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CD: Duane Eddy – Road Trip | reviews, news & interviews

CD: Duane Eddy – Road Trip

CD: Duane Eddy – Road Trip

Richard Hawley and the legendary twanger collaborate with spiffy results

Duane Eddy's 'Road Trip': A sensitive showcase for a legendary musician

Although Duane Eddy will forever be identified with his deeply twangy late-Fifties/early-Sixties instrumental hits like “Rebel Rouser”, “Ramrod” and “Peter Gunn”, he’s never gone out of style. His 1958 debut album was titled Have “Twangy Guitar” – Will Travel. And he has – through time and space. He scored a British hit with “Play Me Like You Play Your Guitar” in 1975. It didn’t chart in the US. His 1986 re-recording of “Peter Gunn”, made with The Art of Noise, was Top 10 in Britain. Now, here he is again with a new album, recorded in Sheffield with big-time fan Richard Hawley. His homeland might not be too fussed, but the love for Eddy continues over here.

Although Duane Eddy will forever be identified with his deeply twangy late-Fifties/early-Sixties instrumental hits like “Rebel Rouser”, “Ramrod” and “Peter Gunn”, he’s never gone out of style. His 1958 debut album was titled Have “Twangy Guitar” – Will Travel. And he has – through time and space. He scored a British hit with “Play Me Like You Play Your Guitar” in 1975. It didn’t chart in the US. His 1986 re-recording of “Peter Gunn”, made with The Art of Noise, was Top 10 in Britain. Now, here he is again with a new album, recorded in Sheffield with big-time fan Richard Hawley. His homeland might not be too fussed, but the love for Eddy continues over here.

Comments

Lovely review of Duane Eddy's new album, but a few small corrections are needed. Duane's recording of Peter Gunn with Art of Noise won a Grammy Award for Best Rock Instrumental of 1986 in America. Yes, Lee Hazlewood produced Duane's early hits and must surely be given full marks for the great sound on those records, but he did not invent Duane's style of playing, contrary to an often repeated urban myth. They were collaborators and partners, co-writing those classics in Phoenix, Arizona. As the final thought of this review kindly says, "Welcome back, Duane Eddy"...

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