Jonny Lang is an American blues, gospel, and rock singer, songwriter, guitarist, and recording artist.
Jonny Lang
Jonny Lang was just 18 years old when he made his debut appearance at the Montreux Festival in 1999 and yet he had already released 3 albums, his first when he was just 14 leading to a contract with A&M Records. The songs featured in this concert are equally split between his two A&M albums released up to that time and are delivered with all his trademark maturity highlighted by some ferocious guitar work.
It’s a modern electric blues that you can put on top of the achievements of Robert Cray and Joe Louis Walker. Lang is an efficient guitarist and surprisingly stylish vocalist. As a teenager has the voice of a blues veteran after many years of training with a cigarette and a bottle of alcohol. He does not try, like many others, to get into Stevie Ray Vaughan’s shoes. The sound of the band is balanced.
This composition is the widely known standard of Sonny Boy Williamson – “Good Morning Little School Girl”. We can say that the vocalist does not lie, singing “I’m a little schoolboy, too”. It happens perhaps for the first time in the history of blues.
During his career, Jonny Lang took advantage of many opportunities to collaborate with such legends as The Rolling Stones, B.B. King, Aerosmith, Sting and Buddy Guy, with whom he performs until today. During his musical journey, which he began at the age of 12, he reached countless concert halls around the world.
Instruments
Lang usually plays Benedict guitars, produced in Minneapolis. Although he prefers a Fender Telecaster Thinline with a spruce body, maple top and figured maple neck. He uses the pickups Bill Lawrence for neck and bridge pickups and a Seymour Duncan P -10 in the center. Jonny sometimes also uses a Gibson Les Paul. As for the effects he uses a Wah Wah model Vox 847 Reissue, but only in some songs. His main amp is a Fender Deluxe Reverb Reissue.
Jonny Lang puts his whole heart into performing his songs both when recording his music videos and during live concerts. See what this song sounds like when performed during a concert.
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