| Cover story |
Musically
obsessed Mandolin
led Jerry Rosa to new careers By R.D. Hohenfeldt “I wanted to play the fiddle. I really wanted to play the fiddle. I’d pick it up every night after I got home from work and practice for three to five hours. After about six months I said, ‘I’m not a fiddle player.’” “Almost overnight I could play the thing. I
wasn’t playing it like a real fine mandolin player, but I was
playing,” After his uncle, Don Brown, known as the Father of
Bluegrass Music in “Or as I tell everybody, I can screw up any song
in any key,” That obsession with learning to play an instrument
led to new obsessions, which eventually led to Rosa String Works. It didn’t take long for the budding mandolin
picker to figure out he needed a better mandolin. After a trip to Rosa, who started working for Southwestern Bell in
downtown “I read it cover to cover eight times. I read it
until I knew every word in that book,” Rosa String Works comprises four businesses:
instrument building and repair, strings and accessories sales, his
recording studio and his band. Company headquarters is on his farm south
of Jerome, which Rosa started working for “I ended up being a designer for most of their huge systems,” he says. That computer background helps him in his new career as a sound engineer and producer.
His first recording was for his own group about three years ago. Since then he’s recorded Rowden Review and Midnight Flight. “I’ve done about 20 projects here,” he says. Starting with a $50 mandolin, “When I get obsessed with something, I don’t
get sort-of obsessed, I get totally obsessed,” On the web: http://www.rosastringworks.com |