Michael Hedges: Difference between revisions
m links; album title in italics; concision (Hedges's death was no more tragic than that of other car accident victims) |
No edit summary Tags: Mobile edit Mobile app edit iOS app edit |
||
(468 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|American guitarist (1953–1997)}} |
|||
'''Michael Hedges''' ([[1953]] – [[1997]]) was an American acoustic [[guitarist]]. |
|||
{{for|the sound engineer from New Zealand|Michael Hedges (sound engineer)}} |
|||
{{More citations needed|date=December 2017}} |
|||
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2012}} |
|||
{{Infobox musical artist <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject Musicians --> |
|||
| name = Michael Hedges |
|||
| image = Michael Hedges.jpg |
|||
| background =non_vocal_instrumentalist |
|||
| birth_name = Michael Alden Hedges |
|||
| birth_date = {{birth date|1953|12|31}} |
|||
| birth_place = [[Sacramento, California]], U.S. |
|||
| death_date = {{death date and age|1997|12|2|1953|12|31}} |
|||
| death_place =[[Mendocino County, California]], U.S. |
|||
| genre = [[New acoustic music|New acoustic]], [[World music|world]], [[New-age music|new-age]] |
|||
| occupation = Musician, songwriter |
|||
| instrument = Guitar, flute |
|||
| years_active = 1974–1997 |
|||
Michael Hedges was a conservatory composition major who applied his classically trained musical background in combination with radical innovation to “reinvent” the steel string acoustic guitar. He combined many unusual techniques on the acoustic guitar with a wide range of musical styles, and was also considered an extremely dynamic performer in concert - a “[[Niccolò Paganini|Paganini]]” of the guitar. |
|||
| label = [[Windham Hill Records|Windham Hill]] |
|||
| associated_acts =[[Michael Manring]] |
|||
| website = {{URL|michaelhedges.com}} |
|||
}} |
|||
'''Michael Alden Hedges''' (December 31, 1953 – December 2, 1997) was an American [[acoustic guitar]]ist and songwriter. He was known as a virtuoso who used unorthodox playing techniques, and much of his output was classified as [[new age music]]. Hedges died in an auto accident, and won a posthumous [[Grammy Award]] for his album ''[[Oracle (Michael Hedges album)|Oracle]]''. |
|||
Hedges wrote nearly exclusively in non-standard tunings for the guitar. His emphasis was on using the guitar for composition, not technique, and if a particular musical expression was more easily performed in a certain tuning, he would utilize that to enhance the playability of the composition. Tunings for some of his signature compositions include, from bass to treble: C2C3D3G3A3D4 on "Aerial Boundaries", C2G2D3G3B3C4 on "Rickover's Dream", D2A2D3G3A3D4 for "Ragamuffin", B1A2D3E3A3B3 for "The Rootwitch"). |
|||
==Early years== |
|||
He is known for extensive use in several pieces of two handed [[tapping]] techniques (nearly a contrapuntal style of multiple voices). He used the fingers of his right (typically picking) hand to slap harmonic "chords" at the 12th, 7th or 5th fret (or elsewhere). He made use of right hand hammer-ons, particularly on bass notes, and often used the left hand for melodic or rhythmic hammer-ons and pull offs, as well as unusual strummings, that played, as mentioned, independent voices to the right hand. These techniques tended to convert the guitar into a quasi-keyboard like instrument for certain musical purposes. He also made extensive use of string dampening as employed in classical guitar, and was known to insist strongly on the precise duration of sounds and silences in his pieces. Other facets to his playing were percussive slapping on the guitar body and extensive use of artificial harmonics. He also played guitar-variants like the Harp-Guitar (an instrument with additional bass strings that Hedges used to play [[Johann Sebastian Bach|Bach]]'s Prelude to Cello Suite #1 in G Major in its intended key), and the TransTrem Guitar. |
|||
