
The ever-intrepid guitarist recorded in isolation and dug deep on his 18th studio album, The Elephants of Mars, achieving even greater levels of emotional expression and dimension-stretching 6-string sonics.
āDonāt ever think that youāre going to impress people by reminding them that you can play faster, stretch your fingers longer, be louder, and look cooler,ā says Joe Satriani. Those words carry a lot of weight coming from Satch, who can, of course, do all those things. But while heās received plenty of attention for his endless supply of dexterous digital athletics over the years, heās always been a committed melody player. And if you ask him, thatās even harder to dish out.
āThe songs that sound like they donāt have a lot of technique are actually the hardest ones to play,ā he admits. āAnd the ones that people think showcase the most amount of technique are actually the easiest to practice and perform.ā
Satriani has long understood that guitarists cannot live on shred alone. With the release of his 18th studio album, The Elephants of Mars, he proves himself a living example of this message, showcasing the electric guitar as a lyrical, emotionally attuned instrument that can exist on a chromatic spectrum of sensesāparticularly when itās in the right hands. The album covers a range of ground, from the Middle Eastern-influenced āSaharaāāwhose release was accompanied by a music video directed by Satrianiās son ZZāto the melancholic ballad āFacelessā to āDance of the Spores,ā which features a full-on circus music breakdown.
Joe Satriani "Sahara" (Official Music Video)
Having an extensive body of work makes it that much harder for some players to keep things fresh, but Satriani pulls it off. For Elephants, he decided to use the isolation of the early pandemic to focus creatively and give remote recording a shot, calling upon bandmates bassist Bryan Beller, drummer Kenny Aronoff, and keyboardist Rai Thistlethwayte to contribute.
When Satrianiās previous album, Shapeshifting,was released in April 2020, he and his team imagined that its promotional tour would be postponed for about three to six months. He considered recording a vocal album to offer as a free supplement, but months later the world was still on holdāand he realized that his audience would be expecting an entirely new project the next time he was to release something. So, he got to work on what would eventually become Elephants.
āIām always a bit shy around people and it gets reflected in how I play.ā
The remote recording experience created a significant change of pace. āFor the last couple of records, I really enjoyed going to the studio, having the clock on the wall ticking fast,ā he shares. āIn a way, having a schedule is good; it just gets you motivated to work hard. If everybodyās stuck at home and thereās no clock on the wall, then we canāt use that as an excuse anymore. Now itās just you listening to your performance, and it comes down to whether youāre going to stand behind it.ā
As the guitarist became more patient and considered, he asked his band to do the same, telling them, āIām not going to send you anything until I think itās the best version that I can give you, and I expect everyone else to take their time. Donāt feel pressured by me to just get it done. And if you want to do something different, change my mind with a great performance.ā
TIDBIT: Recording remotely gave Satriani access to a broader range of emotions while working. Itās a first for the guitarist, who says he ānever would have felt that vulnerable or comfortableā if he werenāt alone while tracking.
That freed the instrumentalists from the restraints of both time and peer pressure, and for Satriani, performing all his parts in solitude yielded a more peaceful creative process: ā[If I hadnāt been recording alone,] I never would have felt that vulnerable or comfortable. Iām always a bit shy around people and it gets reflected in how I play, so this setup worked for me in a way that itād never worked before.ā
āGuitars are made of wood and wood comes out of the ground, so you have only so much control; nature really has most of it.ā
But wouldnāt that environment, free from time constraints, give way to extreme perfectionism? Not if you set rules for yourself, Satriani says. His solution was to remind himself not to āsit there and fix everything,ā but rather to make sure he was tuned in to the moods of the tracks he was recording. He was sure that if he wasnāt having fun while recording the upbeat, bass- and synth-driven āPumpināā or the funk-infused āBlue Foot Groovy,ā the music would bore his audience. And on āDance of the Spores,ā he immersed himself in pure fantasy. āI came up with this idea where, while weāre worried about politics and the virus and the environment and all this kind of stuff, there are spores having parties because everythingās great for them,ā Satriani muses. āLike SpongeBob: Itās so insane, itās so impossible, and yet itās so funny and sad and cute. Everything about life is in that absolutely ridiculous concept. So, what would that sound like?ā
Joe Satrianiās Gear
Reaching for a big bend on a guitar that bears his likeness, Satriani picks ecstatically at a concert at the Tower Theater in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania.
