Pete Anderson Telecaster Trendsetter - ASK ZAC EP 35

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024
  • CORRECTION: Pete used 7 out of the 21 stockpiled Yoakam originals on each of the first 3 albums they released together.
    Pete Anderson turned Nashville on its ear with his playing and production on Dwight Yoakam's 1986 release, Guitars, Cadillacs, Etc., Etc. His use of a Tele and Fender Deluxe Reverb amp, instead of the Music City norm of a Strat going direct with heavy chorus, made Dwight's record stand-out, and radio and record buyers responded by quickly turning Yoakam into a bonafide star. In this AZ episode, I give some backstory on Anderson, show some of his licks, and how his work ethic and street smarts paid off for him.
    To Support the Channel, go to my store at - www.askzac.com
    Spotify Playlist for Pete:
    open.spotify.c...
    Gear used in Video:
    2019 Danocaster Blackguard (1953 Telecaster Style) with Ron Ellis 52T (Bridge) and Julian Lage (Neck)
    danocaster.com/
    Strings:
    D'Addario NYXL 10,12,16, 24, 34, 44.
    Pick:
    Blue Chip TPR 35 RB
    Amp:
    1965 Deluxe Reverb amp with Celestion V30 speaker
    Effects used:
    TC Polytune
    Mirage compressor pedal
    9v power via Truetone CS6 amzn.to/38S9rZK #askzac #guitartech #telecaster

Komentáře • 234

  • @fivewattworld
    @fivewattworld Před 4 lety +49

    I remember reading about Pete Anderson in a guitar magazine and seeking out "Guitars, Cadillacs..." and not having a sense of where country music had gone, immediately felt the Buck Owens sort of TV country I'd seen as a kid. Thanks for filling all of that in for me with this Zac. Always learn stuff here. That's why I'm such a bigger support of "Ask Zac"!

    • @WillyMcCoy50
      @WillyMcCoy50 Před 4 lety

      Big 5watter fan here though you drift into higher wattage from time to time. Love it! Waiting for a one pickup wonder video sometime!
      Peace!

    • @lastofthe4horsemen279
      @lastofthe4horsemen279 Před 3 lety

      I had that magazine with Pete.

    • @artheriford
      @artheriford Před 2 lety

      As a kid, I listened to a lot of Ricky Skaggs, Waylon Jennings, Merle Haggard. Then Dwight showed up and I felt the same way. Where was country music going? It was was way different

  • @bethsimmonds6320
    @bethsimmonds6320 Před 4 lety +36

    Pete Anderson and Mike Campbell are two of the most underappreciated guitar players. Their contribution to country music and rock ‘n’ roll is immeasurable.

  • @danajones8685
    @danajones8685 Před 4 lety +31

    Up until March 9th, with the stay-at-home orders, Pete has been playing blues every Monday night at the Burbank Moose Lodge. Very open to sharing his knowledge and his stage rig. He has his own line of guitars from Reverend.

    • @SuperBuzz71
      @SuperBuzz71 Před 4 lety +4

      Dana Jones That is F ink incredible! When the Rona blows over I am coming out to see it even if I have to join the Moose. I saw him on his first solo tour at a small club in early 90's. He came out with an attitude like he had something to prove from the start. Introduced himself with "Staches, stashes, Staches, where ever you put your stash is proud to present ME". And then he laid into it. We had a front row table at some point during One Day Our Time Will Come I realized some other local player was leaning over my shoulder toward the magic. I turned around recognized every killer player in town had town had showed up too. It was magic, man. We hung out at the bar drinking beer with him afterwards and his confidence and attitude was amicable and cool as hell. A bad ass but not an asshole. I'm coming out to the moose lodge when the Rona clears.

    • @okiecowpokey
      @okiecowpokey Před 2 lety

      They played the Palomino club pretty regularly too.

  • @gregarnold1696
    @gregarnold1696 Před 4 lety +14

    I was in radio in the mid 80s and Pete Anderson's guitar cut through like a blade great stuff

  • @etburkentine455
    @etburkentine455 Před 4 lety +15

    I started playing when I was 10 and still going at it at the age of 45. I grew up listening to classic country but was a total hard rock and heavy metal kind of kid in my early teen years. In high school I started listen to Dwight. I would ride around in my 82' diesel Jetta and the radio didnt have a cassette player so I was eating c batteries like a champ just reaching back and flipping my Dwight albums around in a crappy boom box. Pete blew my mind. With all the stuff I was into and so focused on shred techniques, Pete bent my ear like nothing I ever heard and strived to play like that ever since. Pete is one of my guitar heroes. So it was funny going from an RG Ibanez and instantly wanting a tele in the worst way. His sound was amazing and pre- internet mysteries still existed and just had me chasing that sound still to this day. Thanks Zac! Pete is so worth recognizing. He and Dwight changed things in the most radical way at that time and as far as I'm concerned nothing has had that impact and making the old so amazingly radical. The solo on Little Sister. My Lord

    • @SuperBuzz71
      @SuperBuzz71 Před 4 lety

      ET Burkentine I love every damn word of that. Also, I miss the pre-internet days of mystery

  • @teleclasster
    @teleclasster Před 4 lety +18

    Pete's perfect recording, "Thousand Miles From Nowhere". Tele w bigsby, super hot signal, expressive chords and killer solos.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety +4

      I love that track!

