
A consequence of the sonic potential of an amplified electric guitar, pick drag is the sound made when a guitarist slides the tip or edge of his pick along a single string. It is widely assumed that Bo
Diddley introduced pick drag, in the song “Road Runner” (1957), in which the sound he made with his guitar is the aural equivalent of a car
accelerating from 0 to 60 MPH. (Check out
this demonstration of pick drag.) If it is true that from its inception the opposition structuring rock was
groove (a redundant riff) versus
sonics, then Bo
Diddley is an interesting case. Although widely known for the “Bo
Diddley beat” (“shave and a haircut, six bits”), his interest in exploring sonics — the size and shape of the imaginary spaces that hold music — is perhaps more influential. Pick drag is an example of
exteriorized sound (
acceleration, distance as a function of time), while Bo’s uses of
reverberation, echo, and delay are examples of
interiorized sound, prefiguring
psychedelia. Did Bo
Diddley ever record “The Pusher,” written by Hoyt
Axton but famously
recorded by Steppenwolf? For
Steppenwolf's rendition owes much to Bo
Diddley’s sonic
explorations.
Thanks to Stan Ridgway for the suggestion.
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