Skip to main content
MusicRadar MusicRadar The No.1 website for musicians
UK EditionUK US EditionUS AU EditionAustralia SG EditionSingapore
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
  • Artist news
  • Synth Week 26
  • Synths
  • Guitars
  • Controllers
  • Drums
  • Keyboards & Pianos
  • Guitar Amps
  • Music Gear Reviews
  • Software & Apps
  • More
    • Recording
    • DJ Gear
    • Acoustic Guitars
    • Bass Guitars
    • Tech
    • Tutorials
    • Reviews
    • Buying Guides
    • About us
Don't miss these
Johnny Jewel
Artists Johnny Jewel on his relationship with synths and working with David Lynch
Jake Kiszka of Greta Van Fleet rips a solo on his '61 SG.
Artists Jake Kiszka on the time he went shopping for the world’s most expensive guitar amp in Japan
Jill Fraser
Artists Synth pioneer Jill Fraser on pushing boundaries in the world of electronic music
Nate Garrett of Spirit Adrift is pictured with his Les Paul
Artists Why an underground hero is calling time on one of 21st-century metal's greatest bands
Geoff Downes
Artists We speak to Yes, Asia and the Buggles synth legend Geoff Downes
Moog
Synths We speak to Moog Music President Joe Richardson who exclusively reveals what's coming up
PinkPantheress performs at the 2026 Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival - Weekend 1 - Day 2 on April 11, 2026 in Indio, California. (Photo by Katie Flores/Billboard via Getty Images)
Artists PinkPantheress on her lightbulb MIDI keyboard moment, and her whirlwind music production journey
Jake Kiszka plays his '61 SG live onstage during Tons of Rock 2025
Artists How Greta Van Fleet's Jake Kiszka met the Beloved – the ’61 SG Les Paul that became his talisman
A PRS McCarty 594 on a hard case
Electric Guitars Best electric guitars 2026: Our pick of guitars to suit all budgets
A Strandberg Boden Original N2.6T headless electric guitar with a Fender Tone Master amp modeler
Electric Guitars “If this is the future of guitar, then sign me up”: Strandberg Boden Original N2.6T review
jimmy douglass
Producers & Engineers "This guy pops out of a trash can – it was Ginger Baker!": Jimmy Douglass on his early days working for Atlantic Records
Getty Images
Artists Genre-colliding producer Justin Raisen speaks to us about the thrill of working on Kim Gordon's latest record
flying lotus
Artists “All I hear is ‘Auto-Tune sucks’ and 'drum machines have no soul'”: Flying Lotus on the backlash against AI music
Close up of LR Baggs acoustic guitar pickup
Guitar Pickups Best acoustic guitar pickups 2025: electrify your acoustic for stage, studio and sound fx – our top picks for all budgets
Eric Johnson takes a solo onstage with his Gibson SG
Artists Eric Johnson on the $400,000 rig he hardly played, the Dumble that got away, and his masterplan for setting his playing free
More
  • Synth Week 2026
  • Jimmy Jam
  • 95k+ free music samples
  • Chinese synths
  1. Guitars

St Vincent on creating her signature Music Man guitar, avoiding playing clichés, and performance art

News
By Jamie Dickson, David Mead published 10 April 2017

Thoughts and philosophy from the indie rock guitar goddess

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Introduction

Introduction

Art-rocker and designer of a stunning Music Man signature model, St Vincent - AKA Annie Clark - is notching up accolades across the entire breadth of the music world. We find out more…

You know that feeling when you’ve witnessed a performance so electrifying it sticks with you for months afterwards? This was our experience when we caught St Vincent’s act at The Green Man Festival a while ago. 

Annie Clark is responsible for one of the boldest guitar designs of recent years: the Music Man St Vincent guitar

Her music is a beautiful collision of adept, otherworldly guitar parts and propulsive electronica - though falling short, comparisons with artists such as Bowie, 70s Roxy Music and Talking Heads are a starting point, should anyone be unfamiliar with her music. In fact, she has recorded and toured with Talking Heads’ David Byrne - a fruitful meeting of kindred spirits on the wilder shores of art-rock.

She’s also responsible for one of the boldest guitar designs of recent years: the Music Man St Vincent guitar, pictured here, looks like no other - its clash of modern and retro styles making it almost unique in terms of contemporary design.

“I was really inspired by Klaus Nomi’s triangular tuxedo,” she tells us - and, if you look it up on Google, you can see exactly what she means. With a “deep, bold,” new album in the offing, we grabbed the opportunity to speak with Annie across the Atlantic and we began by backtracking just a little…

Page 1 of 5
Page 1 of 5
Into the chocolate factory

Into the chocolate factory

How did the process of designing your signature guitar begin?

“In the spring of 2015, the Ball family invited me to see the Ernie Ball factory and so I went up there for a day and saw how they built guitars, all the care they put into them… I spoke to a lot of the employees, lots of whom had been there for years. It’s truly a handcrafted guitar and, for me, as a guitar player going into a guitar workshop, it was like going into Willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory!