    • @kevdean9967
      @kevdean9967 Před 4 lety +1

      @@AskZac I was actually stuck, flat broke, and literally a thousand miles from nowhere in the late 90's and listened to the "This Time" album a lot. That song, and not to sound like I'm aspiring to any form of literary nobelness was a form of etherial escape for me!!!

    • @TheMax1230
      @TheMax1230 Před 4 lety +2

      I always thought that was a strat lol!

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety +3

      @@TheMax1230 It was a Tele with a whammy of some kind. In an old mag he said it was a parts Tele with a floyd

    • @teleclasster
      @teleclasster Před 4 lety +1

      @@TheMax1230 I don't know if this is the one, but it sure sounds like the tone on the record. 3 pickup tele style, some kind of tremolo, looks to be on middle pickup : czcams.com/video/QpQ4c3b_RJ8/video.html

  • @rexbostwick3830
    @rexbostwick3830 Před 11 měsíci +1

    The first time I ever heard Pete Anderson with Dwight, was like the first time I heard Knopler on Sultan's of Swing. It changed me and challenged me completely, but for the better.

  • @tomforsythe7024
    @tomforsythe7024 Před 3 lety +4

    I remember when Guitars, Cadillacs, etc, etc came out. Everyone was talking about it, because it brought back real Country Music, but was a fresh take on the genre. The videos were avant garde, his look was iconic, the graphic design on the album, everything said Dwight was a force to be reckoned with.

  • @superbroadcaster
    @superbroadcaster Před rokem +2

    Pete is one of my biggest guitar heroes. He's well known for his work on Dwight's hits, but his work on Dwight Live is astounding. I've listened to almost every song in Dwight's discography involving Pete at least a couple times and Pete has requoted lick ideas only a handful of times.
    Absolute monster and his playing mindset is very unique, should really be talked about more.

  • @guitareveryone
    @guitareveryone Před 4 lety +14

    Tele plugged straight into an old Blackface Deluxe and cranked. That’s Pete’s vintage sound. I think he probably clipped the bright caps in his amp. Great episode Zac!

    • @therhodeo
      @therhodeo Před 4 lety +4

      Esquire plugged into heavily modified Deluxe Reverbs that don't sound anything like a stock deluxe reverb.

    • @misterknightowlandco
      @misterknightowlandco Před 4 lety

      And now he uses a line 6 pod...

    • @therhodeo
      @therhodeo Před 4 lety

      @@misterknightowlandco Was. AxeFx into a fryette power amp now.

  • @thebenderbunker
    @thebenderbunker Před 4 lety +2

    Great to see you recognize Pete Anderson with this video! Pete was my "gateway drug" into Twang country playing and I give him props anytime I can on my channel as well! Still can't believe he and Dwight went through so much together and then finally called it off over contracts & money. Even harder to believe they haven't worked all that out by now and done another album and tour together. Buck and Don....Dwight and Pete!

  • @bwalt5931
    @bwalt5931 Před 4 lety +3

    Dwight and Pete revived country music at that time. Great albums.

  • @Mr.SharkTooth-zc8rm
    @Mr.SharkTooth-zc8rm Před měsícem

    I have been very fortunate to see Pete Anderson with Dwight Yoakum about 5 or 6 times back when Dwight and I still had hair on our heads. I've also seen Pete about 4 times on his own. Of course last time was maybe 12 years ago.
    Just as an aside, the first time I saw Dwight and Pete it was on a triple bill with The Blasters and Los Lobos! Incredible show! We were all young guys then...
    I'm not a musician but I really enjoyed this video.

  • @larrywishon8084
    @larrywishon8084 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I totally agree ! Pete Anderson is VERY underrated. I.M.O. "Please, Please Baby" is The Pete Anderson track ! He just goes off, literally ascending up the fretboard until it runs out. GOD ALMIGHTY !

  • @bryantcoleman5619
    @bryantcoleman5619 Před 4 lety +8

    Nice one. I don’t remember who said it, but someone once said you have your entire life to write the songs for your first album and six months to write the songs for your second one. I guess a Pete was hip to that.

