|

"...this
collection of
wood and wires
became my new
purpose in life..."
"It
was at this point
that my Grease
soundtrack was never
to be heard from
again."
|
Biography
The story begins with the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
William Hooper, my great grandfather four times removed on
my mother’s side, was one of the original signers of
this historic document. Each generation that followed also
found one of my ancestors woven into the fabric of American
history.
My great
grandfather graduated from and taught at West Point as would
his son eventually following in his footsteps. My grandfather
was appointed as military aide to then Franklin Roosevelt
during World War II and was present at the Yalta Conference
which signified the end of that epic war. My birth notice
in the local newspaper declared that a future West Point cadet
had been born, destined to follow in his family’s historic
military tradition. Oops.
I am Richard
Park Ward, aka The Duke. In case you’re wondering, I
picked up this moniker after a German heavy metal writer declared
that “if Zakk Wylde is the King of Modern Rock Guitar,
then certainly Rich Ward is The Duke.” Not being a big
fan of John Wayne’s westerns I initially resisted, but
it eventually stuck. Rewind a few years and my own tale begins
in Atlanta, Georgia.
Growing
up I was always a fan of music. My mom used to listen to John
Denver, Gordon Lightfoot and Carly Simon among others. So
I, with no other reference, thought that this is what music
was all about. After my parents split, my mother’s work
schedule was such that my younger sister and I spent a lot
of time unsupervised. So, to keep some structure in the household
my mother offered free room and board to a female college
student who would look after us each day after school. With
her came a stack of records containing sounds I had never
experienced before. It was on!
For the
first time I heard bands like AC/DC, Van Halen, Black Sabbath,
Rush, Genesis and many others that totally blew me away. It
was at that point that my Grease soundtrack was never
to be heard from again. When I was twelve years old my dad
took me to a pawn shop and dropped $35 on a Fender Mustang.
It fretted out on at least half the neck. (That means no sound!)
But this collection of wood and wires became my new purpose
in life.
Page
Two
|
|