"I'm pursuing soundtrack work in the southern California area and down the line I plan to make a moody, intense acoustic album. Not all acoustic, but an acoustic - oriented guitar record that I've already written most of the material for"
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There is something quietly defiant in Montrose mapping his next moves like a working musician instead of a canonized guitar hero. “Soundtrack work in the southern California area” isn’t just geography; it’s code for the industry’s nerve center, where players reinvent themselves by learning how to serve a scene, not a spotlight. It hints at craft over fame: writing to picture, hitting deadlines, trading the ego-driven solo for texture and mood. For a musician associated with big, loud rock mythology, that pivot reads like maturity with an edge.
Then he drops the real tell: “down the line,” “plan,” “already written most of the material.” This is a guy staking out control. The subtext is less “someday I’ll make my personal record” and more “I’m already doing it, even if the market hasn’t caught up.” The phrase “moody, intense acoustic album” leans against the stereotype that acoustic equals mellow confession. He’s claiming acoustic as a weapon: stripped-down but pressurized, intensity without amplification as a kind of proof.
“Not all acoustic, but acoustic-oriented” is the artist hedging against purist policing while still signaling a new identity. It’s also strategic: he wants the emotional authority of acoustic intimacy without giving up the dynamic range that made him Montrose in the first place. In a culture that boxes musicians into their loudest decade, this reads like an argument for evolution: the same hands, different weather.
Then he drops the real tell: “down the line,” “plan,” “already written most of the material.” This is a guy staking out control. The subtext is less “someday I’ll make my personal record” and more “I’m already doing it, even if the market hasn’t caught up.” The phrase “moody, intense acoustic album” leans against the stereotype that acoustic equals mellow confession. He’s claiming acoustic as a weapon: stripped-down but pressurized, intensity without amplification as a kind of proof.
“Not all acoustic, but acoustic-oriented” is the artist hedging against purist policing while still signaling a new identity. It’s also strategic: he wants the emotional authority of acoustic intimacy without giving up the dynamic range that made him Montrose in the first place. In a culture that boxes musicians into their loudest decade, this reads like an argument for evolution: the same hands, different weather.
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| Topic | Music |
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