  • @stevelankford7343
    @stevelankford7343 Před 4 lety +4

    Love this episode Zac. My wife and I did get to see Dwight with Pete Anderson on guitar in Birmingham back in the early 90’s I think. Anyway, that was a fun show, my wife was beside herself and I just enjoyed the guitar work.

  • @tomburkhardt811
    @tomburkhardt811 Před 3 lety

    WooHoo! You are so knowledgeable about country music and all aspects of it. I simply love hearing about all these pickers from over the years. I can't get enough of it. I'm 65 years old now and was raised on all of this music and am a player myself and a Fender lover too! Thanks Zac for sharing your knowledge once again. 💖

  • @Jamestele1
    @Jamestele1 Před 2 lety

    I love that you examine all the great Tele players from country, rockabilly, etc. That classic Tele you're playing is my dream guitar. I can't believe Pete hired a "stunt man" for Dwight - that's dedication man!

  • @neildavidvandenbergh5422
    @neildavidvandenbergh5422 Před 4 měsíci

    Zac, as per usual, this was an absolutely fantastic piece! 👏🏼 I can't believe that somehow I've only come across Pete's genius within the past couple years, but I'm so glad that a couple of guys, including yourself, have hipped me to him!
    What a fantastic guitar player, arranger, producer, and all around innovator. And yeah, his tone, especially with that wet/dry setup he had, gives me the chills!
    Great job again brother, thanks for posting! 🙏🏼😄

  • @Baci302
    @Baci302 Před 4 lety +1

    I love that sound too. Pete's sound drove that album. Of course, Dwight's voice and the great songs might've contributed some.
    Great stuff. All that hard word that Pete oversaw. We always learn so much from you. Thanks Zac.

  • @robertgandy1519
    @robertgandy1519 Před 4 lety +2

    Another great video. I too love Pete’s playing. Anytime I pick up a Tele I haven’t played before I have to put it on the bridge pick up and play the intro to Guitars, Cadillacs to see if it’s got that sound.

  • @GeorgiaBoy1961
    @GeorgiaBoy1961 Před 3 lety

    Zack, man alive what an excellent review of the amazing Pete Anderson and his influence on country music and country guitar during his years with Dwight Yoakam. Thanks so much for doing it. The guy just knocked me down, bowled me over, with his playing in those years. As a former classic rock and blues type of guy myself, just getting into country guitar in a big way - Pete had a big influence on me. And I have always regarded Dwight as the modern-day successor to Buck Owens, just as I have regarded Pete Anderson as his Don Rich. There are certain guys - even in the country genre - who look down on Pete's work, but the man can flat-out play. His ideas were brilliant, his playing was traditional but unpredictable in a very pleasing way, and his tone and execution were simply superb. And his chops - contrary to popular belief - were nothing to sneeze at. Some of his more-complex passages are masterpieces of country guitar, full of twists and turns and subtle little touches that made his sound in those years unique. Thanks for the info on his "wet-dry" amp setup. That maybe clues us in as to why all of us striving to emulate his legendary tone and sound out in country guitar-land couldn't quite nail it despite playing Teles and vintage Fender tube amps ourselves! I hear that Pete's more-recent work is great too. I'd like to get around to listening to it sometime, if I could just get some of those classic 1980s and 1990s Dwight songs with Pete off my playlist for a while. Just love those old classics!

  • @MarkusRill
    @MarkusRill Před 4 lety +2

    Great stuff! Have always been fascinated by the journey the Yoakam/Anderson records took from feeling very alive and thrilling and almost cowpunkish to becoming very carefully crafted studio productions.
    And thanks for uploading the Richard Bennett interview.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety +1

      Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @martywilkinson6722
    @martywilkinson6722 Před 3 lety

    I always loved his playing. I have the live Dwight Yoakam album and I still listen to it all the time. I appreciate you doing this about him.

  • @Prettynoise
    @Prettynoise Před 4 lety

    Amazing stories. Been a Dwight fan since day 1. Thanks again for the memories.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety

      Glad you enjoyed it

  • @jimpage601
    @jimpage601 Před 4 lety +2

    Fascinating. I love these essays on great players, Zac. Much appreciated!

  • @AllenGarberGuitarFun
    @AllenGarberGuitarFun Před 4 lety

    ‘Guitars, Cadillacs Etc.’ was my dawning moment for country music and country guitar. Blew my mind when it came out...I was listening to all the usual suspects that I still love to listen to and learn from...Zeppelin, SRV, the blues masters, Hendrix, Van Halen...and-I always say it-Dwight and Pete were in my pantheon right along with Page and Plant, Steven Tyler and Joe Perry, David Lee Roth and Eddie Van Halen, etc. I loved this installment of AskZac and looking forward to seeing the Pete interviews!