The son of Thayne Alden Hedges and Ruth Evelyn Hedges Ipsen, Michael Hedges was born in [[Sacramento, California]]. His life in music began in [[Enid, Oklahoma]], playing flute and guitar.<ref name="Larkin">{{cite book|title=[[Encyclopedia of Popular Music|The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music]]|editor=Colin Larkin|editor-link=Colin Larkin (writer)|publisher=Virgin Books|date=1997|edition=Concise|isbn=1-85227-745-9|page=590}}</ref> He enrolled at [[Phillips University]] in Enid to study classical guitar and composition under E. J. Ulrich, who Hedges credited as his biggest influence from his academic training. Hedges studied as a composition major at [[Peabody Conservatory]] in Baltimore, Maryland<ref name="Larkin"/> where he applied his classical background to [[steel-string acoustic guitar]], also studying [[electronic music]].<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9HD_NyXNyw4 Michael Hedges - Interview Enid, OK], with Janice Anrukaitis (published on YouTube, Aug 24, 2010)</ref> |
|||
Hedges made a living by playing and singing in bars and restaurants in Baltimore while a student at Peabody. From 1976 to 1977 he played electric guitar and flute for a local group called Lotus Band, which he left to start performing as a solo acoustic act. In 1980, he made plans to move to California to study music at [[Stanford University]].<ref name="Larkin"/> Hedges was contacted in February 1981 by [[William Ackerman]] who heard him perform at the Varsity Theater in [[Palo Alto]]. On a napkin, Ackerman signed Hedges to a recording contract with [[Windham Hill Records]].<ref name="Larkin"/> |
|||
His first albums, ''Breakfast in the Field'' and ''Aerial Boundaries'', were milestones for the acoustic guitar, although other instrumentalists were also featured, particularly bassist [[Michael Manring]]. He then branched out into songwriting and performing, although he would periodically make a return to more guitar-centred music. Oracle won the 1998 Grammy for Best New Age Album. Hedges was in fact quite a multi-instrumentalist, also playing piano, percussion, tin whistle, harmonica, and flute, among others on his albums. |
|||
==Recordings== |
|||
Many acoustic guitarists claim a very broad range of influences and will not fit into any genre, but this was truer of Hedges than of any other. His musical education was largely in modern 20th century composition. He listened to [[Leo Kottke]], [[Martin Carthy]], [[John Martyn]], and [[the Beatles]], but his approach to composition owed much to [[Igor Stravinsky|Stravinsky]], [[Edgar Varèse|Varèse]], [[Anton Webern|Webern]], and experimental composers such as [[Morton Feldman]]. He saw himself as a composer who played guitar, rather than a guitarist who composed music. He was often categorized as [[New Age Music|New Age]] due to his association with the [[Windham Hill Records|Windham Hill]] record label. Somewhat in reaction to this, he would describe his music as ''"Heavy Mental"'', ''"New Edge"'', "''"Thrash Acoustic"'', "''Deep Tissue Gladiator Guitar''" or ''"Savage Myth Guitar,"'' amongst other terms. |
|||
Hedges' first two albums for Windham Hill were ''[[Breakfast in the Field]]'' and ''[[Aerial Boundaries]]''.<ref name="Larkin"/> He wrote nearly exclusively in [[alternate tunings]]. His early recordings and most of the ''Breakfast in the Field'' album were recorded on the Ken DuBourg guitar and his Martin D-28, named "Barbara". Some of the techniques he used include slap harmonics (created by slapping the strings over a [[Node (physics)|harmonic node]]), use of right hand hammer-ons (particularly on bass notes), use of the left hand for melodic or rhythmic [[hammer-on]]s and [[pull off]]s, percussive, syncopated slapping on the guitar body, as well as unusual strumming. He made extensive use of string damping as employed in classical guitar, and was known to insist strongly on the precise duration of sounds and silences in his pieces. He played guitar variants like the [[harp guitar]] (an instrument with additional bass strings), and the [[TransTrem]] guitar.<ref name="Larkin"/> He was a multi-instrumentalist who played piano, percussion, tin whistle, harmonica, and flute. Virtuoso bassist [[Michael Manring]] contributed to nearly all of Hedges' records. |
|||
Frustrated that his published work reflected only the instrumental side of his creative output, Hedges convinced Windham Hill to release ''[[Watching My Life Go By]]'', a 1985 studio recording of his vocal originals written over a span of five years—songs often performed at his concerts leading up to the album's release.<ref name="Larkin"/> His fourth album, a live recording called ''[[Live on the Double Planet]]'', was assembled from 40 of his live concerts from 1986 to 1987.<ref name="Larkin"/> |
