My defining moment was at around 4pm on the third Sunday in September, 1963!
I will explain. I was packed off to boarding school (Woodbridge, Suffolk) that month. I was already a Shads fan but the thought of playing guitar had never crossed my mind. Guitarists were gods who lived in the tele, on the radio or on record, not mere mortals like me. On Sunday aftrenoons I had found that we had to take ourselves out for a walk after Sunday lunch. I had been down to the town and was walking back passed the school hall when I heard the sound of a Shads tune coming from within. Clearly this sound was not from a record but being played live. I openned the door and my jaw fell open as I saw the boy who sat next to me in house playing a real bass guitar along with three other boys I knew who were playing guitars and drums. It suddenly dawned on me that if they could do it, so could I.
The second defining moment came when the very next morning I saw the advert for the free Bells Catalogue in the Daily Mail and sent off for it. Result - an acoustic guitar for Christmas. And so began the long and very expensive journey through a succession of instruments arriving at the eight I own today.
The boys in that schol group were, by the way, Nick Lowe on bass, who went on to play with Dave Edmunds Rockpile and had a number 1 hit with "I Like The Sound of Breaking Glass", Barry Landemann on drums, who went on to play keyboard and the recorder solo on Vanity Fair's No 1 hit "Hitchin' A Ride, and Brinsley Schwartz on lead guitar (playing a Fenton Weil) who became well known in the '70s and early '80s and played with Graham Parker and the Rumour. With talent like that in touching distance how could i fail to be inspired.
Brian