Photo by Frank White
Guitars
- Ibanez AR3212 12-string electric
- Ibanez JS1CR No. 3
- Ibanez JS2480 MCR No. 2
- Ibanez JS2450 B&W Paisley prototype No. 1
- Ibanez JS2 Gold Chrome Hum-Sing-Sing prototype (1989)
- Ibanez JS Sing-Sing-Sing Blue prototype (2005)
- Ibanez JS6 Style 7 String prototype No. 1 (2001)
- Jerry Jones Electric Sitar (1997)
- Ibanez JSA20 Acoustic prototype No. 1 (2012)
- Martin HD-28E Retro (2014)
āAmps
- Avid SansAmp plug-in
Effects
- TC Electronic Sub 'N' Up Octaver
- EHX Micro Q-Tron
- Dunlop Hendrix ā69 Psych Series Octavio Fuzz
- VOX BBW wah
- Palmer Y-Box splitter
Strings & Picks
- Extra heavy celluloid picks
- DāAddario .010 sets
On the other end of the emotional spectrum, Satriani spent days repeatedly trying to embody the grief he wanted to convey on the darker āDesolation.ā Finally, unrehearsed and unpracticed, he improvised something that fit perfectly. āI never would have done that had we been in a studio with people standing around,ā he says.
Since around 1999, Satrianiās standard protocol for tracking has been to record direct and reamp later. But this time around, reamping āseemed to get rid of a certain percentage of my personality and replace it with āgeneral electric guitar.āā Instead, mixing engineer Greg Koller employed the Avid SansAmp plug-in to the guitar tracks for the entire album.
āIām not sure if thatās a letting go of ego or just realizing your place in the big scheme of things. But I had to realize that it wasnāt all about me.ā
āI plugged into a Millennia Media HV-37 Mic Pre and went right into Pro Tools,ā Satriani elaborates. āA couple of times there was a wah-wah pedal, a [TC Electronic] Sub 'N' Up, a [Dunlop Hendrix ā69 Psych Series] Octavio Fuzz, or an [Electro-Harmonix] Micro Q-Tron. And that was it!ā
If youāve read Satrianiās autobiography, Strange Beautiful Music, you know that the guitarist is obsessed with gear. He spends several chaptersāeach devoted to the making of a different albumāsharing every technical approach and gear combination that went into each recording. When asked about his signature guitars, heās a bit Zen. āGuitars are made of wood,ā he says, āand wood comes out of the ground, so you have only so much control; nature really has most of it.ā
Donning his other signature itemāblack OakleysāSatch boogies down at the Fillmore in Detroit.
Photo by Ken Settle
But that hasnāt stopped him from refining the design of his signature models over the years. āAll these changes that Iāve requested and that Ibanez made really did help me bring my music forward to a higher level of expression.ā Picking up his Ibanez JS2450 B&W Paisley Proto, Satriani points out some of those refinements: āthe height of the bridge, the fact that the edge bridge is such a well-made machine piece, the Satchur8 pickup, the size of the frets, and the fact that Ibanez now stock puts in the Sustainiac in the bridge position. Itās a 24-fret model, with a compound-radius neck. Everything about this guitar helps me express myself, and Iām still working on it. Iāve never changed my pursuit of trying to make the guitar less resistant to my musical ideas. I feel more like I have so much to say, and my body just will not cooperate to let me get it out properly,ā he says, laughing.
Satriani has been searching for ways to express his ideas ever since his early days growing up in Westbury, Long Island, where he not only dedicated himself to his music, but to sharing what heād learned by modeling his educator mother, Katherine, and, at the age of 15, famously teaching a young Steve Vai. āI realized everything that my mother learned in life she hands overāwithout holding anything backāto these kids that sheās teaching,ā he explains. āSo thatās what I should do for this little Steve Vai kid whoās just got these amazing hands, great timing, and really sharp ears. Iām not sure if thatās a letting go of ego or just realizing your place in the big scheme of things. But I had to realize that it wasnāt all about me.ā
āPlaying a ballad with a few notes and making every note countāthat is a skinny mountain road and any variation is death. Youāre plunging off the road into ultimate failure.ā
That concept still permeates his music. It comes back to expression of melody, and Satriani cites Tony Bennett as an inspiration for knowing when to pause or use fewer notes. āThe amount of technique that he has to use to nail it is far more intensive. He has to edit every little bit,ā he says. āItās not like playing your fastest and sticking your tongue out and running around the stage. Thatās the easy part. That is a six-lane highway with no lines on it. But playing a ballad with a few notes and making every note countāthat is a skinny mountain road and any variation is death. Youāre plunging off the road into ultimate failure.ā
Authenticity and humility are at the heart of making truly meaningful art, and, speaking with Satriani, itās clear that those ideals are deeply entwined with what he does. Heās a dedicated practitioner who is still growing, learning, and sharing. āThis only works if you give it away,ā he adds. āYou canāt make people think about your music the way you thought about itāit becomes theirs. When they hear it, it becomes the soundtrack to something in their life. And itās got nothing to do with you, ācause youāve given it away.ā
Joe Satriani - Always with Me, Always with You (from Satriani LIVE!)
No song better exemplifies Joe Satrianiās penchant for expressive melodic leads as his classic āAlways with Me, Always with Youā from Surfing with the Alien. This 2006 performance features all the slick moves of the original with an extra dose of live energy.