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 Interview with Guitar Lords (Mexico):
 February 1, 2004

 Jorge Miranda
 Guitar Lords Manager

 

1- The amazing Tom Hess, thanks for your time!
 Tom Hess:  It is my pleasure, thank you.

2- Please tell us about your personal history and background for the 
fans at Mexico.
 Tom Hess:  I began playing 18 years ago as a kid.  Def Leppard and
Metallica were my early influences, followed by Iron Maiden and Ozzy. 
Later I heard Yngwie and then the rest of the Shrapnel players (Becker,
MacAlpine, Friedman, Gilbert, etc.).  In the 1990s I heard Dream Theater
and Symphony X and those guys really influenced me too.  George Bellas 
and Andy LaRocque were huge influences on me as well.  I listen to a lot
of classical music though (Chopin, Bach, Mahler, Wagner, Liszt, Gorecki). 
Chopin's 24 preludes (Opus 28) really changed my life (musically and 
personally) forever and to this day are my favorite pieces of all time. 
I studied music at Harper college, where I met Mike Walsh (the other 
guitarist in HESS). After graduating Harper college, I studied classical
music composition at Roosevelt University to earn the second music degree
there.

 3- What motivated you to want to learn to play the guitar?
 Tom Hess:  When I was about 11 years old, I began to like rock music 
and guitar, I also noticed that the girls at school also did.  At the 
same time, I heard the Def Leppard album, Pyromania, that was the first 
musical  seed that was planted inside me.  Over the years, my reasons for
wanting to compose, play and record music evolved of course.  Now, 
composing and recording the HESS cds are like my personal diary, they are
my thoughts, emotions, ideals, regrets, sorrows, hopes, dreams, desires and
secrets.
 4- I always figured you could play pretty much any style you wanted, 
but what do you like to play a lot?
 Tom Hess:  I don't want to play other styles really.  I grew up 
playing heavy metal music, but the HESS band is more progressive and 
sometimes neo-classical and Romantic era in style.  I studied both Jazz and
Classical guitar in college, but I don't play much of either now.
 5- Tell us about your technique and how you developed it?
 Tom Hess:  Most of my technique is based on my right hand (picking 
hand). My right hand is far more advanced than my left hand could ever be.  
I use directional picking technique (also called economy picking or inside
picking), it allows my right hand to do anything that my left hand 
wants to do.  I had lots of guitar teachers since I first started playing,
but the best three were: Randy Pierce, Jack Wilson and the great George 
Bellas. Those guys showed me early on how to develop my technique to the 
level it is at today.  I really owe all three of them a lot.  My vibrato 
technique was taken from Andy LaRocque and great singers (specifically 
Fabio Leone  -  singer of the band Rhapsody).
 6- When you were a kid, did you ever think that you would someday be
considered one of the best guitar players of the world?
 Tom Hess: No.  I knew I wanted to play very much, but I wasn't even
thinking  about how good I might, or might not, become later in life.  When 
I went to High School, things changed a little bit, because I knew I was one 
of the better players there and I thought that I needed to take music even 
more seriously and find a better teacher - which I did.  It wasn't until 
years later when I started hearing players like George Bellas and Michael 
Angelo and Francesco Fareri (all players whom I like and respect) telling me 
that I was a great player.  It was so strange for me to hear these great 
players saying these things about me because I had thought these guys to be 
among the very greatest ever.  Anyway, I am very very honored that anyone 
would think such a high thing about me, but it is not my goal to be better 
than anyone else or to be compared to any other players.  I write and play
music at a very high level because that is what is needed to express 
certain things that I wish to express musically.
 7- Who are your main influences?
 Tom Hess:  The most important musical influence for me is Fryderyk 
Chopin (1810-1849).  Others are: J.S. Bach, Gorecki, Brahms, Mahler, 
Wagner, Liszt and Beethoven.  As for guitar players:  Yngwie (of course), 
Jason  Becker, George Bellas, Marty Friedman, Andy LaRocque and Mike Walsh 
(the other guitarist in the HESS band) and lots of others too.
 8- Who is your favorite guitar player?
 Tom Hess:  Hard to say because I like different players for different
reasons. Here is a short list:
Andy LaRocque (for vibrato and phrasing)
Jason Becker (for phrasing and improvising)
George Bellas (for technique and composition)
Mike Walsh (for phrasing)
Marty Freidman (for phrasing)
Yngwie (well, its Yngwie so you know he has to be on the list!)
 
