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Fifty Years of Riffs

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  • Fifty Years of Riffs

    Moscow Times, Russia
    July 30, 2004


    Fifty Years of Riffs

    British and Russian bands honor a legendary guitar at a free festival


    By Sergey Chernov


    The Fender Stratocaster -- the guitar of choice for all
    self-respecting rock stars -- celebrates its half-century this year.
    And to mark the anniversary, over 20 bands from Britain and St.
    Petersburg will take the stage in the Miller Fender Fest, a large
    open-air event on Saturday.

    The free event on Bolotnaya Ploshchad is one of an international
    series of concerts held to mark the guitar's 50th birthday, and will
    showcase four British bands -- King Adora, Mystery Juice, Gold Blade,
    and Kaiser Chiefs -- as well as top Russian acts on a total of five
    stages.

    The legendary electric guitar was designed by American inventor Leo
    Fender in 1954. He was later quoted as saying that it was his attempt
    to "design the best instrument in the world, once and for all." Since
    then it has been played by musicians including Eric Clapton, Buddy
    Holly, Hank Marvin and Bob Dylan.


    For John Robb, singer and guitarist of Manchester punk band Gold
    Blade, who will perform on the main stage, the instrument is
    associated with one star. "I think of Jimi Hendrix and it makes me
    feel really good," he wrote in an e-mail last week. "He was the
    genius who made the Fender Strat great." Robb chooses a Telecaster
    himself, but the band uses Strats on some of their songs.

    Meanwhile, another participant, Sergei Voronov of Moscow-based
    blues-rock band Crossroadz, strums a guitar once owned by Keith
    Richards of the Rolling Stones. While on tour in New York in 1988, a
    session drummer introduced Voronov to Richards, according to
    Crossroadz's official biography. The rhythm guitarist invited him to
    join him in the studio, and then gave him the 1959 instrument.

    While celebrating the famous instrument, the festival does not lay
    down a hard-and-fast rule about playing only Fender Stratocasters,
    and the music will not focus on the classic rock that is primarily
    associated with the Strat, instead ranging from ska to psychobilly
    and electronic.

    The British participants bring their own highly distinctive sounds.
    Mystery Juice, from Edinburgh, plays a psychedelic mixture of blues,
    hip-hop and Gaelic fiddle, while Birmingham's King Adora performs
    updated glam rock, complete with the dramatic makeup. The indie-rock
    band Kaiser Chiefs, from Leeds, has drawn comparisons with Britain's
    recent music sensation Franz Ferdinand.

    The Russian bands, most of whom hail from St. Petersburg, are even
    more diverse in style. Markscheider Kunst performs Afro-Cuban style
    with Russian lyrics, while Billy's Band took its original inspiration
    from Tom Waits, but has adapted his cabaret rock for domestic
    consumption. Deadushki combines electronica and punk, and
    Moscow-based Deti Picasso blends rock with Armenian folk.

    "The main idea was to represent different acts that use a guitar one
    way or another," the festival's co-promoter Dmitry Sidorov said last
    week. "That may be music of different styles, including those using
    electronic and ethnic elements."

    The Miller Fender Fest starts on Saturday at 1 p.m. on Bolotnaya
    Ploshchad. Metro Tretyakovskaya. Info at www.millertime.ru
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