Many of you already
know the tale of Jason Becker, the gifted young
guitarist who developed ALS (Lou Gehrig's Disease)
in his early twenties. It is a disease which slowly
disables every muscle in the body on the way toward
total paralysis while the unaffected mind remains
trapped inside a body that no longer responds.
Eventually, breathing, swallowing, speaking, or
any movement whatsoever is no longer possible.
There is no known cure. At this time Jason is
still able to move his eyes and blink. That's
it. As explained below, this is how he communicates.
I wanted to let Mr. Becker know he has a fan base
at DRG. I didn't think I had a chance at getting
an interview with Jason, but his mother responded
positively to my emails and, amazingly, he agreed
to answer questions submitted by me. Since this
is a special-case interview, I used questions
mainly submitted by DRG forum members, with only
a few added by me. Yes, the responses from Jason
are not overly long and elaborate. But when one
considers what he had to go through to answer
them, they speak for themselves. One request:
Please visit Jason's website, jasonbecker.com
and his myspace.com page to learn a lot more more
about this unique and gifted man.
11/20/06 Interview conducted by Steve Bluemlein.
DRG: Jason, how do you actually communicate
now? How was it made possible for you to answer these
questions?
Becker: I use a system that my father invented. Each
letter has two specific eye movements which I and others
have memorized. I can say anything very quickly; faster
than any computer. I can be a part of every conversation.
Sometimes I yap too much. I am really blessed to have
complete movement of my eyes.
DRG: On a good day, when the sun is shining,
the birds are singing, and life's burdens seem to lessen
just a bit, what do you think about? What do you hope
for? What do you see that the less perfect moments tend
to shadow?
Becker: I wish that every being could be happy
and peaceful like I am at that moment. I often cry because
they aren't.
DRG: From communicating with your
mom, though it was brief, I feel very strong positive
energy coming from her. Is there anything you'd like
to say about her?
Becker: You are wrong. She is a terrible
person. Just kidding. Definitely, she is way positive.
The way she lives and sees things is beautiful. She
creates magic everywhere. She makes kids, as well as
adults, believe in magic. I know this is why I am able
to be happy and love life, even now.
DRG: Ok. On to the musical questions! You have
a tremendous fan base at DRG. Do you realize the magnitude
of your influence on players that came after you?
Becker: That is way cool. No, I don't get it.
I guess I just can't picture myself as an influence.
I feel like I did when I was 16 — a fan. I did
some neat stuff but . . .
DRG: There are many who regard you
as one of the greatest players who ever lived. Putting
modesty aside for a moment, are they on the mark?
Becker: Aw. Considering that I barely had four
years of recording and much of that time I was young
and learning and maturing, I would say top 10. I think
I would put myself in the top 10 rock guitar guys, me
being 10th.
DRG: Did you ever have a Bad Guitar
Day where you just put the instrument down in disgust?
Becker: Hmmm . . .let me think . .
.I did have worse days than others but I tried to work
through it.
DRG: At what point in your musical career did
you think: This is it?
Becker: When I joined David Lee Roth.
DRG: In the 80s it seemed that the quality of
the guitarists were rising year by year. You were lucky
enough to be playing at what may have been the peak
of this quality expansion. Looking back, what are your
thoughts or feelings about this technical mountain top.
Were other aspects of playing, such as tone, touch sensitivity,
emotional display, etc. sacrificed by players in search
of gaining the speed sweep alternate tap crown?
Becker: I think most players sacrificed too
much quality and musical substance trying to be fast.
Of course, there were some players who had both qualities.
DRG: What aspects should a guitarist have to
be one of the best, according to you? Are there guitarists
that have those aspects, in your opinion?
Becker: (No ideas/answer.)
DRG: You've played both as a single guitarist
and in a dual guitarist role. Which did you enjoy more?
Did the dual role allow you the freedom to go-on-the-fly
or did you find it restricting in relation to spot creativity?
Did you find inspiration in the other guitarist's performance
and play to compliment it or did a second guitarist
bring out that dueling high-noon gunslinger attitude?
