Jan rivera

2 min read

Puerto Rican guitarist mixes the flavours of home with contemporary flair.

Jan Rivera is still avidly following Scott Henderson’s advice.
PRESS

AS FAR AS debut albums go, few come as fully formed as Jan Rivera’s Existential Paranoia. For the Puerto Rican musician it’s the result of a lifetime obsessed with the guitar.

“Growing up, our house used to be the happy place,”he recalls.“People would gather around, watch my dad play and have the best time. That really stuck with me.”

As he began his own guitar journey, he looked beyond the celebratory music that echoed around his family home. Soon, he was enamoured by those with a weirdly wonderful approach to six strings.

“When I started to listen to artists like Steve Vai and Joe Satriani, I knew that guitar was something that I really wanted to do,”he explains.“But when I went to study guitar at 15, the only option I had was to study classical. I remember thinking during a recital one day that I’d fallen in love with guitar because of all these other guys. That’s when I decided to move to LA.”

There, at the revered Musicians Institute, Rivera wolfed down as much knowledge as humanly possible. So hungry was he to hone his craft that, unlike his fellow students, the prospect of one-to-one tuition with fusion guitarist Scott Henderson wasn’t something he found terrifying.

“There were open counselling sessions and Scott Henderson would go there pretty regularly,” Rivera continues.“On my first day, everyone was standing outside the room too petrified to go in. I thought to myself,‘If I don’t go in, why have I flown thousands of miles to be here?’So I went in and he told me to take out a notebook‘because I’m going to tell you what you need to study for the next several years’. I wrote pages and pages.”

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