Scott Shelley
Moderators: Randy Perry, The Flying Dutchman, Stiltzkin, skezza, Trigger
-
- Mass Poster
- Posts: 5272
- Joined: Mon Mar 20, 2006 10:19 am
Scott Shelley
It's interesting the people coming out of the woodwork with this documentary... Scott Shelly
-
- Mass Poster
- Posts: 5272
- Joined: Mon Mar 20, 2006 10:19 am
NicDots wrote:Whoever wrote up the "About me" part of the page misspelled Randy's last name.
Yeah, I found that odd.
Last edited by Paul Wolfe on Mon Feb 04, 2008 1:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Mass Poster
- Posts: 1734
- Joined: Mon Jun 11, 2007 5:49 pm
- Location: UK
+1bigduke6 wrote:somethings not right about this....this says this guy is 53 years old...Randy would have been 52 this year. Supposedly Shelley taught Randy when he was about 12 or 13.....meaning this guy here was 13 or so when he was teaching at Musonia...doesn't add up does it...
i was thinking the same thing

Delores talks about Shelley here....
"He found this acoustic Gibson guitar that my father used to relax and enjoy. He played acoustic guitar. He was actually a doctor and he just used it to relax and get his mind off his problems," she explains. "Randy grew up right here in my school but when he picked up that guitar, that was his life. That was it from then on. He started taking lessons but that didn't last too long because he wanted electric guitar. I did have a good electric guitar teacher at the time (studio musician and producer, Scott Shelly), so I said, 'Fine, he could switch.' The only electric guitar we had here in the school was an old semi-acoustic Harmony with F-holes. He didn't care, that was just fine, just as long as he could play electric guitar. The guitar was almost as large as he."
"He found this acoustic Gibson guitar that my father used to relax and enjoy. He played acoustic guitar. He was actually a doctor and he just used it to relax and get his mind off his problems," she explains. "Randy grew up right here in my school but when he picked up that guitar, that was his life. That was it from then on. He started taking lessons but that didn't last too long because he wanted electric guitar. I did have a good electric guitar teacher at the time (studio musician and producer, Scott Shelly), so I said, 'Fine, he could switch.' The only electric guitar we had here in the school was an old semi-acoustic Harmony with F-holes. He didn't care, that was just fine, just as long as he could play electric guitar. The guitar was almost as large as he."