Click on a headline to read the article:
Saying It In Song (Let's Go magazine, 5/11) (PDF file) FH's Hallock performing at 'McCartney' opening
Arizona Republic Article, September 2007 The beat pulsates through the veins of this musician
Musician Hallock features Lennon tour bus Scott Hallock cover story in Acoustic Scene
Opening Night - An Up-Close and Personal Look at the Arts
Arizona Republic, September 2007
(Scott was one of three Valley musicians featured in this article.)

MANDOLIN PLAYER


Since moving to the Valley from New Jersey in 2000, Scott Hallock, 38, has adopted Arizona, and local music fans have adopted him.

“The Valley is a great place to play live music,” said Hallock, who sings and plays acoustic guitar as well as harmonica and mandolin. “There are a lot of coffee houses, book stores and outdoor restaurants here where you can play year-round,” he said, “and the audiences are great.”

Hallock got his start here playing at Phoenix’s Fiddler’s Dream, a coffee house known for showcasing new and seasoned acoustic performers. He then branched out into performing at other coffee houses and larger venues.

His core influences include Bob Dylan, Neil Young and the Beatles, along with younger acoustic artists including John Mayer and Jack Johnson. Hallock plays popular tunes and also writes a lot of his own songs.

“One of the most amazing things about the Valley is how many well-known musicians come through here. I’m always inspired by other musicians, and I love playing with other artists whenever I can,” he said.


Musician Hallock features Lennon tour bus
The Fountain Hills Times, May 2003
At the recent 2003 NAMM Show, Fountain Hills resident and musician Scott Hallock won the John Lennon Songwriting Educational Tour Bus for a day.

One of the companies Hallock represented at the music industry show was Shaker Music of Payson, owned by well-known Valley musician Anne James and her husband, Jim.

The bus will be on display at Shaker Music this Sunday, May 11, with private recording sessions for the winner in the morning and free public tours inside the studio bus from noon to 5 p.m.

There will be live music, food, a live radio broadcast, and TV coverage of this live event.
Fountain Hill musician Scott Hallock outside the John Lennon Songwriter Educational Tour Bus. He will be in Payson with the bus on Sunday, and the event is open to the public.
"So come out and enjoy these afternoon festivities at this special event on Mother's Day," Hallock said.

The John Lennon Bus is a non-profit, mobile recording studio outfitted with traditional musical instruments and state-of-the-art audio, video and live sound equipment.

Its distinctive appearance is recognized by an enlarged self-portrait by John Lennon on the side of the bus.

Since 1998 it has been traveling across the country providing free hands-on programs to hundreds of high schools, colleges, Boys and Girls Clubs, music festivals, concerts, conventions, and community organizations.

Working together with some of the biggest names in music, the Lennon Bus encourages students to play music, write songs, engineer recording sessions, and produce music video projects using the latest equipment.

This spring the John Lennon Bus has been following the Tim McGraw concert tour, which ends in Phoenix May 12 at America West Arena.

For educators and community youth leaders, the John Lennon Educational Tour Bus is a wonderful opportunity to bring to students.

For more information on bringing the bus to a school or organization, contact the John Lennon Mobile Recording Studio at info@jlsc.com.

To see the Lennon Bus firsthand and have an inside tour, come to Shaker Music, 807 W. Beeline Highway, Payson, on Sunday, May 11, from noon to 5 p.m.


FH's Hallock performing at 'McCartney' opening
Fountain Hills Times, March 2003

FH Fountain Hills resident Scott Hallock will be one of three performers at the opening benefit of Linda McCartney's "Sixties Portraits of an Era" photographic exhibit at the Phoenix Public Library Thursday, April 3.

The event will be from 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday.

Event headliner will be Grammy Award winner Laurence Juber, former guitarist of Paul and Linda McCartney's band "Wings."

Program for the evening will include cocktails and hors d'oeuvres catered by A.J.'s, a Jive auction, live music and a display of Arizona music memorabilia and prize drawings.

This traveling exhibition includes 51 of Linda McCartney's exclusive photos of'60srock and roll legends such as Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Otis Redding, Ray Charles, B.B. King, Bob Dylan, Judy Collins, The Who, The Grateful Dead, The Mamas and the Papas and The Beatles.

Hallock will perform music from some of these artists.
Scott Hallock, left, with Laurence Juber at the 2003 NAMM Show (International Association of Music Manufacturers) in Anaheim, Calif. Hallock will perform at an opening benefit in
Phoenix Thursday evening.
Dress for the event is business or `60s attire.

