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Frank Marino

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Name
  
Frank Marino

Instruments
  
Guitar

Role
  
Guitarist

Associated acts
  
Music group
  
Mahogany Rush

Website
  
mahoganyrush.com


Frank Marino Frank Marino DiMarzio

Birth name
  
Francesco Antonio Marino

Born
  
November 20, 1954 (age 69) Montreal, Quebec, Canada (
1954-11-20
)

Years active
  
1970 – 19932001 – present

Genres
  
Hard rock, Blues rock, Heavy metal

Albums
  
World Anthem, Juggernaut, What's Next, Double Live, From the Hip

Similar People
  
Yoshiki, Robin Trower, Pat Travers, Jim Zeller, Randy Hansen

Profiles


Occupation(s)
  
Musician, songwriter

Frank marino guitar solo 1979


Francesco Antonio "Frank" Marino (born November 20, 1954) is an Italian Canadian guitarist, leader of Canadian hard rock band Mahogany Rush. Often compared to Jimi Hendrix, he is acknowledged as one of the best and most underrated guitarists of the 1970s.

Contents

Frank Marino Frank Marino

Montreal guitarist frank marino on local radio his band and his life


Biography and career

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After playing drums since he was five, around age 13–14 Marino started playing guitar. An often-repeated myth is he was visited by an apparition of Jimi Hendrix after a bad LSD trip, a myth Marino has always disavowed, and still does so now on his personal website. His playing, however, is inspired by Hendrix (on the Gibson website he is described as "carrying Jimi's psychedelic torch"), and Marino is notable for strong cover versions of Hendrix classics such as "Purple Haze". He has been criticized by some as a Hendrix clone. Marino himself claims that he didn't consciously set out to imitate Hendrix's style at all: "The whole style just came naturally. I didn't choose it; it chose me."

Frank Marino Another Unsung Hero Frank Marino Guitar Gear

Mahogany Rush was moderately popular in the 1970s. Their records charted in Billboard, and they toured extensively, playing such venues as California Jam II (1978). Toward the end of the 1970s, the band began to be billed as "Frank Marino and Mahogany Rush." Not much later, Mahogany Rush split up and in the early 1980s Marino released two solo albums on CBS. The band reformed and continued to perform throughout the 1980s and 1990s. In 1993, Marino retired from the music industry.

Frank Marino Frank Marino and Mahogany Rush Bands artists and shows Ive seen

Marino returned in 2001, "I always knew we had fans, I just didn't know I'd find half a million of them on the Web," he said in an interview with Guitar Player in 2005. He released Eye of the Storm, and went on tour again, playing more improvisational shows. Frank is still active, recording and touring under his own name. He has also been involved in blues recordings with other artists as well, playing on tribute albums to Albert King and Stevie Ray Vaughan.

Frank Marino Frank Marino

Marino is uncle to Danny Marino, lead guitarist of Canadian metal band The Agonist.

Technique and equipment

Frank Marino Frank Marino one of the greatest most unsung guitar heroes Rock

Besides Jimi Hendrix, Marino acknowledged the influence of John Cipollina (of Quicksilver Messenger Service fame), Robby Krieger, Duane Allman, Johnny Winter, and Carlos Santana. He plays blues, heavy metal, and improvisational styles; one of his notable tricks is playing (live) a lick as if it were played backwards, with the help of only a volume pedal and a delay. His style has influenced many guitar players, including Zakk Wylde, Joe Bonamassa, Eric Gales and Paul Gilbert. His tone is recognized by for instance Guitar Player, which called him a "full-spectrum guitar god," alongside Jeff Beck, Eddie Van Halen, and The Edge.

Frank Marino Frank Marino Vintage Guitar magazine

Marino is a devoted Gibson SG player and uses them with the original PAF pickups and two with DiMarzio humbuckers. He also has an SG with single-coil DiMarzio pickups. He is noted for complicated set-ups; according to Guitar Player, he has "an entire pedalboard ... assigned to hold the expression pedals that control the parameters of the effects on another pedalboard." In the past, he has built his own amplifiers to achieve the right sound; he also uses Fender Twins. He currently uses a pre-amplifier he built himself, reminiscent of a Fender, and any available power amp, through a 2x15" Fane cabinet.

Solo

Frank Marino Frank Marino Vintage Guitar magazine

  • The Power of Rock 'n' Roll (1981 CBS)
  • Juggernaut (1982 Columbia Records) U.S. #185
  • Full Circle (1986)
  • From the Hip (1990)
  • Other recordings and collections

    Frank Marino Frank Marino Vintage Guitar magazine

  • April Wine - The Whole World's Goin' Crazy (1976)
  • Nanette Workman (album recorded but never released) (1976)
  • California Jam II (6 CD set) (1978)
  • Billy Workman:same (1979)
  • Fit for A. King (various artists) (1980)
  • V X N (pronounced Vixen )(1985)
  • Metal Giants (various artists) (1988)
  • Guitar Speak II (1990)
  • Hats off to Stevie Ray (various artists) (1993)
  • Bryan Lee: Live at the Old Absinthe House Bar Friday Night (1997)
  • Bryan Lee: Live at the Old Absinthe House Bar Saturday Night (1998)
  • Best of the Guitar Slingers (various artists) (2002)
  • Live and Loud (various artists) (2002)
  • Rock Thunder (various artists) (2002)
  • Bryan Lee: Bryan Lee's Greatest Hits (2003)
  • Rockin' 70s (various artists) (2004)
  • Montreal Jubilation Gospel Choir & the Jubilation Big Band – I'll Take You There (track 9) (2005)
  • Revolution – A Rock and Roll Tribute to The Beatles (various artists) (2005)
  • Doc Rock presents Classic Rock Weekend (various artists) (2006)
  • Vargas Blues Band – Flamenco Blues Experience (track 2) (2008)
  • Nos stars chantent le blues à Montréal – track 5. Who do you love? – Jonas (avec Frank Marino) (2010)
  • Just Gettin' Started – track 4. Wild Horses – Nanette Workman (2012)
  • Tribute

  • Secondhand Smoke: A Tribute to Frank Marino (tracks by George Lynch, Ronnie Montrose, James Byrd, Randy Hansen, Audley Freed, Jennifer Batten, Karl Cochran, Jeff Cloud, Rick Ray and John Norum) (2005)
  • References

    Frank Marino Wikipedia