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2. Mai 2024 · published 2 May 2024. Classic Interview: The rock 'n' roll icon on tone, hit-making and Hazelwood. (Image credit: Eric Fairchild/Joe Carducci) Duane Eddy, the "Sultan of Twang" has passed away at the age of 86, after a genre-defining career. Here, we're republishing this archive interview in tribute.
1. Mai 2024 · Born in Corning, New York in 1938, Eddy took up the guitar at a young age. Shortly after his family's move to Arizona in 1951, Eddy met a popular local DJ who would play a critical role in his career, Lee Hazlewood. In high school, Eddy formed a country duo, Jimmy & Duane, with a classmate.
1. Mai 2024 · Most of Mr. Eddy’s early recordings were made with the producer and songwriter Lee Hazlewood and released on the Philadelphia-based label Jamie Records.
1. Mai 2024 · Not long after meeting, Eddy and Hazlewood teamed to write many songs including “Movin’ n’ Groovin'” and “Rebel-‘Rouser,” all of which were produced by Hazlewood. The latter became Eddy’s breakthrough hit, reaching #6 on Billboard , and selling over one million copies.
1. Mai 2024 · Eddy and his co-writer and producer, the late Lee Hazlewood, had a way with a title – cue ‘Cannonball’ and the even snappier ‘Yep!’ and ‘Shazam!’ – and moved the guitar on from Les Paul’s clean...
- 1 Min.
- Kevin E G Perry
1. Mai 2024 · It was while living in Coolidge that he hooked up with a DJ named Lee Hazlewood, who cut the young guitarist’s instrumental breakthrough, “Rebel Rouser,” in a Phoenix studio called Audio ...
1. Mai 2024 · Eddy and producer Lee Hazlewood helped create the "Twang" sound in the 1950s, a sound Hazlewood later adapt to his production of Nancy Sinatra's 1960s smash " These Boots Are Made for Walkin.'"...