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Slide guitar master makes return to Salmon Arm

Martin Harley delighted fans with his performance at the 2016 Roots & Blues
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He was once a pancake cook at a nunnery. He lived for a year in Australia – in a used station wagon. He worked as a tree surgeon and was hired to be Santa Claus at a mall. Martin Harley has been around.

He’ll bring songs and stories from the road along with his incredible slide guitar chops to Salmon Arm on Sunday, May 7 at The Handmade Shoppe in the former Canadian Tire building. Harley is returning to Salmon Arm after appearing at the 2016 Roots and Blues festival, and the organization jumped at the chance to host him here again.

Even asking him where he calls home brings an interesting response. “Well,” he says after a pause. “I’m a Welshman who only lived in Wales for 12 months of my life. But that’s what it says on my passport. I grew up in the southeast of London. I now live north of London but I’ve lived in all sorts of places and traveled for the vast majority of my adult life.” He paused again and added, “So I remain lost- a citizen of the world, perhaps.”

His family was not particularly musical but he has early memories of music. “We used to travel a lot,” he explained. “So I remember being very young and traveling with the family in a green Volvo. My sister would listen to the Smiths. My dad would listen to Bob Marley and my mother was listen to stuff like Dire Straits.”

Harley was 15 when he discovered the blues. “I remember picking up a cassette tape in a French supermarket,” he recalled. “It was a mixture of blues artists. There was some Robert Johnson on it and also some Texas Flood with Stevie Ray Vaughn. I think music starting taking hold then but I didn’t pick up an instrument till I was a teenager.”

He started playing the lap slide guitar almost by accident. “That came to me living in the car in Australia when I was in my late 20’s.” he said.

“I bought a 12 string guitar which had been warped from the heat at a pawn shop. I couldn’t push the strings down onto the fret so I started tuning it to an open chord and I started playing it across my lap- which was nothing new. People have been doing that for a long timed but it was new to me.” He continued with a chuckle. “I found that learning to play the slide guitar in isolation is probably a very good idea.”

Harley has been to Canada twice but has never been to Vernon. He’s looking forward to playing live in Vernon. “People are going to hear a good deal of original music played on a mixture of standard acoustic guitars and something called a Weissenborn which is a hollow-necked, tradition Hawaiian-style guitar played across my lap. Folks can expect me to tell a few stories of how songs came to be.” He then added with a laugh, “Or they could be stories about anything I suppose, depending on the evening.”

“Performing live is absolutely my favourite thing to do,” he said.

“My aim is to create a really nice, intimate environment and to get the audience on-board for a wonderful evening of blues and Americana music.”

Harley will be appearing at The Handmade Shoppe on Sunday, May 7 for a matinee concert co-produced with Ted Crouch and Acoustic Avenue.

Tickets are available at the Roots &Blues office and Acorn Music. Doors open at 1 p.m. and the concert begins at 2.