Al Pitrelli
Al Pitrelli | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born |
New York, US | September 26, 1962
Genres | Hard rock, heavy metal, thrash metal, progressive rock, symphonic metal |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter |
Instruments | Guitar |
Years active | 1982–present |
Associated acts | Danger Danger, Hotshot, Alice Cooper, Asia, Joe Lynn Turner, Place Called Rage, Savatage, Trans-Siberian Orchestra, Megadeth, O'2L, Widowmaker (U.S.), Sebastian Bach, Michael Bolton, T.M. Stevens, Vertex, Blue Öyster Cult |
Notable instruments | |
Gibson Explorer Gibson Les Paul |
Al Pitrelli (born September 26, 1962) is an American guitarist, best known for his work with the Trans-Siberian Orchestra, Megadeth, Alice Cooper, Joe Lynn Turner, Asia and Savatage.
Early career (1982–1995)
Pitrelli attended the Berklee College of Music in Boston in the early 1980s (where keyboardist Derek Sherinian was his dorm roommate; they would later work together in the Alice Cooper band). After dropping out of Berklee, Pitrelli worked as a session musician during his early days, and also taught guitar lessons in Manhattan. His first major label gig was performing with Michael Bolton, helping him support his single "Fool's Game". Pitrelli said of the single, "This was when Michael Bolton was still trying to be Sammy Hagar and not Engelbert Humperdinck."[1]
Pitrelli was Alice Cooper's guitarist and musical director from 1989 until 1991 on the Trashes The World tour. He then joined Dee Snider's band Widowmaker for two albums in the early/mid–1990s, and also briefly played with Stephen Pearcy (from the band Ratt) in a band called Vertex. Pitrelli also joined Asia, appearing on their albums Aqua (1992) and Aria (1994). He would go on to be featured on many New York sessions, including for Kathy Troccoli, Taylor Dayne, Randy Coven, Exposé. His songs have been covered by Y&T, Lita Ford and Derek Sherinian. For a month he substituted in Blue Öyster Cult.
Savatage (1995–2000)
Al joined Savatage in 1995, joining at the same time as Chris Caffery returned to the band; Caffery had previously been part of the band around the release of Gutter Ballet in 1989. Pitrelli played guitar on the albums Dead Winter Dead and (1995) The Wake of Magellan (1997), and performed some lead guitar work on Poets and Madmen (2001), despite being a member of Megadeth at the time. On that album, Pitrelli was responsible for the outro of "Stay with Me a While", the main solos of "Morphine Child" and "The Rumor", the first part of the main solo in "Commissar" and its outro.[2] During his time with Savatage, he was asked by their producer Paul O'Neill if he was interested in joining his side project, the Trans-Siberian Orchestra. Pitrelli agreed and has played a role in all of their albums to date.
Trans Siberian Orchestra (1995–present)
Pitrelli has been a core member of the group since their first album. As well as being the main lead guitarist, he is also the live musical director. TSO's 2007 tour program credits his "edgy playing and vast musical lexicon" with making him a perfect fit for the band's constant boundary-pushing progressive rock stylings. Pitrelli's leads are notable on "Tracers" and the instrumental "Toccatta – Carpimus Nocten",[3] the latter being a piece co-wrote. Both songs form part of the group's fifth rock opera, on their 2009 album Night Castle.[4]
Megadeth (2000–02)
Pitrelli was a member of Megadeth from 2000–02, replacing Marty Friedman. Megadeth bandleader Dave Mustaine asked him to join after hearing good reviews from their then-current drummer Jimmy Degrasso, with whom Pitrelli played during his days with Alice Cooper in the early 1990s. Pitrelli joined the band after an impromptu "audition" in front of a live crowd in Vancouver on January 16, 2000. Two nights after Friedman played his last show with Megadeth, Pitrelli was asked to play fifteen minutes before the show and was shocked by the prospect as they never rehearsed. He was present during the recording of Rude Awakening, a live CD/DVD that was released in 2002, and also performed on their 2001 album The World Needs a Hero. When Megadeth entered hiatus after Mustaine injured his arm, Pitrelli rejoined Savatage on April 9, 2002 and also continued his work with TSO.
Recent work (2002–present)
In 1998, Pitrelli was featured on the video game album Sonic Adventure Remix, where he played guitar on a remix of the game's theme song "Open Your Heart".
Al Pitrelli is married to Nicole Pitrelli. He is the father of five children
Jesse, Jamie, Zak, Olivia and Layla
Discography
Danger Danger
- Rare Cuts (2003)
Hotshot
- The Bomb (2005)
Alice Cooper
- Alice Cooper Trashes The World (DVD, 1990)
- Classicks (1995)
Asia
Place Called Rage
- Place Called Rage[5] (1995)
Randy Coven
- Funk Me Tender (1989)
Coven, Pitrelli, O'Reilly (CPR)
- CPR (1992)
Megadeth
- Capitol Punishment: The Megadeth Years (2000)
- The World Needs a Hero (2001)
- Behind the Music (DVD, 2001)
- Rude Awakening (2002)
- Still Alive... and Well? (2002)
- Greatest Hits: Back to the Start (2005)
- Anthology: Set the World Afire (2008)
Morning Wood
- Morning Wood (1994)
O'2L
- O'2L
- Doyle's Brunch
- Eat a Pickle
Savatage
- Dead Winter Dead (1995)
- The Wake of Magellan (1998)
- Poets and Madmen (2001)
Trans-Siberian Orchestra
- Christmas Eve and Other Stories (1996)
- The Christmas Attic (1998)
- The Ghosts of Christmas Eve (DVD, 2000)
- Beethoven's Last Night (2000)
- The Lost Christmas Eve (2004)
- Night Castle (2009)
- Letters From The Labyrinth (2015)
Widowmaker
- Blood and Bullets (1992)
- Stand by for Pain (1994)
Vertex
- Vertex (1996)
Guitar Battle
- Guitar Battle (1998)
References
- ↑ Al Pitrelli career history & bio.
- ↑ ) Savatage Band FAQ, taken from www.savatage.com
- ↑ Sea of Tranquility, October 27, 2009
- ↑ Night Castle album credits.
- ↑ http://www.tommyfarese.com/Tommy%20Farese%20-%20Place%20Called%20Rage.htm
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Al Pitrelli. |
- Interview with Al Pitrelli on metal4bremen.de (German / English)
Preceded by * |
Danger Danger guitarist 1987–1988 |
Succeeded by Tony "Bruno" Rey |
Preceded by Marty Friedman |
Megadeth lead guitarist 2000–2002 |
Succeeded by Chris Poland |