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John Prestia: Behind the Scenes in Nashville

Both a tonehound and a great player, John Prestia has found his niche in Nashville as guitar tech for Tim McGraw.

Nashville has held a reputation for chewing up and spitting out some of the most talented musicians in the world. Surviving is difficult, and thriving can seem downright impossible, but with the right formula, Nashville can be a promised land. For John Prestia, the formula is loads of talent, the ambition to stay in the city, and an insatiable desire to find great guitar tones.

John moved to Music City from sunny Sarasota, Florida a decade ago with hopes of becoming a better songwriter. He had been working 300 days a year as the frontman of the John Prestia Group, while simultaneously writing and co-writing songs – his “No One to Run With” with Dickey Betts was an Allman Brothers hit. He’s been releasing albums since the vinyl age, with 18 releases under his belt.

After spending part of his first year in Nashville as tour manager for Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Lucinda Williams, John found himself faced with the opportunity to wrangle guitars with Tim McGraw and his band, the Dancehall Doctors. This opportunity turned into a steady gig as the guitar tech for one of the most successful organizations in the entire music industry – the Tim McGraw/Faith Hill tour of 2006 broke all of the records of the time, grossing $89 million and selling 1.1 million tickets.

I met up with John in his workshop space, surrounded by mountains of amps, guitars and in-progress pedalboards, to chat about his demanding gig, Nashville, and – of course – the gear.

How did you get hooked up with Tim McGraw and company?

I had never dreamed of being a guitar tech, but I have always been a guitar “nerd.” I had spent 25 years making my living playing 300 nights a years, singing, writing and making my records – just doing my thing. All the while I’ve had an interest in the gear, building pedalboards and the like. I’ve always done my own guitar stuff ever since I can remember.


A sampling of John''s gear room
We’re surrounded by old Fender, Supro and Marshall amps, custom-built Hammonds, a rack of guitars marked with masking tape and Sharpie, old cases everywhere… Looks like a great job!

I bring mountains of these amps into the Tim McGraw sessions for the producer and players to use, and we dig in for tones that work on the particular songs. Fortunately they give me a lot of leeway and trust to discover tones for the records. If the guys are sitting on the outer edges, I can listen to the near-field monitors with Byron, the producer, who is also a great guitar nerd, and point out spots where I hear the possibility for a certain tone. We might break out the ''49 Supro, or if we want a big lush tone for a part, I’ll bring in the Marshall 4x12 cab with a Marshall head – whatever combination fits the track.

By not being in the cans concentrating on a part, I get to see the whole rainbow. I get to pick out colors, and it''s really cool. I would have never thought of being a guitar tech, but I’ve since gotten hired to go into the studio for other records. I bring up an arsenal of tone machines and sit with the producer of the record, saying, “Maybe we''ll tremolo this part or get nutty with the tone, or get a big fat rich tone,” that kind of thing. I''m way into that, and I''m lucky that Tim and the guys in his band are real receptive to my ideas.

How many guys do you tech for?

There''s Denny Hemingson, a fabulous player, on steel and electric guitar; Darren Smith, the band leader and lead guitar; the bass player, John Marcus; and Bob Minor, the acoustic player. We also hire another guitar tech to tour with us, but I''m the full-time guy.

We have more than just an A-team of players here – we are like a family. That''s what keeps me on here; I don''t feel like I''m just a guitar tech, I''m part of the family. And I don''t say "just a guitar tech" lightly, because we all have an important job to do out there on the road – they are all important jobs. If the lighting guy is rolling in a dimmer pack and something goes haywire, things get crazy and it could affect the show. We are all important to the end result. I think Tim spreads that down to all of us.

Tim McGraw must have amazing turnouts -- how many people come to the shows?

Between 15 and 20 thousand. On the last tour with Tim and Faith, we traveled with 22 tractor trailers and 18 busses; there were 130 people traveling and 50 to 60 local hands in each city to set up and tear down. It’s amazing to watch this thing start at 8:00 or 9:00 in the morning with trucks backing in and out, and by 3:00 in the afternoon we are sound checking. Watching it all come down is amazing – massive rigs, masses of people, and they all know what they''re doing. It''s like a dance and they all know the steps. My world is always the last in and the first out – you can''t be bringing in the lights with 35 guitars in the racks set up.

