Joseph "Joe" Satriani (born July 15, 1956) is an American
instrumental rock guitarist, multi-instrumentalist and multiple Grammy
Award nominee. Early in his career, Satriani worked as a guitar instructor,
and some of his former students have achieved fame such as Steve Vai, Larry
LaLonde, Rick Hunolt, Kirk
Hammett, Andy Timmons, Charlie
Hunter, Kevin Cadogan and Alex
Skolnick. Satriani has been a driving force in music credited to other
musicians throughout his career, as a founder of the G3, as
well as performing in various positions with other musicians.
In 1988, Satriani was recruited by Mick Jagger
as lead
guitarist for Jagger's first solo tour.[1] In
1994, Satriani was the lead guitarist for Deep Purple.[2]
Satriani worked with a range of guitarists, including Steve Vai, John
Petrucci, Eric Johnson, Larry
LaLonde, Yngwie Malmsteen, Brian May, Patrick
Rondat, Andy Timmons, Paul
Gilbert, Adrian Legg, and Robert
Fripp through the annual G3 Jam
Concerts.[3]
He is currently the lead guitarist for the supergroup Chickenfoot.
Since 1988, Satriani has been using his own signature guitar, the Ibanez JS
Series, which is sold in stores.
Contents
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[edit] Biography
[edit] Early life
Satriani was born in Westbury, New York. He
was inspired to play guitar at age 14, after hearing of the death of Jimi
Hendrix.[4]
He has been said to have heard the news during a football training session,
where he confronted his coach and announced that he was quitting to become a
guitarist.[5]
In 1974, Satriani studied music with jazz guitarist Billy Bauer and with reclusive jazz
pianist Lennie Tristano. The technically demanding Tristano
greatly influenced Satriani's playing. Satriani began teaching guitar, with his
most notable student at the time being fellow Long Island
native Steve
Vai. While he was teaching Vai, he was attending Five Towns College for studies in music.
In 1978, Satriani moved to Berkeley, California to pursue a music career.
Soon after arriving in California, he resumed teaching. His students included
Steve Vai, Kirk Hammett of Metallica, David
Bryson of Counting Crows, Kevin
Cadogan from Third Eye Blind, Larry
LaLonde of Primus / Possessed, Alex
Skolnick of Testament, Rick Hunolt
(ex-Exodus), Phil Kettner of Lääz
Rockit, Geoff Tyson of T-Ride, Charlie
Hunter and David Turin.
[edit] Music career
Satriani started playing in a San
Francisco-based band called the Squares,[6]
where he continued to network and make musical connections (Squares sound man
John Cuniberti co-produced his second album). He was invited to join the Greg
Kihn Band, who were on the downside of their career, but whose generosity
helped Satriani pay off the overwhelming credit card debt from recording his
first album.[7]
When his friend and former student Steve Vai gained fame playing with David
Lee Roth in 1986, Vai raved about Satriani in several interviews with
guitar magazines, including Guitar
World magazine.
In 1987, Satriani's second album Surfing with the Alien produced radio
hits and was the first all-instrumental release to chart so highly in many
years. In 1988 Satriani helped produce the EP The Eyes of Horror for the death metal
band Possessed. In 1989, Satriani released the album Flying in a Blue Dream. It was said to
be inspired by the death of his father, who died in 1989 during the recording
of the album. "One Big Rush" was featured on the soundtrack to the Cameron
Crowe movie Say Anything.... "The Forgotten Part
II" was featured on a Labatt Blue commercial in Canada in 1993.
"Can't Slow Down" featured in a car-chase sequence in the Don Johnson
starring show Nash Bridges.
In 1992, Satriani released The
Extremist, his most critically acclaimed and commercially successful
album to date. Radio stations across the country picked up "Summer
Song," which got a major boost when Sony used it in a major
commercial campaign for their Discman portable CD players.[8]
"Cryin'," "Friends," and the title track were
regional hits on radio. In late 1993, Satriani joined Deep Purple
as a temporary replacement for departed guitarist Ritchie
Blackmore during the band's Japanese tour. The concerts were a success, and
Satriani was asked to join the band permanently but he declined, having just
signed a multi-album solo deal with Sony,
and Steve
Morse took the guitarist slot in Deep Purple.[9]
In 1996, Satriani founded the G3, a
concert tour intended to feature a power trio consisting of three guitar
virtuosos. The original lineup featured Satriani, Vai and Eric
Johnson. The G3 tour has continued periodically since its inaugural
version, with Satriani the only permanent member. Other guitarists who have
performed in G3 include among others: Yngwie
Malmsteen, John Petrucci, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Robert
Fripp, Andy Timmons, Uli Jon
Roth, Michael Schenker, Adrian Legg
and Paul
Gilbert. In 1998 Satriani recorded and released Crystal
Planet, which went back to a sound reminiscent of his late '80s work.
