Danny Gatton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Danny Gatton (September 4, 19454 October 1994) was a talented and enigmatic American guitarist who committed suicide at his Maryland home in 1994 while still relatively unknown to the public. A biography, Unfinished Business: The Life and Times of Danny Gatton by Ralph Heibutzki, was published in 2003. It has a voluminous discography.

Contents

Gatton was born in Washington, DC on September 4, 1945. His father, Daniel W. Gatton Sr., was a rhythm guitarist known for his unique percussive style, who left his musical career to raise his family in a more stable profession. The younger Gatton grew up to share his father's passion for the instrument.

Danny Gatton began his career playing in bands while still a teenager. He began to attract wider interest in the 1970s while playing guitar and banjo for the group Liz Meyer & Friends. He made his name as a performer in the Washington, D.C. area during the 1980s, both as a solo performer and with his Redneck Jazz Explosion, in which he would trade licks with virtuoso pedal steel player Buddy Emmons over a tight bass-drums rhythm which drew from blues, country, bebop and rockabilly influences. He also backed Robert Gordon and Roger Miller.

Gatton's playing combined musical styles such as jazz, blues and rockabilly in an innovative fashion, and he was known by some as "the telemaster" or "the world's greatest unknown guitarist". However, he never achieved the commercial success that his talent arguably deserved. His skills were most appreciated by his peers such as Eric Clapton, Willie Nelson, and his childhood idol Les Paul.

He usually played a 1953 Fender Telecaster (Fender now manufactures a replica of his heavily customized instrument), with Joe Barden pickups and Fender Super 250L's, or Nickel Plated Steel (.010 to .046 with a .015 for the G) strings. As a slide Gatton would use a beer bottle or mug.

He always played with a jazz style teardrop pick, and was capable of intricate passages combining Bluegrass, bebop, and garage sounds, executed with amazing clarity and at dizzying speeds. His picking technique was a combination of pick and fingers, primarily his middle and ring fingers on his right hand. The basis of his picking technique was Banjo rolls -- he was an accomplished Banjo player and learned the traditional (Scruggs style?) right hand technique from playing the Banjo. He modified a Banjo player's use of thumb and finger picks and used a jazz style pick and his fingers without fingerpicks.

On October 4, 1994, Gatton locked himself in his garage and shot himself. He left behind no explanation. In retrospect of his suicide, people around Danny have suggested that he may have gone in and out of depression for many years. Certainly, he made statements alluding to taking his own life during several severe episodes of what should have been recognized as a depressed mental state. His widow and several other people who knew Danny well have stated that Danny probably should have seen professional help to deal with his periodic lapses into depression.

Heibutzki, Ralph (2003). Unfinished business : the life & times of Danny Gatton. San Francisco: Backbeat Books. ISBN 0-87930-748-X. 

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