EgnaterAmps.com Home  
EGNATER AMPLIFICATION30 YEARS OF INNOVATION. A LIFETIME OF TONE
Egnater YouTube Channel Egnater on Facebook @EgnaterAmps  
 
Tweaker
Egnater Rebel
Egnater Renegade
Egnater Tourmaster
Egnater Vengeance
Egnater Armageddon
Egnater Pedals
Egnater Tone Quest
Egnater Artists
 
   
 

Egnater Artist: Aaron Mclain — Rock Guitarist from Los Angeles, California

Egnater Artist: Aaron Mclain

"I just love my Egnater Tweaker Amp. I used the amp on Beto Cuevas' new CD on Warner Bros. I used it on every song I played on, and had no problem at all getting any sound I needed. The amp is so versatile, it accommodates any style of playing. Big stages or small stages, the tone is right there. From Air Supply, to Beto Cuevas, to my Solo project, this amp gives me everything I need. Egnater rocks!"


Egnater gear: Tweaker-88 & Tweaker-212X
“What I really want to know/Are you with me/All the way?” “All the Way”

He’s humble, self-effacing and soft-spoken. But once L.A. native Aaron McLain straps on his electric guitar and takes the stage, suddenly he’s a god, a true rock & roll hero, channeling some of his favorite influences— Jimi Hendrix, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Eddie Van Halen, singing soulfully like David Bowie or Seal.

It’s an amazing transformation for someone who has traveled the world playing guitar for the likes of Marc Anthony, Beto Cuevas, as well as Tears for Fears singer Oleta Adams, Patti LaBelle, Terrance Trent Darby, and Boys Don’t Cry, among others.

“Music is a way of expressing my deepest self,” says McLain, who started playing guitar when he was eight. “I feel I can let people see who I really am more through a song. Especially when I’m performing it. That’s like the inner core coming out. And if I don’t let it all out, it’s not real. That requires me to be vulnerable.”

Aaron’s a heightened romantic who lets his guitar do the talking, carving out a sacred space where he bypasses the brain to touch the heart.

“Playing guitar and making music is when I’m most comfortable,” he says. “I try to paint a perfect picture, an idealized situation.”

McLain has been working to create that sacred space since he was a youngster being raised by his mom, and grandparents in the desert of L.A.’s Antelope Valley, hearing the strains of K.C. & the Sunshine Band and Sly & the Family Stone coming out of his grandmother’s backyard radio.

“I remember my cousin had this old Fender guitar with maybe one string on it,” he reminisces. “I got some wire from the garage and made it into a makeshift strap. Every time I saw a guitar, I would gravitate toward it.”

His father, living in Arizona at the time, gave his brother an acoustic guitar and Aaron a camera. “My brother was so cool,” laughs Aaron. “He told dad that I always wanted to play guitar and gave me his.”

McLain proceeded to teach himself how to play, using a Mel Bay instructional booklet before taking lessons. When he was 12, he played his first gig at a Boy Scouts ceremony with his brother on bass, covering a couple of Van Halen tunes. He’s already shows his allegiance to his favorite music by dressing up one Halloween as Kiss’ Ace Frehley.

“I was just drawn to rock, because of the guitar,” he explains. “I was into Zeppelin, Bowie, Queen, AC/DC, things like thatAfter graduating high school, Aaron enrolled in the famed Dick Grove School of Music, where he got a quick education into what it took to make a living as a musician.

“I quickly realized I was in over my head, but I wanted to get as much knowledge as I could,” he says. “I met some really cool cats who helped me out quite a bit.”

He immediately became a sought-after session guitarist playing with much more experienced colleagues, which put even more pressure on him.

Realizing early on, if he wanted to make it on his own, he’d need his own home studio, he gradually built up his recording facilities until he now has a 32-channel digital board, several PCs, a number of keyboards and 40 guitars.   

“When I do other people’s gigs, I feel a little torn,” Aaron admits. “I try to do my job well, but knowing I have so much more to offer, that I have these songs, gives me this drive to make this happen for my own sanity, happiness and sense of fulfillment.”

Aaron’s music is about that place where he has complete creative freedom. In “It’s Not Your Fault,” he calls out, “As I reach my hand out/Can you please understand me?,” a sentiment that could be directed at a lover… or his audience.  “I write from my own experience, and hope people can relate to where I’m coming from,” he says. “The solos aren’t just running off a bunch of notes. They’re just as important as the words, and always tied in to the melody. And live, I like to take it to another level, burn it up.”

As unassuming as he is away from the spotlight, when Aaron McLain hits the stage, his music slams you like a punch to the solar plexis. “I believe my music is universal, and my goal right now is to get out there and play in front of as many people as will have me. I’m looking for the place where I can put my two feet on the ground and say, ‘I like it here!’”

 

Although he has played for 20,000 in Madison Square Garden with Marc Anthony, Aaron McLain is every bit as intense in front of a crowd of 100 at one of his local club gigs.

As he sings, with a Prince-like falsetto and a churning guitar in “Passing By”: “I’m just passing by/To see if I could get close to you.”

Get next to Aaron McLain now. It’s going to get pretty crowded around him soon.

Written by Roy Trakin
“Hits Magazine”

 


 
   
 

To find an Authorized Service Center, contact our Support Department. Register your product here

 
 

Egnater is sold world-wide, translate our website or locate the International Distributor in your country