The Nowhere Men featuring Gary R. Peterson
A cover of the Kinks classic
This guitar tune was stuck in Peterson's head so we pried it out with a wang bar and lashed it to a rock-solid drum beat and jumpy bass line.
Drums, bass, acoustic and electric guitars. I'm just noodling around, but I think you'll really like these noodles.
The Nowhere Men were called upon to record Gary R. Peterson's latest offering, 'Interstate of My Mind,' a highway-of-life / love song with three-part vocal harmony, relentless drive, and some of the fanciest guitar chords known to man.
Secret agent ghost rider in the sky rides tidal wave into forest fire.
Cowgirls don't get the blues when this vamp in the key of G is playing.
The bass and drums join two guitars for this musical play in three acts.
Synchopated rhythms keep this jazzy improvisation from becoming clichéd.
A plaintive guitar pleads its case with chords the likes of Em9add11 before breaking into a flat-out shuffle in E major.
This anthem to summer love is nominated for "The best use of a Gm6 chord and wang-bar at a pivotal moment" Award.
The kind of thing that happens when a middle aged kid finally gets a set of drums for his birthday, and a harmonica.
Lost in The Zone with only a four-tone leitmotiv and a flare for the mondo rondo, The Nowhere Men bring it all home, da capo al fine. (Listen carefully for the blackbirds raving up in the background at the very end.)
Like the brooding waters of a deep river, this song immerses the listener in an acoustic reverie - a pleasant vocal mind-scape. Philosophic but fun.