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Sean began
playing acoustic guitar at age ten. It took five years before he got his
first electric guitar—a used Morris Strat copy. The Strat became the
object of Sean's amateur luthiery! Jethro Tull, Eric Clapton, and Santana
were Sean's early inspirations. He spent time learning their licks and
riffs. The high school years saw Sean build his own distortion pedal from
an Ibanez schematic he scrounges from the local music store.
After playing in high school bands Sean performed in both duo and
four-piece top-forty bands while studying electrical engineering at the
University of Cape Town. All this during the early 1980s. Given his less
than enthusiastic appreciation for the standard rock vocal outfit, Sean
was not entirely displeased when a fledgling attempt at vocal oriented
rock failed due to his well… exacting requirements. He was free to focus
on his real passion: composing original instrumentals.
Around this time there was another turning point in Sean's focus: he heard
Yngwie Malmsteen play. Malmsteen changed guitar playing as we know it.
From now on Sean would not be happy with a lesser standard.
During the late 1980s, Sean perfected his technique. To this end, his
practice routines would last for several hours a day. To better harness
his creativity, Sean undertook the study of music theory and composition
with a private tutor. The discipline paid off. Barely out of his teens,
Sean's compositions displayed what the one-and-only Mike Varney, founder
of Shrapnel Records, would later describe as, "Complex arrangements,
tightly played ensemble lines, and a grand display of thematic solo work."
Work as a recording engineer during the early 1990s enabled Sean to record
the original neoclassical instrumental compositions, now available on the
CD,
Electric Storm. Sean accomplished this between engineering
recording sessions and teaching a training course on operating a MIDI
studio.
Sean has engineered commercial recording sessions and has occasionally
worked as a session guitarist. He also maintained a full roster of private
guitar students for several years and performed clinics at his alma mater,
the University of Cape Town, as well as at several events organized by
local music stores. In 1993 Sean and bassist Johan Buys gave a clinic
right after a workshop by Frank Gambale—not an easy act to follow!
After
hearing his compositions, Mike Varney chose in October of 1991 to feature
Sean in Guitar Player magazine's prestigious Spotlight
Column. Varney had this to say:
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