|||
Hedges was killed in a [[car accident]] in 1997. He was 43. His unfinished last recordings were brought to completion in the album ''Torched'', with the help of his friends [[David Crosby]] and [[Graham Nash]]. |
|||
His musical education was largely in modern 20th-century composition. He listened to [[Martin Carthy]], [[John Martyn (singer)|John Martyn]], and [[the Beatles]], but his approach to composition owed much to [[Igor Stravinsky]], [[Edgard Varèse]], [[Anton Webern]], and [[Steve Reich]], in addition to experimental composers such as [[Morton Feldman]]. He saw himself as a composer who played guitar, rather than a guitarist who composed music.<ref name="Larkin"/> He was often categorized as a [[new-age music]]ian because of his association with Windham Hill.<ref name="Larkin"/> |
|||
==Quotations About Michael Hedges== |
|||
“There is nobody on God’s green earth that plays the guitar like Michael Hedges.” - [[Steve Vai]] |
|||
Hedges toured briefly with [[Leo Kottke]]. These shows included solo performances by Kottke and Hedges and, as a finale, a number of duets including performances of Kottke's "Doodles" with Hedges playing a high-strung [[parlor guitar]]. |
|||
“Before Michael, acoustic guitar went from about right there to over here somewhere. After Michael, it goes from near the rest of us, where he found it, to out the other side of the world where he set it down for just a little while.” - [[David Crosby]] |
|||
Hedges' ''Aerial Boundaries'' album, released in 1984, included a tribute piece to the works of acoustic guitarist [[Pierre Bensusan]], simply entitled "Bensusan". Bensusan posthumously returned tribute on his 2001 release ''Intuite'' ("Favored Nations"), with a composition entitled "So Long Michael". |
|||
“Michael Hedges is the guitarist from another planet.” - [[William Ackerman]] |
|||
==Personal life== |
|||
"In Michael's hands, a guitar was a living, breathing extension of his deepest parts. It's almost as if he got so inside its body that the instrument was reborn. His passion for creating those exquisite melodies and technique was as focused as it was abandoned. There was simply no one like him." - [[Bonnie Raitt]] |
|||
Hedges was married to flautist [[Mindy Rosenfeld]] but the couple divorced in the late 1980s.<ref>{{cite book |title=Contemporary musicians: profiles of the people in music|url=https://archive.org/details/contemporarymusi00mich_3|url-access=registration|author=LaBlanc, Michael L. |publisher=Gale Research Inc|year=1990|isbn=9780810322110}}</ref> He was the father of two children, Mischa Aaron Hedges and Jasper Alden Hedges.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.geni.com/people/Michael-Hedges/6000000001819694091|title=Michael Hedges|website=Geni.com|date=December 31, 1953 |access-date=13 Jan 2016}}</ref> |
|||
==Death== |
|||
==Quotations from Michael Hedges== |
|||
According to his manager Hilleary Burgess, Hedges was driving home from [[San Francisco International Airport]] after a visit to a girlfriend in [[Long Island, New York]]. His car apparently skidded off a rain-slicked S-curve and down a {{convert|120|ft|m|adj=on}} cliff. Hedges was thrown from his car and appeared to have died nearly instantly. His body was found a few days afterward.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nomadland.com/pressdem.htm |title=Local news report |website=Nomadland.com |date=December 5, 1997 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Bendersky|first=Ari|title=Guitarist Michael Hedges Dies In Car Accident|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/guitarist-michael-hedges-dies-in-car-accident-19971204|website=Rollingstone.com|date=December 4, 1997|access-date=13 June 2013}}</ref> After his death, his album ''[[Oracle (Michael Hedges album)|Oracle]]'' won the 1997 [[Grammy Award for Best New Age Album]]. |
|||
“I’m not trying to play the guitar. I’m trying to play music.” |
|||
Hedges' unfinished last recordings were completed for the album ''[[Torched (Michael Hedges album)|Torched]]'' with the help of Burgess and friends [[David Crosby]] and [[Graham Nash]], who also provided backing vocals on one track.<ref>{{cite web|author=Matt Guthrie |url=http://www.nomadland.com/Torched.htm |title=Michael Hedges: Torched |website=Nomadland.com }}</ref> |
