“AS A SOLO PERFORMER, THE GUITAR FOR ME IS A
band in a box,” says Irish-Canadian singersongwriter
and fingerstylist Stephen Fearing.
“I’m trying to get as many textures as I can out
of it, so things remain interesting from song
to song. I used to bring a bunch of delays and
reverbs on the road to make that happen, but
then the airlines changed the weight rules,
which meant I had to carry around a lot less
in order to still make a profit on tour. So the
textures became part of how I play the guitar.”
Fearing just released The Man Who Married
Music [True North], a best-of collection that
spans his 21-year career as one of Canada’s
most celebrated folk-rock performers and
acoustic guitar virtuosos. In addition, he’s onethird
of Blackie and the Rodeo Kings, a raucous
alternative rock and country act that also
includes guitarists and vocalists Colin Linden
and Tom Wilson. The group just released their
own career retrospective titled Swinging From
The Chains of Love [True North].
Fearing points to a couple of tracks on his
solo compilation that epitomize his current
approach to creating variation without relying
on effects. “‘The Big East West’ is a country-oriented
tune in which I’m picking little chord
clusters that sound almost like delay,” says
Fearing. “It’s similar to taking a pop piano
approach in which you’re trying to lay down
chords that are four beats to the bar. On ‘Yellowjacket,’
I use a repetitive riff that goes round
and round. Initially, your ear hears the riff as
a distinct part and then it becomes pinned to
the vocal, creating a sense of movement. Doing
things like that help me get away from the
typical singer-songwriter strumming thing that
people expect.”
The unique methods of John Martyn and
Michael Hedges played a major role in propelling
Fearing to go beyond convention.
“Those two more than anybody turned my head
to the endless possibilities of the acoustic guitar,”
explains Fearing. “Specifically, I’m going
for a large bottom end like they did. Martyn
used Echoplex rhythms on albums like Solid
Air, and also often played clawhammer style,
creating a backbeat with his wrist that allowed
him to groove and generate a propulsive, bandlike
sound. Hedges’ ability to bring giant,
percussive sounds to the guitar really inspired
me, too. He emphasized the fact that the guitar
is a big snare drum, and if you use the right
pickup it can sound humungous.”
Fearing’s main acoustic guitar was built by
Linda Manzer in 1990. The deep-body Cowpoke
model features a gentle cutaway with a
German spruce top inlaid with abalone and
boxwood at the sound hole. It’s strung with
medium-gauge Newtone Masterclass Phosphor
Bronze acoustic guitar strings. “It’s an incredibly
robust and strong instrument,” says
Fearing. “I’m a very physical player and my guitar
needs to be able to take a lot of abuse. I’m
not pounding on it willy nilly, but I do a lot of
neck wiggling and hit it pretty hard to create
a big sound, and I play with acrylic nails, so I
have a very strong attack. The guitar also has
a big box and low end, yet it’s still pretty evensounding
from top to bottom, with an
impressive dynamic range.”
Fearing employed Hedges’ pickup advice in
a unique way on his Manzer. It’s equipped with
a Takamine saddle pickup, as well as an Audio-
Technica ATM35 internal condenser mic.
Additionally, the guitar is outfitted with the
guts of a Countryman DI box that powers the
mic—a custom configuration designed by Canadian
luthier John Sharples. The signals are
output through two XLR jacks and routed to
a Pendulum SPS-1 Stereo Preamp. “The
Takamine is the best-sounding pickup I’ve ever
heard, but it’s so hot that it will overdrive most
preamps,” says Fearing. “The Countryman DI
takes that hot signal and transforms it into a
balanced signal. The other drawback with the
Takamine is that it’s very hard sounding when
you pick the guitar right by the bridge. And
the drawback with having a microphone inside
is that the bottom end is wussy and prone to
feedback. I use the Pendulum to EQ the top
out of the pickup and the bottom out of the
microphone, and then I send the two mono
signals to the FOH engineer to be blended. So,
the pickup deals with the volume, presence
and bottom end, and the microphone supplies
the mids and the air on top.”
When Fearing plays with Blackie and the
Rodeo Kings, he focuses on two electric guitars:
a late-’60s avocado green burst Harmony
Rebel and an early-’60s Harmony Monterey.
“The Rebel is beautifully made with gorgeous
aesthetics,” says Fearing. “It’s a hollowbody,
slim-line guitar with F holes and two singlecoil
‘moustache’ pickups. It has separate slider
tone and volume controls and on/off toggle
switches for each pickup, which gives you a lot
of combinations to explore.”
In the acoustic universe, Fearing is known
for using dropped-D, double dropped-D, and
DADGAD tunings. He advocates using open
tunings with discipline instead of as an
ephemeral device. “One of my pet peeves is
singer-songwriters who use open tunings and
just jangle away,” says Fearing. “There’s often
a dissonance that’s initially attractive and then
wears off quickly. Joni Mitchell is a master of
using open tunings with discipline. However,
my generation is full of people who invoke
them to create complicated, jazzy-sounding
chords or just arpeggiate a bunch of chord
changes as the basis of a composition. They’re
missing the point, which is to use them as a
means to a specific end. For instance, if you’re
in standard tuning and play a regular D shape,
you lose your bottom end. You’ll go looking
for the root of the chord on the fourth string
and it won’t have a lot of low-end mass behind
it. But if you tune your low E down to D,
suddenly this really rich, sonorous bottom end
emerges, as well as unison opportunities you
can incorporate into songs to create distinct
tonalities and colors.”
Ultimately, Fearing’s preference is that the
listener focus on his music as a whole, rather
than the sum of its parts. “I want the lyrics,
vocal delivery, melody, and guitar playing to
work together seamlessly,” says Fearing. “When
I come off the stage and someone says ‘I really
loved your show. And by the way, I didn’t know
you were such a great guitarist,’ I know I’ve
done my job well.”