Becker: Playing with Marty was awesome. Recording
with him wasn't restricting at all, but sometimes when
we played live, I wished I could go off a little more
separately. I eventually left Cacophony so I could do
more solo guitar. I guess I prefer just myself but working
with Marty and Steve Hunter was a total blast and I
learned so much from them.
DRG: What is the current state of
your relationship with Marty and do you for see him
performing any of your pieces in the future?
Becker: Marty and I email each other and send
each other what we are working on. You know, he did
perform End of the Beginning with an orchestra
in San Francisco a few years ago. The possibility of
Marty playing my pieces is always there.
DRG: What, in your opinion, was the best guitar
/ amp combination you had the pleasure to play through?
Becker: Hmmm . . .definitely Marshall amp, and,
I would say either Fender or Ibanez guitars, although
my blue Carvin felt the best.
DRG: Your musical compositional skills
have been discussed on our forum. How did you develop
these skills to the level you've achieved?
Becker: To be honest, I don't think I am a great
composer, but I have written some cool melodies. I guess
the more theory I learned, and writing with Marty Friedman,
and wanting to learn a lot, and what kind of music I
wanted to do, all influenced my composition skills.
DRG: Do you find inspiration for your pieces
to be spontaneous or are they something that develop
over time?
Becker: Both. The melody for End of the
Beginning came spontaneously, for example, but
working out all the parts and the minor section took
more time.
DRG: What kind of programs did you use to write
Perspective?
Becker: The software Vision on a tiny Apple
computer.
DRG: So many guitarists have a perspective of
playing that allows them to have a very good insight
into the skill level of the
musician your listening to? In your opinion, which guitarists
playing today have achieved a masterful skill level?
Which guitarists would you like to play your compositions?
Becker: Great question. I haven't heard too
many recent players; I think there are many incredible
guitarists. You guys can all probably tell the great
ones from the good or just okay ones. When you are talking
about the great ones, it really just boils down to your
taste. Some of the great ones in my eyes are Marty Friedman,
Jeff Beck, Uli Roth, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Eddie Van Halen,
Django Reinhart, Greg Howe, Michael Lee Firkins; man
I could go on. For playing my compositions, I would
like Jeff Beck for sure. Vai and
Satriani would be fun too. On my two new songs, I am
getting Michael Lee Firkins, Greg Howe and Steve Hunter.
Steve just layed down a beautiful solo for me.
DRG: What is your favorite composition?
Becker: Hmmm. . . . lots of Mozart, Alan Hovhaness'
Mysterious Mountain, I don't know, lately I
am not into classical music.
DRG: Do you follow any new bands/players? If
so, what bands/players do you listen to?
Becker: No, not really any players. I like the
band Flipsyde and Alter Bridge is cool.
DRG: We've done this on the forum and wondered
if you might give us your thoughts. Of all the musicians
you've
known or listened to. If you were putting together the
best "backup band" for a guitarist to "front"...which
instruments would be on stage and which instrumentalists
would be playing them?
Becker: Tough question. Zakir Hussain on tabla,
Prince's drummer on drums, either Billy Sheehan or Bootsie
Collins on bass, Dan Alvarez on keyboard, Anoushka Shankar
on sitar, and Sting and Joss Stone would sing. Also
the London Philharmonic orchestra and the Vienna Boy's
Choir.
DRG: OK, time to vent a bit. What
really pisses you off at the moment? Don't worry about
being polite.
Becker: Man . . ..okay. I am so sick of so many
people who come to me offering things, big and small,
and then blow me off with no explanation. I can't tell
you how many times this happens. I didn't ask for anything
from anyone. Why come and tell me bullshit? Are they
trying to fuck with a crip? Are they trying to take
advantage of my good nature? I could go on about stuff
in society, like war, racism, gay bashing, cruelty,
but Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert take care of that
for me. Oh yeah, when great shows, like The Simpsons
or Family Guy put musical numbers in. God, that sucks.
We at the Dinosaur Rock Guitar would like to thank
Jason Becker for taking the time to answer our questions.
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