|||
“I play the guitar because it lets me dream out loud.” |
|||
==Guitars== |
|||
Hedges regularly used the following instruments:<ref>{{cite web|author=Matt Guthrie |url=http://www.nomadland.com/Stage_Rig.htm |title=Michael Hedges' Stage Rig |website=Nomadland.com }}</ref> |
|||
* 1971 [[C. F. Martin & Company|Martin]] D-28 guitar (nicknamed "Barbara") with a combination of a Sunrise S-1 magnetic pickup and FRAP contact pickup under the treble strings |
|||
* A 1978 Ken DuBourg custom made steel string guitar (stolen and returned many years later) |
|||
* A custom 1980s [[Takamine Guitars|Takamine]] guitar with his name on the headstock |
|||
* [[George Lowden|Lowden]] L-25 guitars |
|||
* Martin J-65M guitars |
|||
* 1920s Dyer harp guitar configured with a FRAP/autoharp pickup combo / reconfigured with Sunrise S-1 and two Barcus Berry magnetic pickups for the sub-basses (glued straight to the body) |
|||
* Steve Klein electric harp guitar with a Steinberger TransTrem bridge |
|||
* circa 1913 black Knutsen harp guitar (often incorrectly referred to as a Dyer) with a FRAP/autoharp pickup combo—and rattlesnake tail wedged under the sub-basses at the headstock |
|||
* Custom Ervin Somogyi acoustic (as credited on ''Breakfast in the Field'') |
|||
==Discography== |
==Discography== |
||
[[File:Michael Hedges street on the Northern Oklahoma College Campus in Enid, Oklahoma.jpg|thumb|Michael Hedges Blvd., on the Northern Oklahoma College (former Phillips University) campus in Enid, Oklahoma.]] |
|||
*''Breakfast In The Field'' (1981) |
|||
* ''[[Breakfast in the Field]]'' (Windham Hill, 1981) |
|||
*''Aerial Boundaries'' (1984) |
|||
* ''[[Aerial Boundaries]]'' (Windham Hill, 1984) |
|||
*''Watching My Life Go By'' (1986) |
|||
*'' |
* ''[[Watching My Life Go By]]'' (Open Air, 1985) |
||
* ''Santabear's First Christmas'' (1986) |
|||
*''Taproot'' (1990) |
|||
* ''[[Live on the Double Planet]]'' (Windham Hill, 1987) |
|||
*''The Road To Return'' (1994) |
|||
* ''[[Taproot (Michael Hedges album)|Taproot]]'' (Windham Hill, 1990) |
|||
*''Oracle'' (1996) |
|||
* ''Princess Scargo and the Birthday Pumpkin'' (1993) |
|||
*''Torched'' (1999 - posthumous) |
|||
* ''[[The Road to Return]]'' (High Street, 1994) |
|||
* ''[[Oracle (Michael Hedges album)|Oracle]]'' (Windham Hill, 1996) |
|||
* ''[[Torched (Michael Hedges album)|Torched]]'' (Windham Hill, 1999) |
|||
== |
== See also == |
||
* [[List of ambient music artists]] |
|||
* [http://www.nomadland.com/ Nomad Land: The official Michael Hedges site] |
|||
* [http://www.rootwitch.com Michael Hedges tribute site w/ lessons & info] |
|||
* [http://www.skinnydevil.com/lessons.html free Hedges-style lesson & interview] |
|||
* [http://www.guitar-poll.com/ Guitar-Poll] |
|||
==References== |
|||
[[Category:Guitarists|Hedges, Michael]] |
|||
{{Reflist}} |
|||
[[Category:Road accident victims|Hedges, Michael]] |
|||
[[Category:1953 births|Hedges, Michael]] |
|||
== External links == |
|||
[[Category:1997 deaths|Hedges, Michael]] |
|||
* [http://www.nomadland.com/ Official site] |
|||
* [http://www.innerviews.org/inner/hedges.html Michael Hedges Interview by Anil Prasad] |
|||
* {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/19980218185455/http://www.peabody.jhu.edu/concerts-and-events/pn/jan98/hedges.html |date=February 18, 1998 |title=Peabody Reports Michael's Death }} |
|||
* [http://www.harpguitars.net/players/month-player,2-06.htm Michael Hedges: Harp Guitar Player of the Month] |
|||
{{Authority control}} |
|||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hedges, Michael}} |
|||
[[fr:Michael Hedges]] |
|||
[[ |
[[Category:1953 births]] |
||
[[Category:1997 deaths]] |
|||
[[Category:20th-century American guitarists]] |
|||
[[Category:20th-century American male musicians]] |
|||
[[Category:American acoustic guitarists]] |
|||
[[Category:American male guitarists]] |
|||
[[Category:Guitarists from Oklahoma]] |
|||
[[Category:Enid High School alumni]] |
|||
[[Category:American fingerstyle guitarists]] |
|||
[[Category:Grammy Award winners]] |
|||
[[Category:Peabody Institute alumni]] |
|||
[[Category:Phillips University alumni]] |
|||
[[Category:Road incident deaths in California]] |
