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Doc Watson
The man who has had the deepest, most enduring, and most profound
influence on the way the acoustic flat top guitar is played as a
lead instrument in folk, traditional, and bluegrass music today
is Arthel Doc Watson. He has had a profound influence
in traditional, folk and bluegrass music ever since coming to national
attention in the early 1960s. His recordings and performances
have inspired generations of aspiring guitarists to explore the
mysteries of his phenomenal playing.
The sixth of nine children, Doc was born in Stoney Fork, Watauga
County, North Carolina on 3 March, 1923. An eye infection caused
him to completely lose his vision before his first birthday.
Docs musical education began at his mother's knee listening
to her singing old time songs and ballads and at the age of six
he began to learn the harmonica. His first stringed instrument,
not including a steel wire he had strung across the woodshed's sliding
door to provide bass accompaniment to his harmonica playing, was
a banjo his father built for him when he was eleven years old. He
got his first guitar a couple of years later. Doc got a job playing
electric lead guitar in Jack Williams country and western
swing band, Jack Williams and the Country Gentlemen in 1953, and
it was only then that he began making money as a professional musician.
It was during his eight year stay with Williams that he began to
develop his ability to flatpick fiddle tunes on the guitar. While
Elvis, the Beatles, Bob Dylan, and other pop icons of the 50s
and 60s certainly played a large role in bolstering the guitars
popularity, the man who has had the deepest, most enduring, and
most profound influence on the way the acoustic flat top guitar
is played as a lead instrument is Doc Watson.
Docs influence extends far beyond the small niche of guitar
players who try to faithfully reproduce his guitar breaks because
Doc Watson is not just a guitar player and singer - he is an American
hero. To be recognized as a national treasure by President
Jimmy Carter, honoured with the National Medal of the Arts by President
Bill Clinton, and given an honorary doctorate degree from the University
of North Carolina calls for being more than a fine musician and
entertainer. Doc Watson received these accolades not just for his
talent, but for the honor, integrity, humility, grace, and dignity
which he has displayed throughout his long and distinguished career.
While there are many, many great guitar players and singers; there
is only one Doc Watson.
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