Tickets are $75 ($50 tax deductible) and can be purchased at the Phoenix Public Library, 1221 N. Central Ayenue, or by calling (602) 495-7665. Further information is available at www.phoenixpubliclibrary.org/mccartney.

Sponsor for this preview event is 99.9 KEZ Radio.



The beat pulsates through the veins of this musician
by Michael Scharnow, Fountain Hills Times Editor

Scott Hallock plucks the strings or tickles the ivories and one can sense the generations pulsating through his veins.

The Fountain Hills man comes from a family that is very music oriented, and Hallock forges ahead with attempts to make his mark on the music world.

And those musical fingers are very busy - he is comfortable in many aspects of the musical industry, from singing and performing to giving lessons and laying down tracks at his homemade studio, aptly named Barrel Cactus Studio.

As a testament to the musicallegacy through the generations, his latest CD, "Stories," features on its front cover a 1910 photograph of his great-great grandfather, Rudolph A. Shaffer, plucking away on a banjo.

Scott Hallock is a versatile musician who is comfortable playing a variety of instruments as well as handling the technical aspects of running a music studio

The CD also contains a 16-panel booklet that not only features lyrics but personal stories about the songs that he wrote and sharing family memories ofhis father, grandpa and great-great grandfather.

One of the songs is called "Grandpa," and it was inspired by Hallock's late father, who continuously told him stories of his ancestry. The CD also features five songs performed on the banjo and recorded around 1960 by Franklin C. Shaffer, Hallock's great-grandfather. As if that weren't enough, the CD also has a music video, which Hallock filmed for his environmental song, "Believe It's Real."

He is currently compiling another CD, called "Cover Boy," which will feature a play list of famous cover songs over the decades. "They will all be popular songs that people will recognize," Hallock says. "Whenever I play people seem to request these songs, so I thought I'd put them on a CD."

Without a doubt, Hallock is a guitarist, singer and songwriter. Yet revealing the technical nature of music, Hallock prides himself on being an audio and recording engineer as well as a producer. In a display of his versatility, on "Stories" Hallock plays the mandolin, acoustic/electric six and 12-string guitars along with bass, harmonica, zube tube and various percussion.

Hallock is endorsed by Breedlove guitars and mandolins and John Pearse strings.

"I've always liked performing the best," Hallock says. "I've always been in bands, even through high school and college."

He first started playing the electric guitar, but he seriously took up the acoustic guitar during his college years. His "career" was informally launched during his sophomore year in college when he started playing in various English pubs. It's been non-stop since.

In 1998 he produced and released his first CD entitled "Tapping the Grey Sky, More Than I Can Carry" with duo partner Bob DiGirolamo in New Jersey.

With more than 1,000 CDs in his musical collection, it's no surprise that Hallock is influenced by the acoustic folk, bluegrass, rock, country and pop music of the `60s, `70s and `8Os as well as contemporary music of the `90s. "I really like good story songs with a catchy melody," he adds. "I tend to like the sounds of acoustic guitars, especially when playing solo. But like Neil Young, I like to switch over to the electric and crank up from time to time.

"When I have time and feel inspired, I write songs."

While living in New Jersey, he also was a member of the band Altakan for two years and contributed to its "Red Wheeling Spuning" CD. In 1999 he produced Maria Woodford's first solo CD, "Brighter Path."

Hallock's original song "Mr. Bear," was selected for the "Poet Man Acoustic Rainbow Sampler #2" CD, which has received airply worldwide. In 1999, "Mr. Bear" was awarded seventh place in the 16th annual Mid-Atlantic Songwriters Contest sponsored by the Songwriters Association.

Hallock has performed at a variety of venues including festivals, county and street fairs, coffee houses, restaurants, bars, libraries, bookstores and private parties.

Locally he has appeared at Mountain View Coffee, Euro Pizza Café, Cold Stone Creamery, Another Point of View, Great Fair and the Tap House. He currently is featured every Friday evening at Don Pablo's in the Colonnade Mall in Phoenix. On Mondays he teaches music lessons to aspiring students at Nova Records, where his CDs are available for sale.

Hallock has appeared twice on Channel 3's "Good Morning America" to perform and promote his CDs. He is scheduled to appear on the show a third time Aug. 11.

"My main goal is to increase my fan base in this area," Hallock said. "I want to find more venues to showcase my music and entertainment, in places where people appreciate good music. "With moving out here two years ago from New Jersey, it's really kind of like starting over.