|||
[[Category:Windham Hill Records artists]] |
Latest revision as of 15:46, 26 October 2024
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2017) |
Michael Hedges | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Michael Alden Hedges |
Born | Sacramento, California, U.S. | December 31, 1953
Died | December 2, 1997 Mendocino County, California, U.S. | (aged 43)
Genres | New acoustic, world, new-age |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter |
Instrument(s) | Guitar, flute |
Years active | 1974–1997 |
Labels | Windham Hill |
Website | michaelhedges |
Michael Alden Hedges (December 31, 1953 – December 2, 1997) was an American acoustic guitarist and songwriter. He was known as a virtuoso who used unorthodox playing techniques, and much of his output was classified as new age music. Hedges died in an auto accident, and won a posthumous Grammy Award for his album Oracle.
Early years
[edit]The son of Thayne Alden Hedges and Ruth Evelyn Hedges Ipsen, Michael Hedges was born in Sacramento, California. His life in music began in Enid, Oklahoma, playing flute and guitar.[1] He enrolled at Phillips University in Enid to study classical guitar and composition under E. J. Ulrich, who Hedges credited as his biggest influence from his academic training. Hedges studied as a composition major at Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, Maryland[1] where he applied his classical background to steel-string acoustic guitar, also studying electronic music.[2]
Hedges made a living by playing and singing in bars and restaurants in Baltimore while a student at Peabody. From 1976 to 1977 he played electric guitar and flute for a local group called Lotus Band, which he left to start performing as a solo acoustic act. In 1980, he made plans to move to California to study music at Stanford University.[1] Hedges was contacted in February 1981 by William Ackerman who heard him perform at the Varsity Theater in Palo Alto. On a napkin, Ackerman signed Hedges to a recording contract with Windham Hill Records.[1]
Recordings
[edit]Hedges' first two albums for Windham Hill were Breakfast in the Field and Aerial Boundaries.[1] He wrote nearly exclusively in alternate tunings. His early recordings and most of the Breakfast in the Field album were recorded on the Ken DuBourg guitar and his Martin D-28, named "Barbara". Some of the techniques he used include slap harmonics (created by slapping the strings over a harmonic node), use of right hand hammer-ons (particularly on bass notes), use of the left hand for melodic or rhythmic hammer-ons and pull offs, percussive, syncopated slapping on the guitar body, as well as unusual strumming. He made extensive use of string damping as employed in classical guitar, and was known to insist strongly on the precise duration of sounds and silences in his pieces. He played guitar variants like the harp guitar (an instrument with additional bass strings), and the TransTrem guitar.[1] He was a multi-instrumentalist who played piano, percussion, tin whistle, harmonica, and flute. Virtuoso bassist Michael Manring contributed to nearly all of Hedges' records.
Frustrated that his published work reflected only the instrumental side of his creative output, Hedges convinced Windham Hill to release Watching My Life Go By, a 1985 studio recording of his vocal originals written over a span of five years—songs often performed at his concerts leading up to the album's release.[1] His fourth album, a live recording called Live on the Double Planet, was assembled from 40 of his live concerts from 1986 to 1987.[1]
His musical education was largely in modern 20th-century composition. He listened to Martin Carthy, John Martyn, and the Beatles, but his approach to composition owed much to Igor Stravinsky, Edgard Varèse, Anton Webern, and Steve Reich, in addition to experimental composers such as Morton Feldman. He saw himself as a composer who played guitar, rather than a guitarist who composed music.[1] He was often categorized as a new-age musician because of his association with Windham Hill.[1]
Hedges toured briefly with Leo Kottke. These shows included solo performances by Kottke and Hedges and, as a finale, a number of duets including performances of Kottke's "Doodles" with Hedges playing a high-strung parlor guitar.