Planet was followed up with Engines of Creation, one of his
more experimental works featuring the electronica
genre. A pair of shows at the Fillmore in San
Francisco were recorded in December 2000 and released as Live in San Francisco,
a two-disc live album and DVD.
[edit] 2000s and future
Satriani playing in Chile, 2003.
Satriani regularly recorded and
released evolving music, including Strange Beautiful Music in 2002 and Is There Love in Space? in 2004. In May
2005, Satriani toured India for the first time, playing concerts in Delhi, Kolkata and Mumbai. In 2006,
Satriani recorded and released Super
Colossal and Satriani Live!, another two-disc live album and
DVD recorded May 3, 2006 at the Grove in Anaheim, CA.
In 2006, Satriani signed on as an official supporter of Little
Kids Rock, a non-profit organization that provides free musical instruments
and instruction to children in underserved public schools throughout the U.S.A.
Satriani has personally delivered instruments to children in the program
through a charity raffle
for the organization and, like Steve Vai, sits on its board of directors as an
honorary member.
On August 7, 2007 Epic/Legacy
Recordings re-released Surfing with the Alien to celebrate the
20th anniversary of its release. This was a two-disc set that includes a remastered
album and a DVD of a
never-before-seen live show filmed at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1988.[10]
Satriani's next album Professor
Satchafunkilus and the Musterion of Rock, was released on April 1,
2008.[11]
Satriani released a live DVD recording of a concert in Paris titled Live In Paris: I Just Wanna Rock
and a companion 2 CD set on February 2, 2010.[12] In
March 2010 Satriani participated with other guitarists in the Experience
Hendrix Tribute Tour, performing music written and inspired by Jimi
Hendrix.[13][14]
On 29 May 2008 it was revealed that
Satriani was involved in a new hard rock band called Chickenfoot with former Van Halen
members Sammy
Hagar and Michael Anthony, and Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Chad Smith.
The band features Hagar on vocals, Satriani on guitar, Anthony on bass
and Smith on drums.[15]
Their debut album was released on 5 June 2009.[16]
The first single and video released was the track "Oh Yeah," which
was played on the Tonight Show With Conan O'Brien on 5 June 2009.
Satriani received a co-writing credit on all the songs on the band's debut
album.[17]
Broken Records magazine asked Satriani about his new band, and he
enthusiastically mentioned that "it was great fun" and it gives him a
"kick in the music bone" to be playing with such great talent. He
said it felt quite natural to step back and play more rhythm guitar than solo
guitar. Chickenfoot's second album was titled III, and was released on
27 September 2011. Its first single was the track 'Bigfoot'. On its first week
of release, it reached a chart position of #9.
In April, Satriani and Chickenfoot
voiced themselves in an episode of the animated television series Aqua Teen Hunger Force. In May 2010,
Satriani announced he was about to enter the studio to record a solo album, and
dates were released for an autumn tour. He also said that demos had been
recorded for a second Chickenfoot album. In May 2010, Satriani joined Sound
Strike, a movement led by Rage Against the Machine singer Zack
de la Rocha protesting Arizona SB1070.[18][19]
As a result, Satriani refuses to perform live in Arizona. Satriani released his
13th studio album Black Swans and Wormhole Wizards,
on October 5, 2010.[20]
On December 4, 2008 Satriani filed a
copyright infringement suit against Coldplay in the
United
States District Court for the Central District of California. Satriani's
suit claims that the Coldplay song "Viva la
Vida" includes "substantial original portions" of the
Satriani song "If I Could Fly" from his 2004 album, Is There Love in Space?. The Coldplay
song in question received two Grammy
Awards for "Song of the Year."[21]
Coldplay denied the allegation.[22][23][24] An
unspecified settlement was reached between the parties.[25]
[edit] Other work
Satriani is credited on many other
albums, including guitar duties on shock-rocker
Alice
Cooper's 1991 album Hey Stoopid, Spinal Tap's 1992 album Break Like the Wind, Blue Öyster Cult's 1988 album Imaginos,
band members Stu
Hamm and Gregg Bissonette's solo albums. He was credited
with singing background vocals on the 1986 debut album by Crowded
House. In 2003, he played lead guitar on The
Yardbirds's release Birdland. In 2006, he made
appearances on tracks for Deep Purple vocalist Ian Gillan's
solo CD/DVD dual disc Gillan's Inn.
