Shawn Lane
Biography
Shawn Lane was a phenomenally talented guitar player who never quite broke out beyond guitar enthusiasts and critics, but will remain influential to players for many years to come. Originally hailed as a child prodigy, Lane joined Black Oak Arkansas as a teenager, and could have been part of the guitar shredder movement of the late '80s and '90s, but his restless musical inclinations led him down a different path.Lane began his musical education on piano and cello at age four, but had switched to guitar by age eight. At ten, he was holding band rehearsals at the house he shared with his grandmother, and since the other bandmembers left their instruments at his house, Lane was free to try them out, and added bass and drums to his keyboard and guitar abilities. By 15, Lane was becoming known in Memphis circles as a guitarist, which led to an audition with Black Oak Arkansas in 1978, who he toured with for the next four years. Black Oak Arkansas was still popular enough to play at Bill Clinton's inaugural as Governor of Arkansas, but the band's heyday was well behind them. After disbanding briefly, BOA was re-formed with a couple of Shawn's high school friends joining the band, and bringing a heavy fusion edge to this southern boogie band. Then, burnt out from touring, Lane basically dropped out of sight in 1982 for a couple years, practiced piano, studied music theory and composition, and did a lot of reading and watching movies (he claims he barely played guitar at all during this period).
The mid-'80s saw Shawn returning to guitar: first playing in some bands around the south, then appearing on an album produced by Mike Varney on the Shrapnel label, with a tune called "Stratosphere II" on the U.S. Metal compilation (his first available recording). Shortly afterwards, he formed a band called the Willys, who were the house band at the Peabody Hotel in Memphis. Many touring musicians caught Lane's playing while staying there, and word of mouth led to session work, and eventually to his playing on the Highwayman 2 album with Johnny Cash and Willie Nelson. That high profile work ,and a demo cassette passed to Jim Ed Norman at Warner Brothers led to Lane being signed to Warner Brothers in 1990.
Lane spent the next two years at home, creating the Powers of Ten album, on which he played every instrument. Following its release in 1992, Guitar Player Magazine named him "Best New Talent" and he placed second in Keyboard Magazine's "Best Keyboard Player" category. A touring band was assembled to promote the album, and a live recording was made, though it wasn't released until 2001(Powers of Ten Live!). His next project was DDT, a band that also featured Cody and Luther Dickenson, later of the North Mississippi Allstars. The DDT material was supposed to be for Lane's second album for Warner Bros., but the recording never materialized. Also at this time, Lane did production work for other artists, did a couple instructional videos, and developed curricula and taught at several European Conservatories.
1994 would be an important year for Lane, as it marked his first collaboration with Swedish bassist Jonas Hellborg, a relationship that would continue for nearly a decade and produce many releases (mostly on the Bardo label). Lane and Hellborg were perfect collaborators, sharing many of the same musical influences and many other interests as well, and it was playing with Hellborg that Lane really discovered his voice on guitar. They toured with drummer Jeff Sipe over the next several years, developing such a rapport that they were able to play completely improvised sets every night (documented on albums like Temporal Analogues of Paradise and Time Is the Enemy). Concurrently, in 1995, Hellborg and Lane played with Chinese pop singer Wei-Wei, and the Hellborg/Lane/Sipe trio appeared as an opening act at all of Mainland China's largest musical venues.
Lane and Hellborg parted ways with Sipe in 1997, allowing Lane to work on the tracks that would become Tri-Tone Fascination, his second solo album in 1999. Also at this time, he and Hellborg began incorporating more Near Eastern and Eastern influences into their playing and improvising (Zenhouse, ). In 1999, Lane and Hellborg began working with V. Selvaganesh, son of percussionist Vikku Vinayakram of Shakti fame, and began pushing the music into more of a South Indian fusion, as evidenced by Good People in Times of Evil.
Lane started having health problems in 2001, temporarily breaking off his work with Hellborg. After recovering, Lane started playing with a Memphis bar band called the Time Bandits, but was back with Hellborg and Sipe for a brief tour in 2002. There was also more work with the Vinayakrams, resulting in Icon, a dazzling work of East-West fusion that, unfortunately proved to be among Lane's final recorded works. There was a brief tour of India in February of 2003, but Lane's health problems returned, and on Sept. 26, 2003, Shawn Lane passed away following lung surgery. ~ Sean Westergaard, All Music Guide
Selected Discography
No, either eddie or yngwie is the fastest. This guy didn't even come close.
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Never heard of him 'til now. Damn, he was smooth and fast. Very good. Shame he's no longer with us.
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The fastest guitarist ever........ . . . . . . . . . and the only one who had the guts to dabble in improvisatio n a l music with all that speed....... . . . . . . . . R I P Shawn....... . .
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Wow, I had never heard anything by Shawn Lane before. Simply amazing guitar work, very talented style. It's too bad I've just discovered him.
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I wish they would re-release Powers of Ten. One of the greatest recordings EVER. R.I.P. brother
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Shawn was also famous for being in Black Oak Arkansas a band that reminded many of Van Halen before Van Halen he was 15 when playing the role of Eddie in this band and the lead singer even looked like David lee Roth. Shawn was way better than Eddie even Yngwie was no match to this shred guitar wizard. Those who have gone to youtube and witnessed his videos are blown away
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jeffreycente r s is correct - I knew Shawn from the time he was 14 y/o. He passed away in 2003 and he LOVED Hendrix and covered 'Peace in Mississippi' . He was also known around the clubs in Memphis for his blazing rendition of 'All along the Watchtower' (Dylan/Hendr i x ) . Requiem en pace Shawn...
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This is Shawn Lane who passed away in 2003. And "Tri-Tone Fascination" is his CD also. And he was definitely male.
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THIS SOUNDS MORE LIKE A FEMALE ARTIST-----I S THIS EVEN THE RIGHT PICTURE TO GO WITH THIS ARTIST?????? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
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This is not the Shawn Lane that passed away in 2003 (RIP). :( However, the Tri-Tone stuff does feature him. Shawn was an amazing musician who can play an incredible guitar and piano not to mention bass and drums, he did pretty much everything on his Powers of 10 album which is amazing! God bless you Shawn, your memory and music will always remain! Link to the true Shawn Lane: http://en.wi k i p e d i a . o r g / w i k i / S h a w n _ L a n e
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Are you sure that this is the right Shawn Lane? The song playing is "Peace in Mississippi" .
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