likely to hear locally for some time. Stay tuned for it, because this David
is a musical Goliath.
Index of Metroland Articles by Glenn Weiser ©2006 by Glenn Weiser. All
rights reserved.