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Blue Guitar Highway [Hardcover]

David Carr , Paul Metsa

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: University of Minnesota Press (19 Sep 2011)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0816676429
  • ISBN-13: 978-0816676422
  • Product Dimensions: 23.4 x 16 x 2.8 cm
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 300,681 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Paul Metsa
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt
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Amazon.com:  10 reviews
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
A Veteran Singer-Songwriter on the Trials and Joys of a Musician's Life 25 Oct 2011
By Frank Beacham - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I'm not a musician, but I love music and the people who make it. I especially like the little dive bar clubs--those tiny rock 'n roll dungeons where the genuine, real-life jams happen late at night after the paying crowd has left the building. Paul Metsa in "Blue Guitar Highway" takes you into these clubs and navigates through the ups and downs of a working musician's life. It is a mesmerizing journey in a real page-turner.

What's unique is Paul Metsa is not a household name. He's not a "famous" musician living a privileged "rock star" life. Yet, as you learn as the story unfolds, he has played with and for a virtual who's who of musicians at some of the top venues in the nation.

This is a guy who loves music and often lives gig to gig on minuscule paychecks, yet has a life that is rich with friendships, music, travel and remarkably colorful stories. His encounters with Minnesota's more famous song-writing wizard--Bob Dylan--are scattered throughout the book and many are hilarious. He's also a musician with balls, something that is illustrated clearly when he calls and goes to the hotel room of the Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia after a gig to hand him a demo tape.

One of the things that kept me glued to Metsa's masterfully written narrative were the names of musicians he has played or worked with. So many--from Hubert Sumlin, Eric Weissberg and Scarlet Rivera to Louisiana Red, Honeyboy Edwards and Nappy Brown--I have known or had personal encounters with myself. As I read on, I was amazed by the constant connections Metsa makes with these familiar characters.

Paul Metsa nails the music scene with crisp, knowing prose. "American rock and roll started around a campfire in a dark and howling wind," he wrote. "It was blues, country and hillbilly music then. Once it was moved into four walls--juke joint or gin joint, rent party apartment, greased alley garage, or some full-moon Ozark barn dance--it became rock and roll.

"First, gut-bucket whiskey passed around in coffee cans, then ordered over the bar, smoke from hand-rolled cigarettes misting blue windows, both inviting the night and keeping it at bay, beautiful women writhing with imaginary lovers on sawdust dance floors, young men on a weekend pass from some hell-forbidden job doing the Hucklebuck and the Chicken Strut, these sons and daughters then joining in this Church of Saturday night together, while the band in the corner jacks it up, like drill hammers toward heaven, until the sweaty crowd tumbles out sanctified and satisfied."

As much as I like Metsa's writing about his life in music, his colorful family--and his super dog, Blackie--are also important elements to this story. Blackie, one of those instant attractions who senses his future owner at an animal shelter, started as a "problem dog" and managed to max out Metsa's new $5,000 credit limit card when he was hit by a car. From there, the story of Blackie is beautifully told as Metsa nurses him through surgery while tending to his own father, who was also healing from a serious illness.

When Blackie finally stood on all fours, unbowed by his trauma "like a canine Phoenix," Metsa wrote "a water pail couldn't have held my tears."

Then he continues: "Blackie's first paw-penned Christmas card described the whole story: price of adoption: $65. Price of emergency vet in Golden Valley: $1,400. Price of intensive care and surgery at the U of M vet hospital: $3,600. Price of having Minnesota's second best folksinger take me out at 6 a.m. and hold me up while I poop: priceless."

Metsa taps into one of the key reasons I like and respect musicians. These are people who--against all odds--create music out of thin air in a cruel world where "success" is normally measured by how much money a person makes. Anyone can learn to juggle financial deals in banks and on Wall Street, but it takes a special breed to survive and constantly make works of art in an environment where their talent is not celebrated or even recognized.

"The older I get, the more I am drawn to these kinds of men and women, tried-and-true American musicians, artists each and every one," Metsa wrote. "From the heartbeat in their mother's wombs, into a world that bounces us all around like pinballs, they became musicians because it was in their blood. They survived and prospered, not necessarily in terms of money but as beacons to guide the rest of us in troubled waters to that shore that we all call home."

Amen, brother!
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Great read, enjoyed near every page 29 Oct 2011
By iSauna - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Mr. Carr's dead-on foreword sets the tone, you're hooked from page one.. Paul doesn't brag or preach, he just brings it. Worth reading whether you've heard of him or not.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
I thought I knew a thing or two... 14 Dec 2011
By SendInMaureen - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I thought I knew a thing or two about the Minneapolis music scene until I read Paul Metsa's Blue Guitar Highway. It's a `tell all' in the best sense of the phrase. Lots of name-dropping of names and places, and that's one of the things I relish about it. It's a `who's who' of so many great musicians in the Twin Cities and the nation crossing many genres. And yes, of course I wanted to know who he was influenced by and connected with.

I fell in love with Metsa's music when I heard his song "Slow Justice" many years ago. As a lefty, I wanted to learn more about what made this guy tick. Now I know where he's from, how his family and hometown supported him, who he gravitated toward when he moved to the city, all his crazy escapades and why he's prone to cry when he talks about the people and the dog he loves. It's like he let us into his head and his heart.

About the writing... who knew the eclectic musician and performer could string together his thoughts with such eloquence right alongside a sneaky and clever wit. You can immediately tell he's well-read and has interests that reach far beyond songwriting. I was really entertained by his choice of words, turn of phrase, and a fun use of colorful language in just the right setting. So many lines simply took me by surprise. I wish I'd read it with a highlighter in hand.

Now when I hear his music, I appreciate it all the more. I got a peak at this complicated and very simple man. You can bet I'm going to listen closely to every new thing he writes.

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