Sean Smith - Ed Sheeran
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First published by HarperCollinsPublishers 2018
FIRST EDITION
Text Sean Smith 2018
Jacket design by Claire Ward HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd 2018
Jacket photograph Jesse Dittmar/Redux/eyevine
A catalogue record of this book is available from the British Library
Sean Smith asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work
While every effort has been made to trace the owners of copyright material reproduced herein and secure permissions, the publishers would like to apologise for any omissions and will be pleased to incorporate missing acknowledgements in any future edition of this book.
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Source ISBN: 9780008267513
Ebook Edition November 2018 ISBN: 9780008267551
Version: 2018-10-16
Ed was very upset. Without warning, his first guitar teacher had decided that teaching wasnt for him. Playing the guitar was crucially important to Ed and this seemed like a hammer blow to the twelve-year-old boy. He took it very badly. His mother recognised that she needed to act quickly to rekindle his enthusiasm or Ed would go back into his shell. She started asking around to see if someone else in Framlingham might take on her son, and discovered that two neighbours in the street were both using the same virtuoso guitarist to teach their children. They spoke very highly of jazz musician Keith Krykant, whom theyd found through an ad in a local community paper, and thought he would be ideal for Ed.
Keith, who was in his early fifties, had only moved recently to the town but, coincidentally, he had already heard of Ed. He had started teaching Richard Croney, one of the children who lived across the road from the Sheerans. One afternoon Keith was walking home with Richard when they saw a ginger-haired boy on the other side of the street. Richard piped up, Thats Edward Sheeran, and told Keith that Ed played concerts in the town and was already quite well known locally.
Keith and his wife, Sally Voakes, a jazz singer, had started to play gigs in the area and were building a following themselves. Sometimes it would just be the two of them, the Sally Voakes Duo or, for other nights, they might be joined by three or four local musicians.
One evening they were booked as a duo to play the Crown Hotel, which occupied a central position in Market Square. Imogen and John decided to go.
They were impressed, not just with Keiths playing but also by his calm demeanour. They approached him and asked if he might consider teaching Ed. He agreed to give him a weekly lesson, charging 20 for an hour. The lessons, usually in Eds untidy teenage bedroom, continued for the next five years and complemented his development as a guitarist and, just as importantly, as a songwriter.
Ed already had a few guitars hanging on the bedroom wall. His rock guitar had pride of place over the bed. He preferred to decorate the orange walls of his room with his favourite instruments rather than posters of footballers or pop stars. When he grew tired of one or no longer played it, the guitar would be banished under the bed.
One of the first things Keith noticed in the room was an Epiphone Les Paul Sunburst guitar. He offered Ed a Bigsby tremolo unit that he wasnt using at the time, and popped it round to the house. By the time of the next lesson, Ed had put it on and was practising using it. Ed and his mum were hugely appreciative of the gesture, which helped teacher and pupil form a bond of mutual respect and the Krykants and Sheerans to forge a lasting friendship.
Keith quickly realised that Eds playing was pretty advanced for his age and that he also had a great deal of confidence in his own ability. Laughing, he recalls, Hed got a little bit of an inflated ego. He once said that I was the only guitarist hed seen that was better than him. He was only thirteen!
Musically, Ed was at a crossroads. Like many teenage boys, his initial ambition was to be a rock god. He had his electric guitar, admired Eric Clapton and others, and had formed his own group with two friends from school, Fred and Rowley Clifford. They called themselves Rusty and played heavy-metal covers, mainly Guns N Roses. Their showstopper when they appeared at the old Drill Hall in Framlingham was the American bands most famous hit Sweet Child of Mine. Ed liked that song but wasnt wild about the rest of the material.
While Fred did his best impersonation of charismatic singer Axl Rose, Ed took on the Slash role of lead guitarist. He relished the solo, meticulously learning every note in his bedroom after school. He didnt sing because he wasnt any good at it. I couldnt really hold a tune until I was sixteen, he admitted.
Eric Claptons most famous band, Cream, had been a trio, as was the Jimi Hendrix Experience and Rory Gallaghers Taste. It seemed the perfect number to draw attention to the guitarist. They took it very seriously, observes Georgie Ross. As well as various assemblies and low-key school events, they played at the annual charity concert at Thomas Mills, one of the big occasions of the year.
Ed was already getting bored with the band. Keith Krykant observes, He was playing this rock but I think was beginning to realise there was other stuff out there. Hed done that. He exhausted it. He was just imitating others.
Everything changed when Ed discovered the second of the three great musical influences in his life. He was staying up late one night, watching videos on the music channels, when he saw Cannonball by a then little-known artist called Damien Rice. It was very quirky, a series of apparently random images sprinkled with shots of Damiens face as he sang. The almost surreal experience was linked together with a hypnotic acoustic riff.
Ed was immediately hooked. He went out and bought Damiens debut album O the very next day, which was later his choice in Q magazines fascinating The Album that Changed my Life. He admired its honesty and rawness: It was like hed reached down his throat, grabbed his heart, ripped it out, stuck it on a plate and served it up to the world. Ed couldnt wait to share his discovery with his friends. Unfortunately the Clifford brothers thought it was shit so Rusty was hastily disbanded due to artistic differences. The falling-out was an early indication to Ed that he was better off doing it all himself.
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