On Dream
Theater's 2007 album Systematic
Chaos, Satriani contributed spoken lyrics to the song "Repentance." Satriani contributed a guitar
solo to Jordan Rudess' 2004 solo release Rhythm
of Time. He composed much of the soundtrack for the racing video game
NASCAR 06: Total Team Control and
contributed to Sega Rally Championship. He has in
feature films, including 2006 Christopher Guest film For Your Consideration as the
guitarist in the band that played for the late-night show.[26]
Other films include The Hangover, as the guitarist in the
wedding band, and Moneyball in which he appears as himself
playing Star Spangled Banner.
Satriani in 2005
[edit] Guitar virtuosity
Satriani is considered to be one of
the most technically proficient guitarists,[27]
and is a guitar virtuoso.[28][29]
Satriani has mastered many performance
techniques on the instrument, including legato, two-handed tapping and arpeggio
tapping, volume swells, harmonics and
extreme whammy
bar effects. During fast passages, Satriani favors a legato technique
(achieved primarily through hammer-ons and pull-offs) that yields smooth and
flowing runs. He is also adept at other speed-related techniques such as rapid alternate
picking and sweep picking. Satriani was influenced by blues-rock
guitar icons such as Jimi Hendrix, Eric
Clapton, Jimmy Page, Ritchie
Blackmore and Jeff Beck.[2][30]
Satriani created his own recognizable style and is an influential guitarist.[31]
Satriani has received 14 Grammy nominations[32]
and has sold over 10 million albums worldwide.[33]
[edit] Equipment
Satriani has endorsed Ibanez's JS
Series guitars, and Peavey's JSX amplifier. Both lines were designed
specifically as signature products for Satriani. The Ibanez JS1 (the original
JS model) was based on, and replaced, the Ibanez 540 Radius model that Satriani
first endorsed. Many of his guitars are made by Ibanez, including
the JS1000, and JS1200. These guitars typically feature the DiMarzio PAF
Pro (which he used up until 1993 in both the neck and bridge positions), the DiMarzio Fred
(which he used in the bridge position from 1993 to 2005), and the Mo' Joe and
the Paf Joe (which he uses in the bridge and neck positions, respectively, from
2005 to present day).
The JS line of guitars is his
signature line with the JS1000, JS1200, JS2400, JSBDG, and JS20th using
Ibanez's original Edge double locking tremolo bridge. The JS100 and JS120s both
use Ibanez's Edge 3 tremolo bridge. The JS1600 is a fixed bridge guitar with no
tremolo system. The guitar he was most associated with during the 90s was a
chrome-finished guitar nicknamed "Chrome Boy." This instrument can be
seen on the Live in San Francisco
DVD. However, the guitar used for most of the concert was in fact a lookalike
nicknamed "Pearly," which featured Seymour
Duncan Pearly Gates pickups.
Satriani uses a number of other JS
models such as the JS double neck model, JS700 (primary axe on the self-titled
CD and seen on the 1995 tour "Joe Satriani," which features a fixed
bridge, P-90
pickups, and a matching mahogany body and neck), JS6/JS6000 (natural body), JS1
(the original JS model), JS2000 (fixed bridge model), a variety of JS100s,
JS1000s and JS1200s with custom paint work, and a large amount of prototype
JSs. All double locking bridges have been the original Edge tremolo, not the
newer models, which point to a more custom guitar than the "off the
shelf" models. Joe played a red 7-string JS model, seen in the "G3
Live in Tokyo" DVD from 2005. He also has a prototype 24-fret version of
the JS—now called the JS-2400—which he has used with Chickenfoot. As of late he
has used other prototypes featuring a Sustainer or a JS model with three single
coil-sized humbucker pickups.
Satriani's guitars are usually
equipped with his signature DiMarzio humbucker pickups, Mo' Joe and PAF Joe,
although his 24-fret JS model features a Pro Track single coil-sized, humbucker
pickup in the neck position. Some of his guitars are still equipped with the
pickup models he favored in the past, the DiMarzio FRED and PAF Pro pickups.
Satriani has used a wide variety of guitar amps,
using Marshall for his main amplifier (notably the
limited edition blue coloured 6100 LM model) up until 2001, and his Peavey
signature series amps, the Peavey JSX, thereafter.