 9- What projects are you currently working on?
 Tom Hess:  I always have multiple things in progress.  I'm composing 
the next HESS cd (Opus 3).  Mike Walsh and I have wanted to do a side 
project and make an acoustic guitar cd together.  I have many classical
compositions that I would like to have recorded by a great pianist and orchestra 
and would like to make a cd of those (without any guitar).  And I am 
working on a new project with Joey DaMaio (Manowar's bass player and 
songwriter). Joey owns Magic Circle Music (a record company in New York) and
we are  working together on a new heavy metal band  with a great female singer-
the band is called Holyhell.  (actually Guitar Lords is the very first magazine 
or web site to find out about this - I haven't released this news yet to 
anyone else) 

 10- Do you love doing live performances?
 Tom Hess:  Yes.


 11- Where is the line between performer and musician for you?
 Tom Hess:  In the HESS band, we see ourselves as artists and 
musicians, not entertainers.  In the Holyhell band it will be sometimes 
art, but  mostly a performance/entertainment role.

 12- Let's move on to the "Opus 2" record. Was this a particularly
challenging album for you to make?
 Tom Hess:  Yes it was for many reasons.  I spent 3 years composing 
the music, I have the ability to compose quickly, but I wanted the music 
on Opus 2 to be exactly the way I envisioned it, so I needed to take the time 
to get it right.  From a playing perspective, it was also more difficult 
than Opus 1 because I am a better player now so the demands on myself were also
higher.

 13- What´s the meaning of this record to you?
 Tom Hess:  It is very similar to what a diary or journal would mean 
to someone except that this is much more artistic and the most deeply
personal to me.  It is my greatest work so far.

 14- What´s your favorite song from this new record?
 Tom Hess:  I don't think I can choose only one. (sorry).

 15- Have you ever done a song or album that you wish you could go 
back in time and un-do? If so, which one, and why?
 Tom Hess:  I am generally proud of all that I have released so far, 
it would have been nice to have had more money when I made Opus 1.  Opus 2 has
better production than Opus 1 because Opus 1 sales were excellent and that
brought in a lot more money for me to make improvements in the studio when
recording Opus 2.

 16- What are your thoughts on the state of instrumental guitar these 
days?
 Tom Hess:  It is better than it was 10 years ago, but I think there 
are still less opportunities for great players than there was in the 
mid-late 1980s.  However it seems to be getting better now.

 17- What do you think about the new crop of talented Guitar player's 
that are currently out there making music?
 Tom Hess:  I am happy with the new guys out there, there many great
players now, my favorites are: Francesco Fareri (he and I are very close 
personal friends) he is an extreme shredder!  Also Rusty Cooley and Tony 
Smotherman are both amazing as well a lot of the players you can hear at 
guitar9.com


 18- O.K. Time for the heady question that I've been wanting to ask. 
You are easily one of the most influential guitar players on the scene today 
for kids that are coming up. How does that make you feel?
 Tom Hess:  It's a strange feeling actually.  It has taken a long time 
for me to get to this point where I am musically (18 years) and I was always 
the one looking up to my own guitar heroes (Yngwie, Becker, LaRocque, 
etc.). Now I receive a lot of e-mails and letters from younger players 
coming up that express their support and appreciation to me (and Mike).  It is 
a very cool and nice thing and I am grateful that I have had the good 
fortune to inspire others, but its still hard for me to see myself as one who 
other musicians look up to.

 19- When all is said and done, years from now, how would you want 
people to remember Tom Hess?
 Tom Hess:  As the Chopin of the electric guitar.

 20- What will be next for Tom Hess?
 Tom Hess:  I'm in the process of signing a big record deal with Magic
Circle Music to join the Holyhell band.  There will be a big European tour.  
At the same time, I am composing the next HESS album, Opus 3.  Eventually, 
Mike and I want to do an acoustic guitar cd as well.

 21- And can we expect to see you in Mexico any time soon?
 Tom Hess:  I would love to come to Mexico to do some concerts and 
possibly some instructional clinics there too.  Currently the HESS band is not
known enough in Mexico to make a tour there, but perhaps Holyhell will tour
there in 2005.

  22- Is there anything else you would like to share with us that I 
have not asked?
 Tom Hess:  I wish to say thank you to everyone at Guitar Lords and 
also to my fans in Mexico for all of their support over the last few years!
 

 Thanks for your time Tom, we really appreciated it!, we wish you all 
the best!!!.