michael lee firkins

Michael Lee Firkins’ signature axe is a custom reso-Tele that his neighbor Steve Dowler outfitted for him. Firkins’ guitars feature a Telecaster body with a resonator plate and biscuit, tapping both the acoustic and electric worlds for their distinctive, peppery range of sounds.

A decade in the works, Firkins new album is a roots guitar masterpiece.

Michael Lee Firkins is the fire-breathing dragon of modern American roots guitar. When his instrument roars in his incendiary vocabulary of singing ’n’ grinding slide, hyper-speed chromatic runs, futuristic chicken pickin’, fat open-tuned chords and single string lines that scream “backwoods Paganini,” the roof-rattling sound is impossible to forget.

Firkins’ seventh album, Yep, is both his debut recording as a singer and a singular, licks-crazy distillation of influences that leap from Lynyrd Skynyrd to Chet Atkins to Jimi Hendrix to Elmore James to Albert Lee to AC/DC to Danny Gatton. From the mile-wide slide tone that makes “Long Day” gleam like a beacon to the solo in “Standing Ovation,” which pushes honky-tonk guitar into redneck jazz terrain, his intensity never lags. It helps to have a blue-ribbon rhythm section in Gov’t Mule drummer Matt Abts and that group’s former bassist, Andy Hess, abetted by keyboard MVP Chuck Leavell (George Harrison, Allman Brothers, Rolling Stones).

Read MoreShow less