Additional Q & A with Alan Sparhawk from the desk of JG Everest:
Our show with Alan Sparhawk was a lot of fun. He showed up with about
10 guitars and set them all up on the stage in guitar stands. During
the show, he explained where they each came from and how he uses/ has
used them. One of them was actually the first guitar he ever bought,
and was actually a bass guitar that he got while in high school. There
was also an acoustic guitar that he got from Darren Jackson (Kid
Dakota, The Hopefuls) which had since been signed by Chuck D of Public
Enemy.
One of the show's highlights for me was hearing Alan talk about
growing up milking goats on his parents' farm in northern Minnesota.
He demonstrated his considerable technique on a pair of imaginary goat
udders that hung in the air.
One thing that is so striking about Low is that they have worked with
some of the most legendary producers/engineers around, and more
specifically, people who were their musical heroes: Kramer, Steve
Albini, Tchad Blake, and Dave Fridmann. In pinpointing the moment when
his musical tastes took a deeper turn, Sparhawk cited Zak Sally's
playing Galaxie 500 for him in college at UMD. I thought it was pretty
interesting how simply they hooked up with Kramer, the man who
produced those Galaxie 500 records: they sent him a demo tape and
asked if they could pay him to record and produce their first CD. He
agreed, and eventually, gave the resulting recordings to someone at
Vernon Yard/Virgin, the label that went on to release the first three
Low records internationally.
Alan also told us about his recent involvement with the Maasai
Cultural Foundation, a fundraising effort to build a school for a
tribal village in Kenya, Africa. Hans Johnson, the executive director
of the project was in attendance, and sold out of the CDs he brought
of Maasai music. I was lucky enough to get one before they sold out,
and it's a great CD. For more info on this project, please visit the
website: http://www.maasaiculture.org
after the show, I asked Alan a few more questions, some of which came
from our live audience. If you'd like to join in the conversation, and
add a comment, please jump in!
BONUS QUESTIONS:
1) When you were explaining what a "I-IV-V" (1-4-5) progression is,
you mentioned that your guitar was tuned differently. What alternate
tuning/s do you use, and why?
i play in a tuning called "open G" (DGDGBD), which is more of a slide
tuning, though it's most famous as the tuning keith richards used
through the seventies. when i first moved to duluth for college, i
started messing around with just making up tunings - mostly inspired
by
sonic youth. once i stumbled on a tuning i like, i just stuck with it
because i only had one guitar and i didn't want to retune. later i
found out that i had accidentally found open G. haven't switched
since...
2) Are there any favorite guitars you have used in the past that
weren't on stage at Making Music? What were they?
i can't remember if i brought the sunburst telecaster, but that has
been my main guitar since i was 19. i bought it in Bemidji, MN at the
store where i had always gone and pestered the shop owner as a kid.
Jim Miller was his name. i suppose besides that, i would have to
mention the harmony stella acoustic guitar that was always laying
around the house - the neck was warped past function and i think we
destroyed all the strings by the time Pink Floyd's "the Wall" came out.
3) What's your least favorite part of your musical process/ lifestyle?
What is your favorite part?
a real obvious frustration is driving and flying. 8 hours in the van
for just one hour playing music can wear on you and airports are like
going to wal-mart in hell. it's exciting and new at first, but the
14th time down the 94 heading east really takes some stamina. there's
a few unique social stresses that come along with it all - people are
different around you, and some come with a very one-sided
"relationship" with you that's difficult to get your footing on. it
means alot to me when someone has really absorbed our music and it's
influenced them in a good way. i think anyone who get's on stage wants
that result. we've been lucky to have done that. other than that, the
"lifestyle" has made it possible to be around our kids almost all the
time, and i get to sleep in alot...
4) What is your favorite cover that you've done? what is the one
song you'd love to cover, but haven't yet?
i think the cover of neil young's "down by the river" that we did with
the dirty 3 is my favorite. great song, great band to play with, and
the session was fun and spontaneous. we learned so much from those
guys, still do.
right now the two artists i'd like to cover are waylon jennings and
suicide - i think the last song that made me cry was "johnny teardrop."
5) If you could collaborate musically with anyone who would it be?
i've always said that morrissey should do a record and tour with low as
his back-up band, but i think that's becoming less likely over time.
phil spector would be cool - lot's of natural reverb in jail. the best
collaborations happen unexpectedly and short-notice, so who knows.
--
=alan
11/26/2007"Lot's of natural reverb in jail": More of James's conversation with Low's Alan Sparhawk...
(2007-10-10) Making Music featuring Alan Sparhawk of LOW [View Show] 

Upcoming Events

All Request Hour
Fridays, Noon - 1pm
in the Whole
Recent Shows
- Bits Variety Show featuring Joel Johnson, Mark Rossing, Eric Kramlinger, Rick Waltman, and Kelly Jo Mitchell

- Thursday, Apr 17, 2008
- Making Music: Ellis

- Thursday, Apr 10, 2008
- Bits Variety Show featuring: Joe Kruse, Jay Logendran, Chaz Roman, Rayette Peltier, and Digital Penetration

- Thursday, Mar 6, 2008
- Spark Festival: Concert #7

- Friday, Feb 29, 2008
Past Blog Entries
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- February 2007
- January 2007
- December 2006
- November 2006
- October 2006
- September 2006
- July 2006
- April 2006
- March 2006
- February 2006
- January 2006
- December 2005
- November 2005
- October 2005
- September 2005
- August 2005
- July 2005
- June 2005
- May 2005
- April 2005
- March 2005
- February 2005
- January 2005
- December 2004
- November 2004
- October 2004
- September 2004

