ST. VINCENT
Annie Clark, aka St. Vincent, is one of the most well-known and commercially successful artists at the forefront of cutting edge guitar today. The Oklahoman singer-songwriter already has three Grammy awards to her name and has performed at the ceremony onstage with pop sensation Dua Lipa. But despite having one foot in the mainstream, Clark’s unorthodox approach to guitar fully embraces the avant-garde.
St. Vincent’s 2017 LP Masseduction cracked the top ten in both the UK and the US, and its electro-pop sound saw Clark rethinking the tonal palette of her guitar rather than abandoning it in favour of synths – something more typical of the genre’s core sound. Masseduction’s title track features heavy, fuzz-centric riffing that sounds far closer to a saw wave synth than an electric guitar, or anything obviously played by a human for that matter. Clark uses a slide to allow a continuous glide between notes that gives the riffs a pitch-bending quality, and the extremely obscure AAAAAE tuning allows her to hit multiple octaves at once for a thick, robotic sound.
Clark’s most recent album Daddy’s Home channels 70s downtown New York through soul-inspired vocals and a heavy use of a wah. Album highlight Down features Clark on both guitar and electric sitar-guitar, layering variant riffs atop one another before coming together for a harmonised dual-guitar solo that pays homage to psychedelia whilst sounding inventive and unique.
Not just content to stretch the boundaries of her music, Clark’s penchant for a bold, original idea is on full display with her signature Ernie Ball six-string, too. The model’s light weight and ergonomic shape was designed with female players in