Memory Lane: ‘Mr. Guitar Man’ Duane Eddy on uphill trail

A bit late, but to mark Duane Eddy’s 65th birthday in late April, here’s a story I wrote in 1970 when his career was in the doldrums.

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By Ray Bennett

They used to call him the Guitar Man when his twangy rock’n’roll music sold gold records along with Elvis, Buddy Holly and the Everly Brothers.

Duane Eddy.

With his group The Rebels, the well-scrubbed, fresh-faced young Arizonian was the supreme instrumentalist of the early rock’n’roll revolution. His driving twanging guitar made hits of tunes such as “Rebel Rouser”, “Ramford” and “Forty Miles of Bad Road”. He was on top.

Today, Duane Eddy at 32 is backing singer Al Martino at the Elmwood Supper Club. No solo spot, no limelight. He’s there as an expert and professional musician.

Duane Eddy 1970 is very different – at least in appearance – from the man who helped lead pop music into a whole new era back in the fifties. A quiet, soft-spoken man, now with longer hair and a beard, he gives the appearance of being a little weary, perhaps a trifle ravaged by the cruel business he is in.

But there’s no bitterness, not even the slightest suggestion of being defeated or down. The man is a fountain of quiet energies and enthusiasms that he reveals gingerly as if he’s been let down by people in the past. But his smile is warm and genuine.

If you didn’t mention it, he wouldn’t talk about the big days, the fame and subsequent decline. “They were good days”, he will agree. “It really was a time of revolution in pop music. For the first time, it began to be a youthful thing. Before Haley and Presley and those people came along there was the Top 10 but soon it became the Top 100.

“It’d be fun to think of a group of those guys playing together like the ‘supergroups’ – it would be difficult, though – Jerry Lee Lewis, Little Richard, Fats Domino, Chuck Berry. All good people. That was one of the aspects of pop music in those days, the guys in it really were nice guys. It was all new to them and many of them got taken for a ride. Now, it seams to have gone the other way with some of the rock people – they look after themselves.”

Eddy has little tolerance for the myths of show business. He doesn’t react with indignation, though, just a knowing smile. “There are pressures in the business but you find the people who cannot handle it are those who aren’t really stable. The ones who do all the complaining about being harassed by fans and other things are the first ones to complain if it all disappears. But don’t believe that story about helping people on the way up because they’ll help you on the way down, either. When you’re on the way down, you never see those people.”

The Rebels’ last big hit was in 1963-64. “The guys reached a stage where it was tiresome doing endless one-nighters, constant touring. They wanted to get married and stay home. I got married too and felt the same way.

“Well, that’s all over with now. I have a little girl 6-years-old. When the marriage ended, I went to Europe – I’d still been recording and doing session work. I lived in London and formed a group called the Quotations – mnost guys from the old Merseybeats rock group. We toured all over Europe.”

The guys from the Rebels – pianist Larry Knechtel, sax and flautist Jim Horn and guitarist Al Casey – are the top session men in Los Angeles today, Eddy says, “When I returned from Europe, I was doing more recording work, then in March this year I was working with Al Martino and he asked me if I’d like to play for him in Las Vegas. It seemed like a good idea and we’ve worked together several times since.

“I’d like to get back into recording. I’ve just got a single out – a soft, gentle version of George Harrison’s ‘Something’. I don’t think I’ll get into the heavy rock sounds, though. In the fall, I’m going to get a group together and tour the Orient and see what comes out of that.”

Duane Eddy will be back. As his buddy, drummer Wayne Hudson, said: “Don’t worry, he’ll be there; he’ll get it together when he’s ready.”

The Windsor Star, Aug. 25 1970

 

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Raymond’s Revue Bar and the music of Henry Mancini

Jean Raymond 1967 001 Cliff

By Ray Bennett

For all I know, the late London land baron Paul Raymond might have been the “porn king” of Soho but what I recall is that he published innocuous nudie magazines and ran a strip club called Raymond’s Revue Bar that was pretty good fun. Continue reading

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THEATRE REVIEW: Lester and Kinnear in ‘Othello’

Rory Kinnear as Iago and Adrian Lester as Othello.

Rory Kinnear as Iago and Adrian Lester as Othello.