  • @ericcarpenter3263
    @ericcarpenter3263 Před 4 lety

    Pete Anderson os one of the all time greats. I hate that he doesn’t get as much mainstream attention as others. He is really super human. He is such a beautiful player. I don’t play in that country style, but Zac, you have one of the best behind the scenes channels of all time. Much love from Tulsa.

  • @okiecowpokey
    @okiecowpokey Před 2 lety

    I grew up on country music but by the late 70s was losing interest then along came Dwight & I was blown away. Pete Anderson grabbed me like no one since Roy Buchanan. I became a fanboy & followed them across country. I saw 18 concerts from as close as I could get seats, just to watch Pete. What a monster of a player. Thanks Zac for another great show about another great artist.

  • @JacksonTaylorandTheSinners
    @JacksonTaylorandTheSinners Před 10 měsíci +1

    Pete Anderson and Don Rich are why, I play tele’s.

  • @markaochoa2017
    @markaochoa2017 Před 4 lety

    Pete is one of my biggest guitar hero’s. His new stuff is really good too. Thanks for the episode!

  • @user-jl9kw9gn3m
    @user-jl9kw9gn3m Před 4 měsíci

    That was a great commentary, Zac...I didn't know that Nashville was using strats and going direct 'pre Dwight'
    Lots of irony there too, with Nashville's wimpy sound and Dwight and Pete being fans of 'that Bakersfield Sound ' 😁

  • @andypearce5537
    @andypearce5537 Před 3 lety +1

    Stole a bunch off Pete! And you too. My complements on your use of the word “Pastiche”... 👍👏🏻

  • @themayor6836
    @themayor6836 Před 3 lety

    What a monster player and an original sound & licks. Just hear a few notes and you know it's Pete.

  • @joeldowdy404
    @joeldowdy404 Před 4 lety

    Pete Anderson one of my top 3 favorite guitarist of all time (Chuck B, Don R, Pete A), the first time I heard that guitar in 1986 at the start of Jr High I was hooked in big time. It was the best stuff on country radio!! Finally got my Ask Zac Tshirt I ordered, good day!! Thanks for the nod to Pete A today Zac, love your channel sir!!

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety +1

      Joel, thank you so much for the support. It keeps the show going.

  • @JacksonTaylorandTheSinners

    That first Dwight record changed my life. You’re videos have lead me to leaving my Dusenburg’s at home and bringing my tele’s back on the road. It’s profound how lazy my playing has gotten since, I put my tele’s in storage. And my playing was already pretty lazy. Love your videos. Thank you for making them. 🙏🏼. A side note. Pete and Moot David opened up for us at The Brick in Washington back in around 2006-7 and he was playing through two lines 6’s. They sounded amazing.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 2 lety

      The first album floors me. Thanks for sharing!

  • @guitarsofold100
    @guitarsofold100 Před 4 lety

    We caught Pete Anderson with Dwight Yoakam in concert Melbourne mid 90's Do not forget his slide playing !! He finished the concert with a 10 min blues inspired solo that is imprinted in my brain even today .. A very underrated slide player........... thank you Pete!!

  • @scottreynolds6317
    @scottreynolds6317 Před 4 lety

    Thank you! I've not heard of him until now, but I certainly have heard his music many times!!!! Thank you so much for the Spotify playlist as well!!!

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety

      Thanks for listening

  • @kwik2hear915
    @kwik2hear915 Před 2 lety

    Great info, Pete's got the heat, love his playin!!!!!!!

  • @aguynamedben
    @aguynamedben Před 4 lety +1

    Those C6 bends are mimicking the C6 neck of a pedal steel, i.e. on a double neck pedal steel the neck closest to the player, mostly used for jazz/western swing/old school Texas country.

  • @paspallum
    @paspallum Před 4 lety

    Zac awesome video - I was listening to Dwight Yoakam around 86 87 88 - I had all his albums and I loved Pete Anderson’s guitar playing
    Apart from Johnny Cash this was the only country I had in my record collection and would listen to - Remember it was music like the jades and Garth Brooks her country music where embracing remember it was music like the jades and Garth Brooks her country music where embracing
    And now country music seems to be like a cross between hip-hop and heavy metal with a huge dollop of R&B and pop
    I think what diet and Pete were doing was real country - keep up the good work!

  • @rbanyaga
    @rbanyaga Před 3 lety

    Thanks for the great videos and Spotify link! Pete Anderson’s playing made me want to pick up a Telecaster! His tone and technique are amazing. Those early Dwight albums will always be my favorite but I love his Blues and solo albums too!