The guitar that I drew up on that first day is very similar to what ended up making the final cut

“I just got the sense that they not only made a high-quality product for players, they also seem to run a very respectful and respectable business. It means a lot to me, in this day and age, when a lot of things get outsourced and quality control can go down the tubes and things get too, too, too big.

“So after going to the factory, I sat down with Sterling and he said, ‘Why don’t you design a guitar?’ Really, the guitar that I drew up on that first day is very similar to what ended up making the final cut. There were definitely tweaks back and forth to make sure the ergonomics were correct - the balance was correct, to whittle down as much of the weight as possible without sacrificing the tone. 

“I couldn’t believe that it was that easy; I thought that there would be red tape or there would be a bureaucracy or it would have to go through layers of investors approving it… But they’re a small, tight, well-run family-owned company that give you the freedom. And with my vision and their skills combined, I think we made a really great guitar. 

“I think the test of a guitar is whether you reach for it time and time again. I’ve been writing for months now and I haven’t reached for another guitar. I’ve not wanted the feel of anything else. Some guitars can be like wearing a really well-tailored outfit - some just make you look good, make you sound good and that’s been my experience with this new guitar.”

Page 2 of 5
Page 2 of 5
Tuck technique

Tuck technique

Your music is diverse - how often are guitar parts the starting point for compositions?

“Quite a lot of times. Melody, to me, is everything and there are a lot of melodies that I dream up that end up transposed onto guitar and end up being riffs. At the moment, I can only really speak of my current writing process, but it’s very guitar-heavy. My emotional spectrum on the instrument has gotten broader.”

[It's about] approaching the guitar from a melodic standpoint as a jumping-off point instead of relying solely on muscle memory

You play with quite a lot of dynamism - you’re up and down the fretboard with quite a percussive approach. Did you make a conscious effort not to play guitaristic clichés or is it just your voice on guitar… How did your style crystallise?

“I did try to shy away from the pitfalls of the poorly played blues guitar. I think, too, approaching the guitar from a melodic standpoint as a jumping-off point instead of relying solely on muscle memory - this might feel fun to play, but how does it sound?

“The ear and the heart are king. It’s fun to riff on the classic stuff that every guitar player knows, but I get away from that in particular because there is John Lee Hooker and there is Howlin’ Wolf and I don’t think that that’s where I need to add to the conversation.”

The revered guitarist Tuck Andress is a relative of yours. Was he an early influence and, if so, what’s so interesting about him as a player that you admire?

“Tuck’s my uncle and his influence on me is immense. I flatter myself to think that there is an actual genetic through-line to our playing - I mean, we’re obviously related and there are all manner of micro-movements that we might share. 

“Tuck’s a total genius and he can make an instrument sound like 10 people playing. The level of skill and discipline it took for him to become a one-man guitar symphony is staggering. I’ve never seen anybody play like he can play - he’s the eighth wonder of the world.

“Tuck and Patti [his wife] took me out on tour with them when I was 15 years old to Japan, and to be a 15-year-old kid from Tulsa growing up in Dallas, all of a sudden being in Japan being their tour manager-slash-roadie, I got to see what it really meant to be a touring musician. And I got to see how much their show moved the audience, myself included, and it encouraged me to fall so deeply in love with music. I did and it’s never, ever let me down. It’s just the best thing.”

Page 3 of 5
Page 3 of 5
High stakes touring

High stakes touring

Your live show has huge power. What’s the key to engaging a big crowd?

“We’re getting into the premise of David Byrne’s book How Music Works. Music is so much about context, and certain kinds of music like to translate in big outdoor spaces better than other kinds of music. So there’s that side of it. 

Once you start playing to a certain level of crowd, the audience hears with their eyes

“My personal relationship is that once you start playing to a certain level of crowd, the audience hears with their eyes, so I introduced choreography to the show that I thought would help shape the narrative [of the music].

“My personal relationship to the music just deepened: songs are meditations and the more you sing them, the deeper you go into them, in my experience. And you find new ways to get out the same thing and every night, even with a show that is structural, you want to find that moment where it’s not like any other night. 

“You have to be here now, and for a musician who tours a lot you have to make sure that you keep the stakes for yourself really high, because those high stakes for yourself mean high stakes for the audience and the emotional payoff is better and better.”

Page 4 of 5
Page 4 of 5
Serve the art

Serve the art

What sort of gear do you use alongside the Music Man in your rig?

“The touring rig has to fulfil the sonic need, but also the space need. So for touring I’ve been using two Eventide H9s and a Z.Vex Mastotron Fuzz and a [Bixonic] Expandora going into a Kemper modelling amplifier. 

It’s a techy show and all my guitar sounds are programmed - for me, consistency outweighed the alternatives

“Ideally, I would like to have air moving through a speaker into a microphone, and I’ve had various small amplifiers - an old Kalamazoo and a custom TRVR that was like a 50s Tweed, and I loved playing through a ’73 Princeton. 

“My guitar tech had also worked with Nine Inch Nails and pitched me to the Kempers and I ended up buying a couple of them from the Nails. It’s a techy show and all my guitar sounds are programmed - there are complicated changes and all of that stuff - so, for me, consistency outweighed the alternatives.”

