Question: What was the most exciting change in your guitar playing this year?
Guest Picker - Brian Dunne

Photo by Marianka Campisi
A: My guitar playing is pretty constantly shifting, but in the last few years, I feel like I’ve really “found it.” And I’d attribute that to a personal change, honestly. I’m no longer afraid to show what I’ve got. I grew up playing, but I was a slightly “embarrassed” guitar player, if that makes sense? I loved indie rock and I loved singer-songwriters, and at that point in my life, I felt like the guitar solo was maybe a gratuitous move, and so for years, I hid my playing abilities. Not only that, but because I was so self-conscious, every time I stepped up for a rare solo, I had so much going on in my head that I never felt free.
I’m in my thirties now, and I would never say I don’t care anymore—I’ll always care about what music means, who it’s for, what it says, what each note indicates to the listener. But I am who I am, and I think that people are their best musical selves when they’re singing and playing at the top of their ability. And that’s what I’m gonna do. You’ll be hearing a lot more guitar on my records from here on out. I’m a proud guitar player, no way around it.
Obsession: Current obsession is a 1973 Tele Deluxe that I just bought!
Reader of the Month - Dave Jackson

A: This last year I’ve noticed that I’m not using a pick very often, and I’m really enjoying the direct contact of fingers and fingernails on strings. Also, I’m using very few effects with no reverb or delay, and that feels like I’m closer to the instrument's vibrations. So I’m just down to a Rothwell Switchblade distortion into my ZT Lunchbox and an Emma TransMORGrifier compressor for clean stuff—and both together for neighbor-friendly feedback.
Also, after 45 years I’ve grown dissatisfied with humbuckers and want single-coil clarity and hi-fi detail but without the hum and buzz. So I’ve been researching noiseless Strat pickups until my eyes got bleary. There’s some Bill Lawrence Wilde pickups on their way to go in my ’80s Squier Strat.

Obsession: Current musical obsessions include Black Sabbath’s Master of Reality. I’m left-handed, so Tony Iommi will always be a hero for me. I’ve also been revisiting Derek Bailey’s solo recordings like Lot ’74. He completely changed the way I think about music when I saw him play in 1986. Free improvisation is the most rewarding kind of music making I know. Ornette Coleman’s Love Call has also been heating up my speakers this week.
Editorial Director - Richard Bienstock

Photo by Carla Fredericks
A: Sweep picking. Not a new concept for someone who grew up listening to metal in the ’80s and ’90s, but as much as I was into fast, technical playing, something about sweeping always left me cold. Too video-game sounding, before that was actually a thing guitarists were trying to sound like! But now my son plays, and one of the solos he tackled this year was Marty Friedman's daunting leads in Megadeth’s “Tornado of Souls.” Like everything else, we played it together. So, more than 30 years after I was hunkering down in my bedroom with the Hal Leonard official Rust in Peace tab book, I was finally sweeping up and down the frets.

Obsession: Cobra Kai, for maybe a third (fourth? fifth?) go-round. It just hits the perfect note of self-aware nostalgia, and the guys behind the score—Zach Robinson and Leo Birenberg—are two of the most imaginative guitar-based composers around. What’s more, they tapped ace ringers like Tim Henson, Andrew Synowiec, Myrone, and even Tosin Abasi to lend a hand, making it essential viewing—and listening—for guitar nerds.
Contributing Editor - Ted Drozdowski

A: Freedom. After recently retiring as editorial director of PG, it seems I’ve been pushing the envelope more—in the disparate directions of tradition and outrage, and feeling more comfortable and relaxed with a guitar in my paws. I think the title made me self-conscious about my playing, which is never a good thing. I’m excited about what happens next!

Obsession: The thrilling, evolutionary period of jazz from the mid 1940s to 1975, thanks to James Kaplan’s extraordinary book 3 Shades of Blue: Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Bill Evans, and the Lost Empire of Cool. It’s reconnected me to this wonderful, diverse, and sometimes extreme, often beautiful music I’ve loved so long, but had lost contact with.










![Devon Eisenbarger [Katy Perry] Rig Rundown](https://www.premierguitar.com/media-library/youtube.jpg?id=61774583&width=1245&height=700&quality=70&coordinates=0%2C0%2C0%2C0)







Then, in the dream, I “awoke” and realized I was back in my bedroom, and it was all just a dream. The kicker is that I was still dreaming, because that “paddle” guitar was suddenly in my hands—then I woke up for real! How about that misadventure?