Joe Walsh
The Eagles Guitarist’s Live Technique
Text: Dieter Roesberg
Photos: D. Roesberg / U. Roesberg / Archive
There’s hardly any other band that makes as much money with
their worldwide tours as the Eagles, who are battling for the first
ranks regarding ticket revenues with Paul McCartney, the Rolling
Stones, Elton John, and U2. However this band also pays back,
with exquisite music, a great show, perfect sound, and
sophisticated technique. The Eagles indulge themselves with
comfortable touring as well as excellent equipment: in occasion of
the Cologne concert Joe Walsh’s guitar technician Mark Reis
allowed G & B [acronym for the magazine “Gitarre & Bass”] a look
on stage and backstage, the guitarist himself was available for a
little interview two days later in Frankfurt.
Guitar World
“Welcome to guitar world”, that was the friendly welcome from guitar technician Mark
Reis, after Joe Walsh’s personal tour assistant Smokey Wendell was kind enough to
smuggle me into the Lanxess Arena. It was preceded by an hour of chaos: in Cologne a
major telecommunications line had broken, the conventional phone network was dead,
the mobile network completely broken down. And the offer to “call me when there are
any problems” was meant in a nice way but was completely useless. That all reminded
me of former times when there were no mobile phones. But as people from Cologne say:
still it always turned out well [this is not translateable in the appropriate slang – it’s
actually funny].
On the right below the big stage there is Mark Reis’ working place that he shares with
Steve “Charley” Cohen, the technician of the Eagles’ second live guitarist Steuart Smith.
Joe Walsh brought about 28 guitars on this tour of which he needs about a third each
night. Also the stage looks rather spartan. Two small Carvin combo amps, a Crate
acoustic amp, a Roland booster for the talk box, a pedal board with a few effects, that’s
all. Mark Reis is working for Joe for already six years and knows every detail of the set-
up: “this equipment sounds really good for what he has to do. For Joe Walsh solo shows
and also for the James Gang concerts he of course still uses Marshalls and his Leslie, but
for the Eagles, a vocal band, the pedals, different fazers, chorus and delay and the small
amps are exactly the right thing. Joe uses his in-ear monitoring only for the vocals, he
wants the stage sound from the combos and monitors. That’s why we also have two
amps which are arranged in a certain angle to each other, so that he can hear them
everywhere.”
Also Steuart Smith’s equipment is well-arranged with two tube combos and a pedal board
– amazing considering the sound diversity he’s creating with them.
Everybody in the crew agrees that Joe Walsh is a “guitar maniac”. All the time he shows
up with new guitars that he saw in some store. Many of the instruments he uses on tours
are run of the mill, or as Mark puts it “right off the wall”. So for example his new white
Strat, a regular standard model that he has just bought. And also the Ibanez Joe Satriani
JS1600 that he just discovered is brand new.
Before we showed up Mark has just put new strings on eight guitars which took him one
and a half hours. Since he’s using an electrical string crank (my secret weapon) he
became much faster he proudly states. Joe uses Ernie Ball and DR strings, .010 to .046
for his electric guitars, .011 to .052 for slide. For the PRS Mira that he also uses for slide
he uses a .084 E-string on the .011 set.
Mark Reis loves his job as he can work in a pleasant atmosphere. But there’s also
everyday life, routine: “there often are simply boring days, only with three additional
hours of concert where we have to fully concentrate on the artists. Then it’s a pity that
we never see anything of the show.” But then he has this in common with every big or
small artist that never sees his own show.
Joe Walsh
Two days later, in a 6 star hotel in Frankfurt, we meet Joe Walsh who together with his
wife gives us the warmest welcome. Manager Smokey leaves us alone, he has to go
shopping with Mrs. Walsh. “Now please don’t tell her that there are many great shops in
Frankfurt”, Smokey growls who actually had been looking forward to his day off. “Then it
will again take forever …”. Appropriately Glenn Frey announces an Eagles classic the next
night. “My wife calls the next song the ‘Credit Card Song’, here’s ‘Take It to the Limit’.”
Joe Walsh is a friendly likeable guy who has a sparkle in his eyes and very seriously and
skillfully starts to talk shop as soon as the topic guitars comes up. You notice that on
stage he’s playing two roles: the serious side man who does his best to make the Eagles
songs sound perfect, but also the clown when it comes to Walsh solo songs.
The manufacturer Paul Reed Smith had arranged the talk with G & B after Joe had visited
the site. “I was in Stevensville at the site, had a look at everything, also the numerous
machines. It’s fantastic what they have there and what they’re doing: the computer
controlled production, and most of all the quality control really enthused me. But the
most exciting thing was Paul’s wood storage: you have to see this. After this we were in
some back room where all the secret material is stored. I couldn’t believe what I saw
there. Wood, 40 to 50 years old, wood of which I never knew it existed. Paul has dug up
some woods of which violin necks have been made earlier on. He showed it to me,
knocked on it, and it had a sound, a tone … Before that I had never thought of it. And
exactly from that he built me a guitar. He said ‘Give me six months’ and then there was
the guitar. I have it at home, it’s the most beautiful I’ve ever seen with its sunburst top.”
