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Lee at Advision Studios, London, during the recording of jazz flautist Herbie Mann’s album London Underground, November 5, 1973
► “He’s the greatest guitarist in the world. The
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Lee at Advision Studios, London, during the recording of jazz flautist Herbie Mann’s album London Underground, November 5, 1973

► “He’s the greatest guitarist in the world. The ultimate virtuoso. His skill is extraordinary, his ear is extraordinary, and he’s gifted on just about every level.” So said Eric Clapton of Albert Lee, known to many as both “the guitar player’s guitar player” and “Mr. Telecaster.” Born in Lingen, Herefordshire, England, on December 21, 1943, Lee began studying piano at age seven but took up guitar in 1958, when rock and roll came along. His first guitar was a second-hand Höfner President, which he later traded for a Resonet Grazioso, the forerunner of the Höfner Futurama. Said Lee, “I always used to wish that I’d bought a Fender instead.”

► Lee was drawn to American country, rock and roll, and R&B, and his early influences included Jimmy Bryant, Cliff Gallup, James Burton and the Everly Brothers. He left school at 16 to pursue his music career, and by the early 1960s he was one of many young rock and rollers, including the Beatles, cutting his teeth in nightclubs on Hamburg’s notorious Reeperbahn.

► In the early 1970s, Lee achieved guitar hero status with the British country-rock group Heads Hands & Feet, playing his Fender Telecaster at breakneck tempos. Though he’s celebrated for his speed and virtuosity on the instrument, he’s also held in high regard for his melodicism. Over the years, Lee has used both Telecasters and Music Man guitars equipped with B-Benders.

► Lee’s career kicked into high gear in 1974 when he moved to Los Angeles, where he performed session work on albums by Buddy Holly’s former group, the Crickets. He subsequently worked with Emmylou Harris’s Hot Band, where he replaced his hero James Burton, and in 1978

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