  • @telecasterbear
    @telecasterbear Před 4 lety +1

    In the late 80s I was in a two piece cover band. We played a bunch of Dwight songs, making me aware of Pete. Great stuff.

  • @mjt5576
    @mjt5576 Před 4 lety +1

    Pete's playing on "A Thousand Miles From Nowhere" is nothing short of inspirational. Pete is a bad boy.

  • @stantissue2065
    @stantissue2065 Před 4 lety +1

    Pete is a badass. Blue collar Motor City country lick genius. I love to listen to Dwight on Bakersfield Beat, but I’m really there to catch the early Pete Anderson tunes.

  • @ronelliott7262
    @ronelliott7262 Před 4 lety

    Great episode Zac! Pete is the reason I got back into country music. In the 80s there wasn’t a whole lot of good country music. I remember the first time I heard Dwight, I went the next day and bought the record and have been a big fan of Pete and Dwights ever since.

  • @PeterKeaneMusic
    @PeterKeaneMusic Před 4 lety

    Was never much into the guitar heroes of the 70s but when Pete Anderson came along in the 80s spun my head around. Saw him w DY at a small club in 86 or 87 and a few years later at an outdoor show. He utterly owned the stage ( well, Dwight held his own... ). Been following closely since then - he’s the real deal ( country, blues, jazz, etc ).

  • @jeffclark7888
    @jeffclark7888 Před 10 měsíci

    Anything involving Buck Owens and Don Rich and their Telecasters grabs my attention!

  • @putzengiler
    @putzengiler Před 4 lety +1

    The other day I dug out a vinyl copy of "A Town South of Bakersfield 2 " from '88 , it's pretty much a Pete Anderson album, he produces and plays on every track of different artists he compiled plus his own outfit, Pete and the Hotshots...

  • @eaglewindrider7700
    @eaglewindrider7700 Před 4 lety +1

    First time I heard Guitars & Cadillacs I didn’t know a guitar could sound like that made the hair on my body stand up. Would listen to that album over & over. When Pete quit playing with Dwight I quit listening. Always enjoy the insight & history you present as well as your playing & tones. 👍🔥🎸🦅

  • @grahamt33
    @grahamt33 Před 4 lety

    Zak, have just discovered your channel. Mate, you are soooo laid back !!!! Brilliant !

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety

      Thank you kindly!

  • @chippsterstephens6800

    Have really been woodsheading Pete lately, I was struck at how really tight the band is on guitars Cadillacs, and now it makes sense to me, massive rehearsals, Pete’s hooks are not all the flashy but something that you end up humming later, it sticks in your mind, but what stands out to me most as a guitar player, is how he served the song rhythmically, really pushing the song , in a simple way , really sounds powerful, and not wanking to just show us his chops, he served up yokums voice on a golden platter, with a very tight band, just learned honkytonk man, to me that song is absolutely brilliant, Pete has his killer hook, then rhythmically pushes and serves the song well, the dynamics of the acoustic parts, another element here, the only time he really sticks out , it creates tension over the whole song not resolved till the very end, a very simple part played well, my god I wish I could write like that! I know this video is old, but I sure think it’s very valid, and maybe even more so today, so much to learn here. Thanks zak!

  • @gilsanderson3275
    @gilsanderson3275 Před 3 lety

    Another GREAT video Zac! I love the way you are never critical of anyone....like Mo West eliminating amps on recordings.....but you embrace the positive aspects of everyone, regardless of the stupid things they do sometimes. :) Also, thanks for mentioning Dean Parks, a hometown son of Ft Worth, Texas. A lot of people automatically think of Austin as the music source in Texas, but an amazing number of musicians come from Ft Worth. (and that obscure suburb to our east, Dallas)
    I am NOT a country fan, per se, but I can listen to Pete Anderson and Dwight all day. Thanks again, Zac.

  • @Mrpsblobsoflowendmung
    @Mrpsblobsoflowendmung Před 3 lety

    I’m a bass player who obsessed with a couple of three guitar players and you mentioned 2 of them here , Pete and Redd are my fave “country” players along with Nels Cline and Wayne Krantz

  • @haldumille5594
    @haldumille5594 Před 4 lety

    Number 341 at one hour! Talkin' Teles, talkin' PA. Nice. Thanks Zac!

  • @troyoswald5683
    @troyoswald5683 Před 4 lety

    Absolutely wonderful! Thanks so much. LOVE your channel Zac. Love your presentation style.