This guitar is a Paul Reed Smith 28; from the very best woods Paul has built exactly 28
of those. For obtaining the wood for the decks he had to deliver in payment a Dragon I to
the seller. When one week later I meet Paul at the Meinl Guitar Festival and tell him
about Joe Walsh he first is very upset. “What? He has this guitar sitting at home? He
should play it and take it on tour, so the people could hear it. It’s so fantastic, and his
guitar got such a wonderful sunburst …”. After that Paul grabbed the PRS 28 displayed at
the Meinl Festival and went to his workshop. “Then I will play it!”
Back to Joe Walsh. “Paul had the wood in storage already for a very long time. I think he
was looking for a good reason to use it for building a guitar that he wanted to create by
any means. And so I’m the one to blame. (laughs) Blame it on me! And I’m proud of this
guitar. Anyway I’d never take it on tour …”
Apart from PRS Joe collaborates with many different manufacturers and with that he tries
to pass his experience. “I know when a guitar feels good. It’s good if there are people
like Paul Reed Smith to who you can tell in an abstract way how something feels and
then they can translate it and tell the computer how it has to be done. The pure
technicians don’t know a thing about the sensation, they don’t know what a guitar feels
like. But Paul has it, this feeling.”
Joe Walsh picks his guitars for the live concerts according to various criteria, a.o. he
looks about the instruments from the original studio recordings to get the appropriate
sound mix of the songs: “With the Eagles we often mixed single coil sounds with
Humbuckers to get a contrast and thus a width in sound. So also today my choice
depends on what Steuart takes on stages. In a three piece band like the James Gang I
actually always go for a fat Humbucker sound.”
On what you can rely as an Eagles and Walsh fan: you’ll always see Joe with different
guitars. “Yes, I like switching guitar models, check them, then I have a new favorites,
play them for a while, but then I switch again. Then I see something new, buy a few
here, a few there. Like the Ibanez Satriani. It’s got a great shredder neck which is good
for my big hands: I can play it up high to the end of the neck. That’s great! I love to
experiment and do it a lot. I can be a better musician when I know my way around with
different guitars, different amps … But in the end I still keep getting back to the
Telecaster.”
For a while now Joe can often be seen with the German Duesenberg guitars. How did he
find those? “Duesenberg guitars sound great. I saw Mike Campbell playing one at a Tom
Petty concert. I took it in my hands and immediately said to him: ‘Ah, that’s why you
play it!’ Then he gave me the phone number and told me to call. Well, and now I’m
playing it. Nice guys.”
Allegedly on this occasion Glenn Frey also got a Duesenberg guitar that however Joe very
quickly took away and didn’t want to return. So Glenn had to order a new guitar from
Hannover …
When I tell a bit about the background of Duesenberg, Rockinger and Göldo he is
amazed; and when he learns that Dieter Gölsdorf, the man behind the enterprise, also
founded the guitar manufacturing school Formentera Guitars back in the day he only
says “Cool. That’s great. I want to go there!”
When we start to talk about amps and effects Joe gets very puristic. “On stage I control
everything myself”, he emphasizes. “I don’t like that digital crap. I need buttons. I’m
really an analog guy. I can’t play with presets. It’s no fun when there are no buttons.”
However Joe Walsh always tries out new amps, atm he uses Carvins, before there were
Vox AC15, but also some Boutique amps: “Dr. Z from Cleveland is a good friend of mine.
He has a good reputation in Nashville with the Telecaster guys. I keep playing his amps
again and again, he’s fantastic and keeps sending me his new stuff. We’re currently
working on a new concept for an amp that though it has two channels only uses one
input. The one is clean and crisp, the other one is distorted. You can mix the channels
but by doing it the amp doesn’t get louder; so the one channel delivers the clean “eeee”
and the other the overamplified “brrr”. That has never been tried before.”
And what about the acoustic guitars with which Joe can be seen working? “My Gibson
guitars have an internal pickup but without all that active crap, without controls on the
guitar. There’s a simple reason for it: Whenever you change something on the guitar you
drive the sound guy on the mixer nuts. I increase treble control, then he hears more and
takes it back again, then I keep increasing and he again adjusts. We would only be
fighting. Here it’s totally different: I simply play guitar, plug in, and let the sound guy do
his job.”
For a few years already Joe has to play the clown on the Eagles stage during “Life’s Been
Good” when he pictures the audience with a camera built into a hard hat or baseball hat
and projects it onto the video screen. Surprisingly on this tour Steuart played the solo,
exactly in Joe’s original way, note by note. I ask Joe how that came to be. Actually I had
no mind to do this anymore. It’s exhausting, and I also ruined my solo, it sounded
terrible. Both at the same time didn’t work.
But the others in the band said that the audience and they themselves are having so
much fun with it. OK, so I asked for permission to delegate the solo to Steuart. And he
does a great job. He’s a specialist anyway with a great technique. He can play
everything, in the Nashville scene he’s a really big one, a great musician.”
However at last we still want a hint from Joe Walsh at how to create a magnificent guitar
sound.
“Many people want to know how I make my sound: take a guitar and plug it in. Then I
add some delay and that’s it.
My secret: just plug it in!”