IF I I I I I I II li Buy 1 Combo Meal, receive 10% off Thursdays in the EMU Food Court Auto Pros Inc. Locally owned ORiexr exPRess i LUBE, OIL, FILTER • Chassis Lube • New Oil Filter • Up to 5 Qts. 10W-30 Kendall Oil • Clean Front Window • Vaccuum Front Floor Boards No Appointment necessary Most light cars & trucks 99 3/4 or 1-ton & Extra Cab Trucks Additional Kendall DOWNTOWN 1320 Willamette 485*2356 *2975 West 11th 344-0007 Must present coupon at time of purchase Jazz, Blues & Great American Art Full bar, craft beers &. extensive wine list Celebrate or Commiserate Apres Civil War 3 Great American Cuisines BBQ Santa Fe Be the contest played out well or ill, Come after to the Crossroads Grill. Autzen Centennial ■4 Pioneer Pkwy. 737 Main Street, Springfield 741-3366 Main St. « South A St. *4 John Henry's Night Club $ Tuesdays: Hip-Hop a Reggaa ® Thursdays: m Vinyl Banco HigM $ Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays & Mondays: Tho freshest live music please recycle this paper! Eugene guitar wiz plays on ■A youthful Justin King has just finished his third album and is planning his fourth By Mason West Oregon Daily Emerald After four years of playing the acoustic guitar, Justin King has put one priority on his music: “It’s more important to be moving than impressive.” At the age of 22, the local guitar wizard has already released two al bums and traveled the world pur suing his craft and finding new ways to affect people with his mu sic. His skill has earned him a reg ular spot at Cafe Paradiso on Wednesday nights at 8:30 p.m. and taken him to England to record ma terial for a third release. King started playing music with a drum set but quickly found the elec tric guitar at the age of 14. However, it wasn’t long until he grew restless. “I was playing a lot of stuff that was angsty, like every teenager goes through, and I realized, like proba bly every teenager realizes eventu ally, I didn’t like feeling like shit all the time,” he said. “Part of my movement away from that kind of sound was a longing to be a little bit more creative and a little bit less down on everything.” King made the switch to acoustic guitar at 18 and since then said he has viewed the electric guitar as purely a melodic instrument that “feels like jelly.” King fuels his progress on the acoustic guitar with passion and motivation but not with teachers and books. He has studied with other musicians, but never in a strict teacher/student relationship. King defines them as “interactive relationships.” King also briefly at tended both Lane Community Col lege and the University — but nev er to study music. “What I’ve seen happen is if you remove the mystery completely from music and make it just math and formulas, you remove some emotional aspect to it,” he said. Despite King’s lack of formal training, he said he fears that many Mason West Emerald Justin King (right) works with Billy Barnett, owner of Gung-Ho Studio, to edit the rough recordings for King’s third release, due out early in 2002. people limit his music to its more formal aspects. “A lot of people see me as a tech nical guitar player, and that’s OK I guess, but I really wouldn’t like to be thought of that way. You can’t cuddle up to technical,” he said. King learns through experience and collaboration. He spent a week in France at the home of guitarist Pierre Bensusan gathering new ideas. He also traveled around Spain learning about flamenco gui tar by hanging out in traditional fla menco bars. There he found a gui tarist named Carlos who played nightly at a bar called El Cabaret. “He didn’t speak a word of Eng lish, and my Spanish is like, total caveman, but I would sit there and watch him, and afterward he’d come over and we’d just fuck around on the guitars. I would just try and fig ure out what he was doing, and he was trying to figure out what the hell I was trying to do,” King said. King doesn’t claim to play in any traditional guitar style because he adds his own flavor to everything he learns. He is influenced by oth er musicians, such as Michael Hedges and “a bunch of artists who you would have no idea who they were.” King is also inspired by ideas, as was the case with a song called “Locomotive,” which was born simply by his thinking about how to represent the sound of a train with a guitar. Sometimes, King’s ideas surpass physical capabilities. A year ago, he began toying with the idea of using a guitar technique called tapping, Turn to King, page 8 HOLIDAY SHOPPING 50% Off Selected Merchandise December 22 & 23, 2001 Goodwill has so much more in store tor the Holidays!