Hallock also would like to get back on the circuit of backing up "big name" acts. In his travels Hallock has met, worked with and/or performed on the same program with many prominent musical artists including Livingston Taylor, Arlo Guthrie, Emmy Lou Harris, Michael Martin Murphy, America, Jars of Clay, Gary US Bonds and others.

Even though Barrel Cactus is a converted garage, and the sound booth a former closet, Hallock takes great pride in his modern equipment and his mastery at the sound board. "This studio is up and running, and I try to be fair with the rates," he says. "I like to offer it back to others who are just beginning."

Meanwhile, the beat goes on for Hallock. He will continue to play music, teach music, produce, write songs, whatever it takes. "Making contacts is the name of the game in many businesses, and it is definitely true in the music business," he concludes. "Talent, experience and versatility are a musician's best assets for success."

Judging by Hallock's career to, date, he is well versed in all three of those aspects.



Cover feature story
Scott Hallock interview
by Hank Thomas, Acoustic Scene

Originally from New Jersey, Scott Hallock started calling Arizona his home back in December of 1999. He was, however, no stranger to valley gigs, as he has performed here for several years. Sometimes a solo act, sometimes as a duo, or even with a full band, Scott continues to make his music his profession, and has already had much success. With several CD projects under his belt, and his first solo CD due out this spring, Acoustic Scene took the opportunity to find out what's in the mind of this successful, local musician.

What made you choose Arizona as your new home?
My mom moved out here eight years ago, and even before that we came out

to visit family. I always liked the Phoenix music scene. I was able to get gigs here every time I visited, and soon developed a Phoenix fan base. The weather was another reason for moving here. You never have to worry about being snowed out of a gig. The cost of living is less in Arizona than the East, and since l am a full time musician, this was a real important part of my decision to move here.

What one thing do you want people to know about your music?
I would like people to know that I wear a lot of different hats and am a versatile musician. If you have only seen me play two unplugged songs on an acoustic guitar at an open mic, that really is not painting a very broad picture of me and what I do musically. I play a variety of instruments, percussion, harmonica, electric and acoustic guitar, bass, mandolin, and vocals. I like backing up other people or taking the lead.

At bar and restaurant shows I play with background tracks on CD for a full band sound. No one that has seen me at Fiddlers Dream would probably know that. I play songs from the 50's to today's hits, country, rock, folk, no-depression, alternative, children's music, and classic rock. I really like good story songs with a catchy melody. I tend to like the sounds of acoustic guitars especially when playing solo. But like Neil Young, I like to switch over to the electric and crank up from time to time. When I have time and feel inspired, I write songs.

I understand your first solo release is due out this Spring. Tell us a little about that.
This CD was started in New Jersey before I moved out here. I put it on hold to produce Maria Woodford's CD, and for the first six months that I lived here, I did not work on it. However, it is now near completion, and hopefully will be released in early Spring. It is a collection of ten songs; eight written by me and two written by college friends. I was going for a more acoustic folk feel with this CD. On the More Than I Can Carry CD the folk stations would say it's a bit rocky, and the rock stations would say it is a bit mellow. They just didn't get it. I mean Paul McCartney had "Rocky Raccoon" and "Helter Skelter" on the same album. Bob DiGirolomo (Tapping the Grey Sky) and I were big fans of many 70's groups like the Dead, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin and the Beatles. All of them mixed up tempos and feels, and instrumentation. We were going for a variety; we did not want every song to sound the same.

The first song on my solo CD, entitled Scott Hallock Stories, is called "Grandpa" and is written in bluegrass style. I wrote about different stories of people in my family from stories that were handed down to me from my father, Duncan. That is where I got the chorus, "Stories handed down from father's father" The CD cover is a picture of my great, great grandfather holding a banjo. All the songs come with a full list of credits, lyrics and a story. Like VH- 1 Storytellers I take you inside my head when I was writing these songs. The package concept is an old family scrapbook, with a three page cardboard fold and a sixteen panel booklet. The second song, "Red Line" was written by a college friend, Seth Miller, and I perform it as a duet with Maria Woodford. The song, "Have" is a tribute song to the Beatles. At the end of the CD I include five tracks of solo banjo played by my great grandfather from an old record he cut.

