I'm better for it and I prefer to keep things simple and see what sounds I can get out of my head and hands rather than relying on a sound that someone else created.
Andy Summers
It accumulates over the years and I've led so many bands of my own now and forced myself into new situations... You would hope that you play better and better - until you just get too feeble to do it anymore.
I spend a lot of time working as a painter and in my studio I go from upstairs where I paint to downstairs where I play and record, so I get this thing crossing over.
My favorite sounds are the high, spacey ones that are very ambient.
I don't have a great nostalgia for the past.
It's hard to avoid the past but one goes forward.
It's been very hard for the guitar as a serious synthesizer to compete with keyboards.
For me, the guitar synthesizer is a great writing instrument.
More recently, I used guitar synthesizer extensively on the two albums I did with Robert Fripp.
If you're a guitarist, you should not be intimidated by using your instrument as a synthesizer, but you shouldn't feel that you have to own one, either.
Of course the playing is important but writing and the establishing of what you are going for is prime too.
The most obvious thing you can't do with a guitar synthesizer is to really sound like a guitar.
Actually, I think my hands are in the best shape they've ever been in terms of what I can do.
I would like to play with electronic keyboards again.
I actually think I play better now than I've ever played.
If I'm playing a violin thing, for instance, I tend to respond to that sound with the way I finger.
It is not very practical in today's world when you tour all over the place having a big band.
I like to play with someone who can cover a lot of ground and someone with whom you can discuss the language at a reasonable level; otherwise it gets a bit frustrating.
If the guitar synthesizer is really going to stand as a synthesizer on its own, it needs to develop a more characteristic sound; I don' think it's gotten there yet.
What I wanted to do was play the guitar but I don't like instrumental rock. I think it is tripe.
I don't like playing standards. I like to do my own cutting edge work.
I've got four or five records in my head at a time that I try to work on and I would like to do a guitar trio record next - since The Police I've mostly made records with keyboards.
I think rock records tend to be very expensive.
I'm just trying to avoid any sort of generic kind of music - I don't want to do generic jazz or fusion.
In The Police, in a trio situation - which I've come back to now - it's just so wide open that it does actually provide this arena where you can play with a certain freedom.
There was a period when I'd just come out of college where I'd been playing classical guitar and I suddenly realised that it wasn't what I wanted to do with the rest of my life.
I think we are coming to a new era where people will record much faster.
I was totally into jazz in my teens.
I am pretty embroiled in moving on and moving forward with music.