The JSX began life as a prototype
Peavey XXX and developed into the Joe Satriani signature Peavey model. However
he still used distortion pedals with the clean channel rather than the built in
od channels. Satriani has used other amplifiers over the years in the studio,
such as the Peavey 5150 (used to record the song 'Crystal
Planet'), Cornford, and the Mesa/Boogie
Mark IIC+ (used to record the song 'Flying in a Blue Dream'), amongst others. He
has recently switched to the Marshall JVM series, having used a modified JVM
410H in his Black Swans and Wormhole Wizards tour in 2010 and with Chickenfoot
in 2010 and 2011.
These modified JVM Marshall amps
were prototypes for a signature amp which was scheduled for release in 2011.
The reverb has been replaced by noise gates which cancel any lag when switching
channels. The clean channel has been replaced by the clean channel of a 6100 LM
model which he likes as an option to use distortion pedals with. The orange od
channel and the modern red od channel have been better matched with each other
as he still claims to prefer the organic od channels of the JVM amp rather than
pedals. The red od channel has been modified to be based more on beefy rock
than a nu-metal sound. The fx-loop has been simplified to be serial only.
His effects
pedals include the Vox wah,
Dunlop
Cry Baby wah, RMC Wizard Wah, DigiTech
Whammy, BK Butler Tube Driver, BOSS DS-1, BOSS CH-1, BOSS CE-2, BOSS DD-2
and a standard BOSS DD-3 (used together to emulate reverb effects), BOSS BF-3,
BOSS OC-2, Barber Burn Drive Unit, Fulltone Deja Vibe, Fulltone Ultimate
Octave, and Electro-Harmonix POG (Polyphonic Octave Generator), the latter
being featured prominently on the title cut to his 2006 Super
Colossal. Satriani has partnered with Planet Waves to create a
signature line of guitar picks and guitar straps featuring his sketch art.
Although Satriani endorses the JSX,
he has used many amps in the studio when recording, including the Peavey
Classic. He used Marshall heads and cabinets, including live, prior to his
Peavey endorsement. Recently Satriani used the JSX head through a Palmer
Speaker Simulator. He has released a Class-A 5-watt tube amp called the
"Mini Colossal." Satriani has been using a Marshall JVM410 head in
live gigs since 2009.[34][35] He
is currently working with Vox on his own line of signature effects
pedals designed to deliver Satriani's trademark tone plus a wide range of new
sounds for guitarists of all playing styles and ability levels. The first being
a signature distortion pedal titled the "Satchurator," and the
"Time Machine," which will be a delay pedal, with more to follow,
including a wah pedal called the "Big Bad Wah."[36] On
March 3, 2010 a new pedal was announced on Satriani's website regarding the new
Vox overdrive pedal called "Ice 9."[37]
[edit] Recurring themes
Satriani during a concert in
Rijnhal, Arnhem,
2008.
Satriani's work frequently makes
references to various science fiction stories and ideas. "Surfing
with the Alien," "Back to Shalla-Bal,"
and "The Power Cosmic 2000" refer to the comic book character Silver
Surfer, while "Ice 9" refers to the secret government ice weapon
in Kurt
Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle. "Borg Sex" is a reference
to Star
Trek, which features a homogeneous
cybernetic
race known as the Borg. His albums and songs often have
other-worldly titles, such as Not of this Earth, Crystal
Planet, Is There Love in Space?, and Engines of Creation.
On the album Super
Colossal, the song titled "Crowd Chant" was originally called
"Party on the Enterprise." "Party on the Enterprise"
featured sampled sounds from the Starship Enterprise from the Star Trek TV show. But as
Satriani explained in a podcast, legal issues regarding the samples could not be
resolved and he was unable to get permission to use them.[38] Satriani
then removed the sounds from the song and called it "Crowd Chant."
The song is used as goal celebration music for a number of National Hockey
League teams and MLS teams including the Minnesota Wild and New England
Revolution.[39]
The song is also used in the EA Sports hockey video game NHL 10.
"Redshift Riders," another
song on the Super Colossal album, is "based on the idea
that in the future, when people can travel throughout space, they will
theoretically take advantage of the cosmological redshift effect
so they can be swung around large planetary objects and get across [the]
universe a lot faster than normal," Satriani said in a podcast about the
song.[40]
On the album Professor Satchafunkilus and the Musterion of Rock the song
"I Just Wanna Rock," is about a giant robot on the run who happens to
stumble upon a rock concert.[41]
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