You have done some producing in the past, such as Maria Woodford's album, Brighter Path. Any plans to pursue more of that out here in Arizona?
I would be interested in doing some more producing. A friend of mine, Mike Alicke from the NJ band, Alaskan, is coming out here for a visit and we might start to work on his solo project. I have a small studio setup in my home, and am planning to finish my own CD ofcover songs, which is about half completed.

How is that role different for you when you were working with someone else to produce a project, as opposed to writing and playing your own material? How would you separate your own style from that of the musician you are working with, or is there a common ground?
Maria Woodford is a very strong and focused artist. It was easy to work with her. She came to my studio already knowing the songs she would record. She even knew all the tempos which made it easy to set the drum machine forher click track. That would be asimilarity with both of our CDs. Almost all the songs on Brighter Path and More Than I Can Carry started with one guitar and a click track and then we added other parts. Maria had written all of her own songs, with the exception of one or two which Alex Radius co-wrote. With More Than I Can Carry, I had many more responsibilities. In addition to producing, I had to play different instruments on all of the songs. The mastering, mixing, packaging, graphics, photos, and any other details you can imagine were left up to me. On Brighter Path, my role was focused on producing, which involved engineering, playing on some of the songs myself, hiring all the musicians, and helping to arrange the different instrumentation for each song. Maria had her own graphics and photos done. I selected the song order and put her in touch with a mixing studio, mastering studio, and duplication company.

What do you like/dislike about the local music community here, and what would you like to see happen?
Well I was very upset when Bob Zucker closed up his Web page. He had been really helping me with online CD sales. He was also posting all my show dates. He provided a real important service at a local level and unfortunately not enough people took advantage of it. His hits were up, but people did not buy enough CDs. Selling CD's has been a real problem for me. To make a CD sound like Maria's or mine it takes a lot of money and time. 'More Than I Can Carry' took over four years to complete, and I am not sure when I will ever break even on it. I tried hard to make it sound as good as if it had been done at a top of the line studio with a million dollar budget, and I think I came close. It upsets me when people pick them up and then just put them down, without buying them. Tonight, I sold one CD to a seven year-old girl who asked me to sign my autograph in crayon. It really made my day! People are too often hesitant about taking a chance on an independent CD. The younger kids were burning their own CDs for friends and now they just download the MP3 from Napster. They do not have to buy CDs anymore. I have a thirty year old friend who told me that he had not bought a CD in six months. He downloaded a copy of U2's new CD before it even hit the stores. So, I see CD sales in the future to be a problem for all musicians. Here in Phoenix, I would like to see people support local musicians more. I would say to our audiences, if you enjoyed a show, buy a CD to take home. It is probably not somethingyou can get in a store and supplies are limited. Most musicians do not print more than a thousand, so, who knows, it could become a collectors item!

Who had the biggest impact in influencing you, and why?
I have so many influences; I have a really eclectic taste. The one constant group that I keep going back to is the Beatles. They will never disappear. When I was in first grade I remember having Beatles 45's. I would play air guitar along with them, and dress up and make a stage out of chairs. They are still with me in whatever I do today: songwriting, engineering, producing, singing - it is all trying to measure up to them. Later, I would have to say the Grateful Dead. I leamed so much from this one group: blues, bluegrass, rock, jazz, psychedelia, country, folk, ethnic music, improvisation and great covers too. They had interesting harmonies and great writers, like Robert Hunter and John Barlow. Jerry Garcia played great banjo, acoustic and electric guitar, and pedal steel. If you look at the credits of his first record he played every instrument except the drums. That same CD gave us great songs like 'Sugar Ree', 'Loser', 'Deal', 'The Wheel', 'Bird Song', and 'To Lay Me Down.' I really can not say enough of what this band meant to me and the world.

You have had great success with getting some cool gigs with some big names, and done quite well getting your name out there. Other than your obvious talent, what's your secret?
I work really, really hard. The business side is not what I enjoy because it takes time, away from creating and playing music, but it is the most important thing to get your name out there. What I have found at this level is that no one books you better than yourself. If I do not get gigs, I will not have money to pay my bills, so that is a real motivator. I make a lot of phone calls and I always have an extensive press kit in the car ready to drop off at prospective venues. When I see a new room opening, I stop in and tell them what I am about. That is the best way to do it, in person. As for working with 'big name' artists, I have often been in the right place at the right time and because of my experience in sound engineering as well as performing and writing, I have had the opportunity to do sound for some of these performers, and to play with them, as well. Making contacts is the name of the game in many businesses, and it is definitely true in the music business. Talent, experience and versatility are a musician's best assets for success.