By Ray Bennett

Nicholas Hytner’s production of “Othello” at the National Theatre has drawn rave reviews from UK critics and in the theatre it was easy to be consumed by the power of the play and the great acting, but it has diminished a bit upon reflection. Continue reading

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An evening at the Idler with Tinker and Sir Tim

Dudley Sutton 'Talking Existentialist Blues'

By Ray Bennett

Dudley Sutton (pictured above) says that although he has done a few, he prefers not to record his poetry and songs, which is a great shame for posterity but makes his performance at the Idler Academy, along with actor Timothy Ackroyd, as precious as it was entertaining. Continue reading

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Gordon Brothers buys Blockbuster UK

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By Ray Bennett

Restructuring specialist Gordon Brothers Europe has acquired Blockbuster UK for an undisclosed sum and will retain 264 outlets under license from the US firm with around 2,000 jobs saved. Continue reading

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My picks for the 2013 Academy Awards

Twentieth Century Fox 'Lincoln' 002 x650cliff

By Ray Bennett

Anticipation of this year’s Academy Awards was a pleasure with many great films and terrific performances but then came the nominations the prizes that lead up to the Oscars and it all went pear-shaped.

Inexplicable awards have been given to films such as “Argo”, “Les Misérables” and “Django Unchained” while prizes for splendid films such as “Life of Pi”, “Lincoln”, and “Silver Linings Playbook” have been hit and miss. Wonderful productions such as “The Master” and “Moonrise Kingdom” have found honours limited while the excellent “Killing Them Softly” was ignored entirely.

It means that tonight’s Oscar show might well turn out to be a major disappointment so many of these selections are made in hope that Academy Awards voters will prove smarter than the others, but history suggests they won’t be. Continue reading

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Royal Opera House is ready for its close-up

Royal Opera House 'Eugene Onegin' x600

By Ray Bennett

When the BBC’s new Director General, Tony Hall, takes up the job in April, the broadcaster will get not only a former BBC News Chief Executive but also the man who has brought financial stability to one of the UK’s most complex arts institutions, the Royal Opera House.

His term since 2001 has included the ROH’s successful move into live cinema screenings of its opera and ballet productions across the country and around the world including the first opera screenings in 3D. In 2007, Hall oversaw the acquisition of DVD production and distribution company Opus Arte. As a result, it has produced a series of DVDs of its productions and those of other arts organizations using high definition technology. Continue reading

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Gregory Peck on Abraham Lincoln: ‘A secular saint’

Gregory Peck as Abraham Lincoln, The Blue and the Gray 1982 x600

By Ray Bennett

In 1982, Gregory Peck achieved a lifetime ambition to portray his idol Abraham Lincoln onscreen. It was a cameo appearance in the CBS miniseries “The Blue and the Gray”, which became the subject of a special issue in TV Guide Canada. I traveled from Toronto to Southern California to interview director Andrew V. McLaglen and members of the cast such as Stacy Keach, John Hammond and, of course, Peck.

In our lengthy interview at Peck’s lovely home in the Holmby Hills in L.A., he spoke at length – unhesitating and in great detail with no resort to a book or notes – about Lincoln and his admiration for the man . I asked him if TV Guide Canada could run his comments under his name, to which he agreed. He later sent me a note of thanks for giving him his first byline. With the UK release this weekend of Steven Spielberg’s wonderful “Lincoln” starring Daniel Day Lewis, I thought I would revisit what Peck had to say. This is what he told me: © Continue reading

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THEATRE REVIEW: McKellen and Stewart in ‘Waiting for Godot’

Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart in Samuel Becket's 'Waiting for Godot'

Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart in Samuel Becket’s ‘Waiting for Godot’

Broadway is in for a treat this fall as Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart are scheduled to repeat their West End and worldwide success in Samuel Beckett’s “Waiting for Godot”.

The pair also will perform together in Harold Pinter’s “No Man’s Land” with both plays, to run in repertory, directed by Sean Mathias, who worked with the actors on “Waiting for Godot” during its 2009 West End run.

The two productions are scheduled to open in the autumn but no details on the venue were disclosed. Here is my review from their London run. Continue reading

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FILM REVIEW: Kathryn Bigelow’s ‘Zero Dark Thirty’

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By Ray Bennett

Kathryn Bigelow’s taut and exciting “Zero Dark Thirty” tells how a single-minded CIA officer drove the decade-long hunt for Osama Bin Laden and does not stop for politics or personal lives. Unlike Ben Affleck’s CIA film “Argo”, it does not cater to the audience with anything crowd-pleasing, it simply tells the gripping and thoroughly scary story of how a super-power goes about the elimination of its declared No. 1 enemy.

Jessica Chastain is terrific as agent Maya, who is propelled into the hunt for the Al Qaeda leader following the events known as 9/11 and becomes convinced that only she has the will to sort through a maze of intelligence to find her target. Writer Mark Boal, who won Academy Awards for original screenplay and as a producer of fellow double Oscar-winner winner Bigelow’s 2008 picture “The Hurt Locker”, has turned his in-depth reporting into a story remarkable for its cool detachment. Continue reading

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