What about the backline?

Yeah, I do the backline and I build the pedalboards. We run a clean stage, in that there are no amps in sight. We run stereo paired amps in big isolation boxes that we roll up under the stage and mic up. We have an incredible in-ear monitor system that all of the musicians use. I have the pedalboards pre-loomed to the amps, so the sound guys come in and mic the amps up, and the rest is all pretty much pre-set. In a realistic show-world, we have to be able to scroll through the sounds that are set up for each song in the show, just like the lights, so I build the pedalboards to be able to see the tones and find them quickly and be song or set specific.

When we do a show, we are not dinking around jamming – it''s a show. It''s a pretty tightly coordinated deal with the lights, video, sound, and guitar changes all coordinated. I''ve had to do as many as three guitar changes in a song. Denny goes from steel to electric, Darren switches out, and I''m running around with an armload of guitars. I like to be stealthy when I do it, so sometimes the guitar just appears. Like, where did that come from? I remember going and seeing shows as a kid, and it was like magic, all of the gear and the guitars.

As the guitar guy, is it your responsibility to get the gear where it needs to be?

Yes, we have a couple of great companies that we work with that keep the backlines straight, like when we do Today in New York or The Tonight Show in L.A., they make sure that everything is there for the shows. The company is Center Staging; their gear is always in good shape and is what we ask for.

For the main touring rigs in Tim''s World, we’ve used stereo paired Peavey Classic 50s with 4x10s as long as I''ve been here. I never had any experience with these before I joined Tim, but they''re just a great EL84-type amp. Peavey is a great company for us to work with; if I have a problem, I just call them up and they’ll overnight us whatever we need, and it will be at the arena office when we get there. G&L Guitars has been great with us also – great guitars and great support. We also work with Taylor guitars; Bob Borbonus (Artist Relations) is great to work with.

We work with a lot of the different guitar companies; if we need a Les Paul, we go to Gibson and get one and make sure that it gets some visibility. We are responsible to our endorsers to play the gear, and we love it. We don''t take stuff just to have free gear – we already have 22 trucks of stuff! But it''s a valuable thing to get a product seen with a high-profile artist like Tim. I remember as a kid, I got my old Firebird because Johnny Winter and Dave Mason were playing them. I had to have one! I don''t forget that it''s a valuable thing for artists to influence sales, if they can afford to do so.

What about other backline stuff? Do you use leslie cabs for guitar?

Not live; we do use them for the keys, and in the studio if we want a leslie for the guitar we use one, but out on the road the pedalboards are set up to simulate and create any special needs that we may have.

Let’s look at one of the pedalboards.

You can see that we have the wires all routed from underneath the metal and the power supply is under there also. I build the board with the specific pedals any of the players want. For mine, I love the fat boost, and the Keeley compressor – those two are on all the time. Then there’s the Line 6 echo and modulation pedals, a Fulltone Fulldrive II, a Tubescreamer TS-9, a Keeley compressor, a wah pedal, a volume pedal, and the most important part, a tuner. I have a couple of outlets to side-car the expression pedals for the Line 6 pedals, and a send and receive circuit in case I want to add anything on-the-fly; it’s pretty simple over all. I''ll use the two drive pedals with each other – I set the drives kind of low so I can build the tones. I like the midrange thing with the TS-9 and the full body of the Fulltone II. I built a custom board for Denny and a second studio board for him that has the new OCD on it also.



So this is the board I played when I sat in with you a couple of weeks ago. When you''re in town it seems like you gig a lot, and with great players.


Oh, the players are there when they can be, and I use others when they can''t. One night it might be Rick Brothers (Gretchen Wilson) on drums, and Chris Tuttle on keys, Anthony Joyner (Shania Twain) on bass, maybe Bart Pike (Danny Gatton) the next night or Bruce Brown (Charlie Daniel''s Band) on guitar. There are a whole lot of great players here in Nashville and I love having them all as friends, and sometimes bandmates. Living here, the bar is raised up pretty high and it makes me become a better player and musician.

For samples of John''s music and more information, visit johnprestia.com.
For more information on Tim McGraw and the Dancehall Doctors visit timmcgraw.com or try Google for a wealth of sites.