Guitarist Link Wray Dies At 76
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Guitarist Link Wray Dies At 76
Saw this posted on Billboard this morning. Sorry if this is a duplicate:
Guitarist Link Wray Dies At 76
November 21, 2005, 10:00 AM ET
Guitarist Link Wray, who was said to have invented the power chord, the major modus operandi of modern rock guitarists, has died in Copenhagen. He was 76. A native of Dunn, N.C., Wray's style is considered the blueprint for heavy metal and punk music.
The artist died on Nov. 5 and was buried Nov. 18 at Copenhagen's Christian Church, according to his official Web site, which did not reveal the cause of death.
Wray is best known for his 1958 instrumental "Rumble," 1959's "Rawhide" and 1963's "Jack the Ripper." His music has appeared in movies such as "Pulp Fiction," "Independence Day" and "Desperado."
His style is said to have inspired many other rock musicians, including Pete Townsend of the Who. David Bowie, Bob Dylan, Steve Van Zandt and Bruce Springsteen have also been quoted as saying that Wray and "Rumble" inspired them to become musicians.
According to Wray's site, he invented the fuzz tone by deliberately punching holes in his amplifier speakers. In 2002, Guitar World magazine elected him one of the 100 greatest guitarists of all time.
Wray, known for his trademark black leather jacket, gave his last performance in July in Glendale, Calif. He is survived by his wife and son.
Guitarist Link Wray Dies At 76
November 21, 2005, 10:00 AM ET
Guitarist Link Wray, who was said to have invented the power chord, the major modus operandi of modern rock guitarists, has died in Copenhagen. He was 76. A native of Dunn, N.C., Wray's style is considered the blueprint for heavy metal and punk music.
The artist died on Nov. 5 and was buried Nov. 18 at Copenhagen's Christian Church, according to his official Web site, which did not reveal the cause of death.
Wray is best known for his 1958 instrumental "Rumble," 1959's "Rawhide" and 1963's "Jack the Ripper." His music has appeared in movies such as "Pulp Fiction," "Independence Day" and "Desperado."
His style is said to have inspired many other rock musicians, including Pete Townsend of the Who. David Bowie, Bob Dylan, Steve Van Zandt and Bruce Springsteen have also been quoted as saying that Wray and "Rumble" inspired them to become musicians.
According to Wray's site, he invented the fuzz tone by deliberately punching holes in his amplifier speakers. In 2002, Guitar World magazine elected him one of the 100 greatest guitarists of all time.
Wray, known for his trademark black leather jacket, gave his last performance in July in Glendale, Calif. He is survived by his wife and son.
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"Rumble" was actually banned on the radio and it was an instrumental. Hilarious. It certainly does have a nasty, nasty sound. Great stuff. Pretty cool that he really never stopped touring.
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Originally Posted by 12thmonkey
Link rocked.
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Oh well, his time has come. Some guitarist who had a song from Pulp Fiction is what most people will remember by and most people probably didn't realize that he was still alive.
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Originally Posted by ChrisKnudsen
Oh well, his time has come. Some guitarist who had a song from Pulp Fiction is what most people will remember by and most people probably didn't realize that he was still alive.
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Originally Posted by clayg
I think you're confusing him with Dick Dale. He's still alive and well.
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I was fortunate enough to see him play a relatively small club in the early to mid-eighties, not long after he'd married his Danish wife (who was in the audience).
Great show, a great performer, and a great guitarplayer.
Great show, a great performer, and a great guitarplayer.
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Originally Posted by Jippy
Actually, Link Wray's "The Rumble" is featured when Mia is "powdering" her nose at Jack Rabbit Slim's.
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Originally Posted by clayg
I just assumed the poster was thinking about the theme song Misirlou since the Link Wray tune isn't on the soundtrack. But you are correct Rumble was featured in the film.
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I don't know why or how but Link Wray was never on my radar. When I read of his passing and what was said about him I had to investigate. As soon as I heard Rumble I recognized it from Pulp Fiction. I then found and bought the cd "Rumble! The Best of Link Wray" which I have been listening to it all day today....awesome stuff.
http://tinyurl.com/8klr9
http://tinyurl.com/8klr9