Hedges' Aerial Boundaries album, released in 1984, included a tribute piece to the works of acoustic guitarist Pierre Bensusan, simply entitled "Bensusan". Bensusan posthumously returned tribute on his 2001 release Intuite ("Favored Nations"), with a composition entitled "So Long Michael".
Personal life
[edit]Hedges was married to flautist Mindy Rosenfeld but the couple divorced in the late 1980s.[3] He was the father of two children, Mischa Aaron Hedges and Jasper Alden Hedges.[4]
Death
[edit]According to his manager Hilleary Burgess, Hedges was driving home from San Francisco International Airport after a visit to a girlfriend in Long Island, New York. His car apparently skidded off a rain-slicked S-curve and down a 120-foot (37 m) cliff. Hedges was thrown from his car and appeared to have died nearly instantly. His body was found a few days afterward.[5][6] After his death, his album Oracle won the 1997 Grammy Award for Best New Age Album.
Hedges' unfinished last recordings were completed for the album Torched with the help of Burgess and friends David Crosby and Graham Nash, who also provided backing vocals on one track.[7]
Guitars
[edit]Hedges regularly used the following instruments:[8]
- 1971 Martin D-28 guitar (nicknamed "Barbara") with a combination of a Sunrise S-1 magnetic pickup and FRAP contact pickup under the treble strings
- A 1978 Ken DuBourg custom made steel string guitar (stolen and returned many years later)
- A custom 1980s Takamine guitar with his name on the headstock
- Lowden L-25 guitars
- Martin J-65M guitars
- 1920s Dyer harp guitar configured with a FRAP/autoharp pickup combo / reconfigured with Sunrise S-1 and two Barcus Berry magnetic pickups for the sub-basses (glued straight to the body)
- Steve Klein electric harp guitar with a Steinberger TransTrem bridge
- circa 1913 black Knutsen harp guitar (often incorrectly referred to as a Dyer) with a FRAP/autoharp pickup combo—and rattlesnake tail wedged under the sub-basses at the headstock
- Custom Ervin Somogyi acoustic (as credited on Breakfast in the Field)
Discography
[edit]- Breakfast in the Field (Windham Hill, 1981)
- Aerial Boundaries (Windham Hill, 1984)
- Watching My Life Go By (Open Air, 1985)
- Santabear's First Christmas (1986)
- Live on the Double Planet (Windham Hill, 1987)
- Taproot (Windham Hill, 1990)
- Princess Scargo and the Birthday Pumpkin (1993)
- The Road to Return (High Street, 1994)
- Oracle (Windham Hill, 1996)
- Torched (Windham Hill, 1999)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Colin Larkin, ed. (1997). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Concise ed.). Virgin Books. p. 590. ISBN 1-85227-745-9.
- ^ Michael Hedges - Interview Enid, OK, with Janice Anrukaitis (published on YouTube, Aug 24, 2010)
- ^ LaBlanc, Michael L. (1990). Contemporary musicians: profiles of the people in music. Gale Research Inc. ISBN 9780810322110.
- ^ "Michael Hedges". Geni.com. December 31, 1953. Retrieved January 13, 2016.
- ^ "Local news report". Nomadland.com. December 5, 1997.
- ^ Bendersky, Ari (December 4, 1997). "Guitarist Michael Hedges Dies In Car Accident". Rollingstone.com. Retrieved June 13, 2013.
- ^ Matt Guthrie. "Michael Hedges: Torched". Nomadland.com.
- ^ Matt Guthrie. "Michael Hedges' Stage Rig". Nomadland.com.
External links
[edit]- Official site
- Michael Hedges Interview by Anil Prasad
- Peabody Reports Michael's Death at the Wayback Machine (archived February 18, 1998)
- Michael Hedges: Harp Guitar Player of the Month
- 1953 births
- 1997 deaths
- 20th-century American guitarists
- 20th-century American male musicians
- American acoustic guitarists
- American male guitarists
- Guitarists from Oklahoma
- Enid High School alumni
- American fingerstyle guitarists
- Grammy Award winners
- Peabody Institute alumni
- Phillips University alumni
- Road incident deaths in California
- Windham Hill Records artists