  • @Dman85612
    @Dman85612 Před 4 lety

    Pete sounds like he listened to Roy Buchanon doing those sixth bends and suspensions .
    He played for the song and had the good sense to cover classic honky tonk...definitely the anti Nashville sound...his leads hardly sounded worked out and 1st or second takes seat of the pants LIVE playing ...we covered lots of Dwight in the band I played it at the time ...people loved dancing to it .It was just fun music to play and because of the trad. Sound it appealed to new and old.. the hardest thing was finding a vocalist with that Dwight Yoacham honk.
    Thanks again Zac..great episode.

  • @davidmahoherrezuelo
    @davidmahoherrezuelo Před 3 lety

    I go to buy the new Squier classic vibe Esquire Custom 60 in black FSR....for Pete... GREAT episode Zak!

  • @Kan-o-tex
    @Kan-o-tex Před 3 lety

    Pete Anderson has probably influenced my picking more than any other single player. I'll never forget buying the "Guitars, Cadillacs..." cassette one hot summer in OKC and hearing it for the first time; it changed everything. A giant in his own right, and without Pete I might never have discovered Roy Nichols, Don Rich and Clarence White. Within a few weeks of hearing that first album (I know, the e.p. on Oak, but G,C etc. was really the first album) some friends and I had the privilege of seeing Dwight play at a strip mall country bar called Nothin' But Country. Pretty sure the band was just set up on the floor, and we saw them leaving the gig in a couple of black Lincoln Continentals. What a show. I wish Pete and Dwight could make up and put out at least one more great album.
    Thanks for the video!

  • @CoryHawthorneCharmGames

    Pete is an amazing player and producer and just one heck of a nice guy.

  • @maxwhitten8376
    @maxwhitten8376 Před 4 lety

    Thanks again Zac!!!
    The wiring diagram is a big hit in my house!♥️

  • @WillyMcCoy50
    @WillyMcCoy50 Před 4 lety

    Just found your channel through the search for The Harvard Amplifier and ended up binge watching your videos. You have a refreshing take that is backed by insight and talent/experience. Bless you and your telecaster! Oh yeah, Subbed!

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety +1

      Awesome, thank you!

    • @WillyMcCoy50
      @WillyMcCoy50 Před 4 lety

      @@AskZac I also found your TrueTone interview with Pete Anderson. What an affable guy! He didn't want no "hippie dippie" slathered on his working Telecaster!! LOL!

  • @MrKB1007
    @MrKB1007 Před 4 lety +1

    Awesome stuff. Would love something similar on Vince Gill.

  • @JS-mz4xf
    @JS-mz4xf Před rokem

    I had the good fortune to become good friends with Pete during our time at GIT. I can remember numerous evenings when we would get together and work out licks late into the night at his place or mine. I learned an awful lot from him during those times. One day he called me and asked if I'd like to take his place in a country-rock band playing locally in the San Fernando Valley I asked him why he would be giving up a 4 night a week gig and he just said he was going to go and give it a try with a singer he knew. The rest is history.

  • @hearpalhere
    @hearpalhere Před 4 lety

    I didn't know anything about Pete Anderson except that there's a signature model guitar from Reverend. This was really great to learn more and I'll definitely check out some of the songs you've referred to. Thanks Zac!

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety +1

      Then I have done my job. Thank you

  • @tristensmithguitar
    @tristensmithguitar Před 4 lety

    Good stuff, Zac! Pete is one of the all-time greats.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety

      Couldn't agree more!

  • @bddmhopp5
    @bddmhopp5 Před 4 lety

    Love the playing to back up the stories. Thanks,

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety

      Glad you enjoy it!

  • @kallejularebo
    @kallejularebo Před 4 lety

    Pete is the King in my humble opinion. Got the chance to see him with Dwight in Austin in the 90'.
    Also blown away with his blues playing these days, which I had the fortune to witness live at the Moose in LA a couple of years ago.

  • @Jamestele1
    @Jamestele1 Před rokem

    Pete Anderson is a true original.

  • @Wildman9
    @Wildman9 Před 4 lety

    Yes sir another fact filled journey.Thanks Zac. Great videos.👍🎸

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety

      Thanks for watching!

  • @Crizzy4141
    @Crizzy4141 Před 3 lety

    Pete Anderson...is my favorite!

  • @zinggdrew
    @zinggdrew Před 3 lety

    Thanks. That was great.

  • @randalclarke5487
    @randalclarke5487 Před 4 lety

    Yes...!!!! Thank you! You're opening declaration of Anderson being underrated got me to subscribe! Lol thank you for honoring one of my heroes and biggest influences!!!

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety

      Thanks for the sub!

    • @randalclarke5487
      @randalclarke5487 Před 4 lety

      @@AskZac I saw where you worked at Music Man in Kingsville... I gave lessons there in 88-89. I was there with the Saenz family and Russell Blomsteadt managed it.

