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Gaugamela

(2,970 posts)
Thu Aug 7, 2025, 02:53 PM Aug 7

MY FATHER, GUITAR GURU TO THE ROCK GODS

When the greatest musicians of the 1970s needed an instrument—or a friend—my dad was there.
By Nancy Walecki
The Atlantic


This is an enjoyable article about Fred Walecki, guitar shop owner, luthier, and valued friend to the LA music scene. It’s kind of long, but I skimmed it and the names and anecdotes just popped out at me. There’s a gift link below the quote.

My father was a competent musician, though never thought about doing it professionally. He learned some songs, including Browne’s “My Opening Farewell,” so he could show customers different aspects of a guitar’s tone. “He always really liked to show me that he could play it, which I felt very honored by, you know?” Browne said. “And that goes right along with him pulling out a guitar and saying, ‘I have to show you something. Check this out.’ And he would show you what invariably would be a phenomenal guitar.”

Check this out : the three-word portal into the Fred Walecki Experience. Check this out, and he’d hand John Entwistle his first-ever Alembic bass, a brand he would go on to use for many years with the Who. Check this out, and he’d pull out a guitar by Mark Whitebook or David Russell Young, luthiers he’d discovered in the mountains of Topanga Canyon, and whose instruments he sold to James Taylor and Gram Parsons. Glyn Johns bought a David Russell Young so he’d have a good acoustic guitar for the rock bands he worked with. (Johns showed me that guitar when I visited him at home last fall; he apologized for all the scratch marks. “Everybody’s played this,” he said. “Eric has played it; Jeff Beck’s played it; Jimmy Page has played it.”)

Guest does an imitation of my father rummaging around in his shop for the item he needs you to see. Wait, what’s this thing? he’ll say, as he unearths some treasure. My dad has been doing this for as long as I can remember. It was just over here [Dad lifts up a touring case, printed with b.d., from a Bob Dylan tour]. Maybe it’s under [peers behind a platinum record the Eagles gave him for One of These Nights]. I think it’s just [moves aside a priceless Spanish guitar by the 19th-century luthier Antonio de Torres Jurado]. Oh, here! The joy for my father is in watching other people check this out. This is why when he looks at me with pure excitement and asks me to try the soup he has made from three different types of Progresso, I accept the spoon from him.

I’ve tried to get my father to wax poetic about the music that his customers were making in the ’60s and ’70s. He was there for the birth of what is sometimes called the California Sound, a blend of country, bluegrass, folk, and rock that is utterly distinctive and nearly impossible to categorize. How to contain the Beach Boys and the Byrds, the Doors and the Mamas & the Papas, Bonnie Raitt and Joni Mitchell? Gram Parsons called his own sound Cosmic American Music, and maybe that’s a better term for the entire Los Angeles scene. The music, he said, would unite “longhairs, shorthairs, people with overalls, people with their velvet gear on.” Cosmic American Music, at least, captures the movement’s spiritual aspirations, while gesturing to the distance between its stars.

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2025/09/fred-walecki-guitar-expert-westwood-music/683558/?gift=zG3QhAU6gmMahXOLzb6c3RdbkFBoJQGFXdPvNlL9YN8&utm_source=copy-link&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share
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MY FATHER, GUITAR GURU TO THE ROCK GODS (Original Post) Gaugamela Aug 7 OP
What a great read. Thanks for the gift link! erronis Aug 7 #1
Thanks! A feel-good read can't hurt these days. Gaugamela Aug 7 #2
Excellent Article ProfessorGAC Aug 11 #3

erronis

(21,146 posts)
1. What a great read. Thanks for the gift link!
Thu Aug 7, 2025, 03:36 PM
Aug 7

Last edited Thu Aug 7, 2025, 04:13 PM - Edit history (1)

Just starting it and seeing so many well-known, beloved artists' names is wonderful.

Edited to add one of hundreds of quotable passages:

Early in her career, Bonnie Raitt was playing in little clubs and “wasn’t even expecting to do this for a living. It was kind of a hobby for me,” she told me. But Dad, she says, “showed me around and showed me the whole world of things that I could have.” He explained how different amplifiers could change her sound, and he took her to a trade show where he introduced her to the genteel, rather ancient chairman of Martin Guitar, C. F. Martin III.

Raitt has a mischievous, bawdy sense of humor. (As a kid, I understood I was never to repeat a Bonnie Raitt joke.) Dad told C. F. Martin that Raitt was a rising star and may be in need of a custom-made guitar. “What I really need is a custom-made IUD,” she said. Martin had no idea what she was talking about, so Dad jumped in: “Uh, it’s a lot like a Martin D-35.”

ProfessorGAC

(74,182 posts)
3. Excellent Article
Mon Aug 11, 2025, 03:40 PM
Aug 11

I've heard of the store, but never got over there when in SoCal.
Now, I'm wishing I did.

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