Local boys participate in guitar festival workshops
Guitarists speckled the landscape of
the sprawling grounds at the Flathead Lake Lodge in Bigfork on an
unseasonably cool Thursday afternoon. Among them: 15-year-old
Josiah Dunham, a quiet Lakeside homeschooler with a big passion for
music.
Dunham was one of a handful of student
musicians who received full scholarships to attend the weeklong
series of classes offered as part of the second annual Crown of the
Continent Guitar Foundation Workshop and Festival.
Each year, the festival brings together
world-renowned musicians from several different genres — along with
local students and instructors — for a week of concerts, classes
and camaraderie.
Although Dunham dabbled in music
throughout his childhood — he started playing the piano at age 5 —
he didn’t discover his affinity for the guitar until about three
years ago.
“I was hanging out with some of my
dad’s relatives at a family reunion, and they were just sitting
around playing guitar,” Dunham said. “They were really good. They
were teaching me some stuff, and I just wanted to follow through
with it.”
Since then, Dunham has taken lessons
on-and-off, but he is mostly self-taught.
“There’s so much you can learn on the
Internet these days,” Dunham said.
As a homeschooled student, Dunham has
the freedom to set aside ample time to practice his craft. His
schedule also allows him to work for his dad — who is in the
telecommunications business — so he can earn money to buy guitars
and guitar accessories.
“It works out because I like to spend
all my money on guitar stuff,” he said.
For Dunham, playing music is often a
solitary activity — which is why he welcomed the company of so many
fellow guitarists, especially world-famous artists such as Steve
Lukather, Lee Ritenour and Joe Bonamassa.
“Being around all these guitarists is
amazing,” Dunham said. “You might not recognize all their names,
but they are incredible. They’re just not on the radio because
they’re not mainstream.”
As students in the intermediate rock
workshop, Dunham and his peers learned a variety of musical
concepts and techniques — including chord patterns and progressions
— to help them develop their playing skills. Although he found the
instruction very helpful, Dunham said that for him, a big part of
the learning experience was simply listening to other guitarists
play.
“When you hear how awesome they are, it
inspires you to practice,” Dunham said.
As he continues to improve, Dunham has
his sights set on establishing a fluid connection between his
emotions and his music.
“Music, to me, has always been another
way to express myself, almost like a second voice,” he said. “I
would like to be able to portray how I’m feeling. I can always hear
it in my head, but I would like to become more proficient at
translating that to the guitar.”
Although he sometimes thinks about
pursuing a career in music, Dunham said that wherever life takes
him, he will continue playing guitar.
“It would be great to do something with
the guitar for a living, but I think that could be tough,” he said.
“For me, it’s more just for fun. I’ll always play, whether I’m
working in construction or whatever.”
Building a foundation
Although the intermediate and advanced
students entered the workshops with a well-established skill set,
class offerings weren’t limited to those with solid foundations in
guitar.
Missoula-based guitarist Tommy Pertis
spent the week working with a group of beginners, including
12-year-old Bigfork resident Zach Guizol.
“It’s been working out as a really good
match so far because I get to work with beginners all the time,”
said Pertis, who teaches a beginning guitar class as an adjunct
music professor at the University of Montana. “And when I say ‘get
to,’ I really mean it. I consider it a real pleasure to introduce
these concepts of music to new players, especially before they’ve
developed any bad habits.”
Guizol, who started playing guitar
about a year-and-a-half ago, was also one of this year’s
scholarship recipients. In his application letter, Guizol expressed
hope that the workshops might help him rediscover his passion for
music.
“I took lessons for a couple of months,
and then I got some CDs and learned on my own for awhile, but it
just started to get frustrating,” Guizol said. “So I stopped
playing for while.”
After hearing about the workshop
scholarships, Guizol’s father encouraged him to apply.
“I thought it would be a neat way to
get back into guitar,” Guizol said. “So in my (scholarship) letter,
I told them about how I played and how I got frustrated, and that I
wanted to try to get back into it.”
Over the course of the week, Guizol and
his classmates have practiced basic guitar techniques, along with a
few fun tricks to impress their friends with.
“We’ve learned new ways to use the
guitar, and new ways to play that we didn’t know about,” Guizol
said.
Pertis enjoys watching his students
grasp, and eventually master, the skills he teaches.
“It makes me happier to see them pick
up a skill than it makes me to pick up one myself,” Pertis said. “I
get to be the first person to call them guitarists.”
At the end of the week, all students —
including beginners — performed onstage as a group.
“Some of these guys are going to go
from never having any instruction to playing in a concert as part
of an ensemble,” Pertis said. “To take that step in one week is
phenomenal. To have a program that sets the bar that high is a
great thing.”