Eric Roche

Eric Roche
Background information
Born (1967-12-04)December 4, 1967
Origin New York City, USA
Died September 6, 2005(2005-09-06) (aged 37)
Genres Fingerstyle
Instruments Guitar
Years active 1990s–2000s
Labels P3 Music
Website www.ericroche.com
Notable instruments

Eric Roche (December 4, 1967 – September 6, 2005)[1] was an Irish fingerstyle guitarist.

Biography

Roche was born in New York City, but his family soon moved to Tralee, County Kerry, Ireland. He was a learnt accountant, but practised only for a short time before enlisting for classical guitar in 1992 at the London Musician's Institute. After his degree he became head of its guitar department in 1996 and released his first CD The Perc U Lator three years later. In 2000 he accepted a position as head of guitar at Academy of Contemporary Music in Guildford, where his pupils included Newton Faulkner. In 2001 his second CD Spin was released. In 2004 Roche issued his third album With These Hands and released his book The Acoustic Guitar Bible, a guide to acoustic guitar playing with a foreword by Tommy Emmanuel. Roche was a regular columnist for the magazines Guitar Techniques and Acoustic Guitar and did international master classes and workshops.[1]

Eric played many musical genres on solo guitar such as classical, Celtic, Folk, jazz, blues, rock and pop. As well as being a gifted guitarist-composer, he was also well known for his solo guitar arrangements of other artists' tunes. Some of these solo arrangements include:

A characteristic feature of his playing was his percussive style of playing involving drumming on the body of the guitar to create the sound of various different drums and sounds similar to DJ scratching. He was well versed in not only standard tuning, but also in various other altered tunings on guitar, especially DADGAD. Just like Pierre Bensusan and Laurence Juber, Roche was able to play in multiple keys on this tuning without the need for a capo.

Death

Roche died from throat cancer aged 37 and left his wife Candy and his two children, Stefanos and Francesca.[2]

Roche's death was mourned by many of his colleagues. For Eric, a tribute CD, was released shortly after his death in 2005, containing 20 tracks from different artists. In 2006, the Guitar School of the Academy of Contemporary Music in Guildford was renamed to "ACM Eric Roche Guitar School". Guthrie Govan dedicated a song called "Eric" in his 2006 album Erotic Cakes to him. Newton Faulkner's song 'So Much' was written as a token of respect for the influence Roche had had in his life. In 2006 Roche's Tablature Collection #1 was published, jointly produced by Roche and his close friend Thomas Leeb, who dedicated his work to Roche and his part of possible income to the benefit of Roche's children.YouTube guitarist, 'Robert Castellani', wrote a song in tribute to Roche entitled, 'Song for Eric'.

A radio documentary on Roche's life, featuring his brother Bryan, was broadcast on the Irish station RTE in February 2009.[3]

Discography

Books and sheet music

References

  1. 1 2 Ankeny, Jason. "Eric Roche: Biography". Allmusic. Retrieved 2007-12-23.
  2. News - page at Eric Roche's website. Retrieved on January 04, 2008
  3. With These Hands - page at RTE website. Retrieved on February 07, 2008

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.