You have a very controlled, passive persona on stage - what was the root of that look?

“The Digital Witness tour [which took place from 2014 to 2015] was a bit of a commentary on the zeitgeist of the time, and part of the narrative of the show was seeing the robot break down as it goes along. That was part of it. 

“Also, I feel it’s interesting, the dichotomy of having really wild sounds delivered in a controlled way - playing with persona but not removing the emotional core - was interesting and that was kinda the first time I’d really dug into persona, and it’s just something that’s going to continue to evolve. You have to serve the art in ways that fit the themes of future records and projects…”

Page 5 of 5
Page 5 of 5
David Mead
Read more
Paul Gilbert wears a tricorn and period dress as he poses in shred mode with his signature Ibanez guitar
Artists “I’ve got to compete with Bach and Beethoven and Mozart and The Beatles!”: Inside the mind of guitar hero Paul Gilbert
 
 
Cory Wong with his Ernie Ball Music Man StingRay II
Electric Guitars How Cory Wong reimagined Ernie Ball Music Man’s iconic bass for a signature electric with “that George Benson sound”
 
 
asg
Artists “I have a little bit of a love-hate relationship with my Prophet ’08”: Art School Girlfriend on new project Lean In
 
 
Jill Fraser
Artists Synth pioneer Jill Fraser on pushing boundaries in the world of electronic music
 
 
Eric Johnson takes a solo onstage with his Gibson SG
Artists Eric Johnson on the $400,000 rig he hardly played, the Dumble that got away, and his masterplan for setting his playing free
 
 
Mark Morton of Lamb Of God takes a solo onstage with his prototype signature Les Paul
Artists Mark Morton on the chemistry behind Lamb Of God's twin-guitar groove and what he owes ZZ Top
 
 
Latest in Guitars
Fender Godzilla Distortion
Guitars You’ve seen Fender’s Godzilla Strat, now here the comes the pedal – and it’s a monster op-amp distortion with city-levelling tone (and a seriously cool graphic finish)
 
 
Harley Benton refreshes its Pro Series with 41 new Fusion-IV S-styles, mid-priced but offering specs such as quilted maple veneers, sculpted heels, EMGs and locking tuners
Guitars A sub-$600 shred machine with active EMGs and roasted flame maple neck? Harley Benton expands its Pro Series with 41 hot-rodded but affordable S-styles
 
 
Julian Lage
Artists Julian Lage wants to teach you guitar! The jazz virtuoso announces multi-day masterclass “diving deeply into everything” guitar
 
 
Kirk Hammett of Metallica performs during the band's St. Anger tour
Guitars “These songs are played a lot. They’re often not played well”: Guitar Center reveal the Top Ten riffs played at their stores
 
 
NEW YORK, NY - NOVEMBER 21:  Taylor Swift and Johnny Rzeznik of the Goo Goo Dolls perform during the "Speak Now World Tour" at Madison Square Garden on November 21, 2011 in New York City.  Taylor Swift wrapped up the North American leg of her SPEAK NOW WORLD TOUR with two sold-out shows at Madison Square Garden this week. In 2011, the tour played to capacity crowds in stadiums and arenas over 98 shows in 17 countries spanning three continents, and will continue in 2012 with shows Australia and New Zealand. (Photo by Larry Busacca/Getty Images)
Artists How Johnny Rzeznik wrote Goo Goo Dolls' Iris, which has become the soundtrack to '90s nostalgia
 
 
Blackstar Beam Mini: the super-compact desktop amp has AI stem separation and offers players access to over 200,000 user-created NAM captures
Guitars With AI stem separation, component-level modelling, and access to 200,000+ neural captures, Blackstar's Beam Mini “redefines” the desktop amp
 
 
Latest in News
Rolling Stones Speaking in Tongues artwork
Singles And Albums “I think this is the one, after years of toiling in obscurity”: Stones launch new album in NY with Conan O’Brien
 
 
Fender Godzilla Distortion
Guitars You’ve seen Fender’s Godzilla Strat, now here the comes the pedal – and it’s a monster op-amp distortion with city-levelling tone (and a seriously cool graphic finish)
 
 
Harley Benton refreshes its Pro Series with 41 new Fusion-IV S-styles, mid-priced but offering specs such as quilted maple veneers, sculpted heels, EMGs and locking tuners
Guitars A sub-$600 shred machine with active EMGs and roasted flame maple neck? Harley Benton expands its Pro Series with 41 hot-rodded but affordable S-styles
 
 
Dave Grohl visits SiriusXM Studios on April 29, 2026
Bands “It turned into like a scavenger hunt”: Dave Grohl talks about hiding CDRs of the new Foos album in stores
 
 
Julian Lage
Artists Julian Lage wants to teach you guitar! The jazz virtuoso announces multi-day masterclass “diving deeply into everything” guitar
 
 
Kirk Hammett of Metallica performs during the band's St. Anger tour
Guitars “These songs are played a lot. They’re often not played well”: Guitar Center reveal the Top Ten riffs played at their stores
 
 

MusicRadar is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google
  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...