  • @danielcombs3207
    @danielcombs3207 Před 3 lety

    I saw Pete when he worked with Steve Forbert in the early maybe mid 80's he was incredible. I didn't know him but I never forgot him after he was introduced.

  • @TheMax1230
    @TheMax1230 Před 4 lety +1

    I spent a lot of time trying to replicate Pete's stuff. A couple years ago when he went full Axe Fx he sold me his Number 1 Deluxe Reverb from the old Dwight days. That amp is a monster.

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety

      Well that is just awesome! I bet it is a monster

    • @TheMax1230
      @TheMax1230 Před 4 lety +1

      It had an EVM 12 when I received it. It does sound like the mids are on 10. Converted to 6L6s with what looks like a twin transformer although it could be from a Super Reverb possibly. It gets so hot there is a little computer fan installed lol. This thing is loud loud loud! There is also a 1/4 inch out that syncs the tremelo with the other one he sold back in the early 2000s as well as an effects loop. Here's a link to some pictures on Reverb. reverb.com/item/4529821-pete-anderson-1965-fender-blackface-deluxe-heavily-modded

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety

      Wow! Thank you so much for sharing this.

  • @rrrrdavid1
    @rrrrdavid1 Před 4 lety

    I do believe Pete went to GIT. Pete is a great player as seen by the comments on here. In my nowhere career I could never get a band to rehearse heavily. Only one band I ever played in would rehearse just about every night and what do you know it was the best band I was in. Great video Zac.

  • @matthunting1162
    @matthunting1162 Před 4 lety

    Nice to see Pete get some well deserved recognition . I can never get too much of that twangy doinky stuff !

  • @lastofthe4horsemen279
    @lastofthe4horsemen279 Před 3 lety

    To me Pete Anderson was my generation guitar hero.Loved the New Bakersfield sound Pete and Dwight were laying down

  • @peterdollard853
    @peterdollard853 Před 2 lety

    Wow great combination of music and talk... really well presented..I would have liked to hear his take on Fast as You... I think i blew up my steels fuzz tone trying to copy his solo

  • @J_Fowler
    @J_Fowler Před 4 lety

    Just discovered you on Spotify! Thanks for the playlists!!

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před 4 lety

      Glad you like them!

  • @markhighfill
    @markhighfill Před 4 lety

    I got busy with my day job and quit playing for 20 years. In '04 I was working in Iraq and a buddy downloaded a complete Dwight Yoakam playlist to my computer. I stayed in the Middle East for 5 1/2 years listening to that. When I retired and came home I bought a Pete Anderson signature guitar.

  • @Docsjeff
    @Docsjeff Před rokem

    In 86’ our Bass player lived in SannAntonio,& listened to KBUK on Sundays.He recorded a new song called Guitars Cadillacs on a Sony Walkman and played it for me over the phone.
    The album hadn’t even been released I don’t believe.From that moment forward,it was all we had on our setlist,along with tunes from the Wagoneers out of Austin.
    That bass player is Brinson S.’s brother Charlie.
    We were all in a band playing full time.

  • @codyhudman2763
    @codyhudman2763 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for another great episode Zac! I just got my main telecaster back after doing the tone bypass for the neck pickup, as you recommended. Why did I never do this before!! I've taken the covers off, used strat pu's in the neck, but never thought of this to get a more open sound from this pickup. Thanks!

  • @elsinore5364
    @elsinore5364 Před 4 lety

    I saw Dwight open up for Husker Du in NYC 1986. His band was super tight. And then Husker Du came on. I've never been more whipsawed.

  • @jimbeaux4988
    @jimbeaux4988 Před 4 lety +5

    My band got to open for Dwight in the late 80s. I was disappointed to find that Pete was not there but was replaced for some time by the very capable Eddy Shaver. Eddy was very nice to me and showed me the whole rig. He was told by Dwight what to use. He had a Tele string with 13s. He let me "try" to play it. I was playing 9s at the time. The amps were either 2 twins or deluxes on the ground behind him with a small slap delay pedal between them. Then, from one amp, a 4x12 was being run UNDER the stage. Thunderous!
    Eddy played the songs flawlessly. I watched from side stage and picked up a couple of licks I did not know yet.

    • @roberthdahlquist
      @roberthdahlquist Před 4 lety +1

      Cool you got to meet him - he wasn’t around long enough! The word I got was that Eddy (Billy Joe Shaver’s son) preferred his Strat, but Dwight wanted him to use a Tele. Same with amps; Eddy preferred Marshalls (? - not sure about this) but, like the Tele, Dwight wanted that “look” for his playing with him.

    • @jimbeaux4988
      @jimbeaux4988 Před 4 lety +2

      @@roberthdahlquist That is correct. I actually got open up for Billy Joe Shaver at a small club at a later time and got to talk to Eddy again. He had his usual Strat and Marshall at that gig. The 4x12 was off the floor and right behind his head! He sounded completely different than the Dwight gig. In fact he remarked that he barely remembered any of Dwight licks. I was shocked when I learned of his passing. I did not know about his personal demons. He was a real nice, sharp guy. A real fiery player. RIP.
      Edit: I had his name spelled wrong. Also, at the Billy Joe gig he may have had the 4x12 pointed backwards. Memory and all that . lol.

    • @therhodeo
      @therhodeo Před 4 lety +2

      @@roberthdahlquist most videos have Eddy using a Mesa Mark II or III Coliseum amp. 6x6l6 for 150 watts into a 4x12 loaded with EVM-12ls. Seismographs could record you playing your E string through that rig.

    • @roberthdahlquist
      @roberthdahlquist Před 4 lety

      @@jimbeaux4988 I appreciate this! Nice to get it from you first-hand, especially since not that much has been written or said about Eddy. (But I do remember hearing it was Dickie Betts who’d given him that sunburst Strat.) Thanks for responding!

  • @gvrussell9230
    @gvrussell9230 Před 4 lety

    I'm still playing at 67. The first electric guitar I ever heard was Luther Perkins. I've been a strat guy for 30 years but just got the first Tele I've had in a long long time and I'm lovin' it. Traded a Marshall Amp for it. I enjoy your videos.

  • @boco1951
    @boco1951 Před 4 lety

    Pete is a great guy and guitar player!

  • @josephmullinsii8461
    @josephmullinsii8461 Před 4 lety

    When I bought my t style guitar (Harley Benton TE-20 left handed, brass saddle, fender 62 neck, Only Music blues tribute lone star bridge, gunstreet bleed wiring and bone nut upgrades) the first thing I learned was the beginning of Guitars Cadillacs!

  • @mikeadams4605
    @mikeadams4605 Před 4 lety

    Pete was a great producer too.....he did one of my favorite Blue Rodeo albums, Casino

  • @martynsparkes7118
    @martynsparkes7118 Před 4 lety

    Pete andersons playing especially with Dwight is kind of Old school meets wacky but its him being him you gotta find you....,its very very clever stuff,some of it is really mad off the wall kind of stuff and things like Aint that lonely yet are just sublime..,but having said that he played the song you know and wasnt just sitting there waiting to shred...,best thing you can be is a team player,just awesome,a constant joy to hear,thanks Zac..

  • @robertgunning9667
    @robertgunning9667 Před 4 lety +1

    thanks for the wiring diagram!

  • @RBZ3
    @RBZ3 Před 4 lety

    Thanks a lot Zac and congratulations on passing 10,000 sub's.

  • @elipatrickmusic
    @elipatrickmusic Před 4 lety

    Pete is one of the best EVER

  • @edhardiman835
    @edhardiman835 Před 3 lety

    I got in a message board exchange with Pete Anderson over our shared delight of the amp emulations found specifically on the POD 2.0. Especially the 50’s small Fender Amps and Pete tells me the blackface fender deluxe emulation are the best out there. He’s a great guy and it’s a downright shame him and Dwight stopped working together...

  • @simply3141592654
    @simply3141592654 Před 2 lety +1

    Pete's signature Reverend guitars are very nice

  • @txtele
    @txtele Před rokem

    I can honestly say that Dwight yoakam's career may not have even existed without Pete Anderson Dwight owes so much to those memorable hooks that Pete played and the arranging and the production that he did on those albums it cannot be overstated how important that Pete is to Dwight's music and we owe a lot to these guys creating a small little revolution in the industry and helping get away from some of the bad practices that were taking place and recording industry hence no amps electric drums yada yada so and so on

    • @AskZac
      @AskZac  Před rokem +1

      Pete is incredibly important in the history of country music. Especially the 80s and 90s.

    • @jeffclark7888
      @jeffclark7888 Před 10 měsíci

      Similar to Buck Owens-Don Rich.

  • @schrammguitars
    @schrammguitars Před 4 lety

    Loved this episode Zac.Thanks

  • @andrediaz392
    @andrediaz392 Před 3 lety

    He's the reason I bought 3 Teles... But live his sound was sooooo different from the album's. Still a monster on guitar.

  • @timothydaniels504
    @timothydaniels504 Před 4 lety

    Really interesting history.

  • @snoogie6015
    @snoogie6015 Před 4 lety

    Pete Anderson is one of the biggest influence on my playing