Andy Aledort may not be a name that everyone instantly recognizes, but within the guitar community, he is regarded as something of a legend. Over the past 27 years, he has sold more than one million instructional DVDs and continues to create new releases for Guitar World and Truefire.
His career has taken him far beyond teaching. Aledort has been featured nationwide on Comcast Music On Demand and spent a decade on the road with Dickey Betts of the Allman Brothers. He has also been a regular part of the Jimi Hendrix Tribute Tours for the last 17 years, sharing the stage with Paul Rodgers, Buddy Guy, Hubert Sumlin, Mick Taylor, Mitch Mitchell, Billy Cox, Robert Randolph, and many others. Yet Andy’s talents don’t stop at the guitar. He is also a gifted singer and songwriter, and he has just unveiled his latest album, Light Of Love.
We at Music-News recently had the chance to sit down with Andy to talk about the new record!
Who are some of your musical influences? What else inspires you?
My biggest musical inspiration is Jimi Hendrix; in my first band, we played over 30 Hendrix songs. I learned a lot from studying the guitar greats of the 60s--Beck, Winter, Zappa, Duane Allman and Dickey Betts, Ritchie Blackmore--but blues became a huge focus too--BB King, Albert King, Elmore James, T-Bone Walker, Lightnin' Hopkins, Blind Willie Johnson. Seeing John McLaughlin and the Mahavishnu Orchestra at 16 in 1972 was the next earth-shattering moment, which sent me off on a course of studying jazz and the music of McLaughlin, Wes Montgomery, Charlie Parker, Pat Martino, Chet Atkins and many others. Besides music, I am hugely inspired by visual arts: Willem DeKooning, Picasso, Dali--and film: Luis Bunuel, Hitchcock, Billy Wilder, Elia Kazan, John Huston, Curtiz, and later Polanski, Fellini, Truffaut and others.
Congrats on the release of your new album 'Light Of Love'! We love it. What’s the story behind the record and its songs?
Thanks and I'm glad you love the record! "Light of Love" is a collection of songs that come from a handful of different recording sessions over the last 27 years but were never released. Some of the songs only needed to be mixed, some needed one overdub like a vocal or guitar, and some needed a bit more.
One of the tracks, "Have Mercy On Me," was recorded with Stevie Ray Vaughan's rhythm section, Chris Layton on drums and Tommy Shannon on bass. We had done the basic gtr/bass/drums rhythm track totally live (one take) about 20 years ago and about two months ago I added lead guitar/vocal, also totally live,. The result is a track that sounds totally live and I'm very happy with it.
The title track, "Light of Love," came out of some tough times and I think that comes across in the music. The same is true for, "Save Something For Me." Both songs always go over very well and seem to connect with the audience.
Who is one artist/band that you would love to tour with?
I would love to tour with Lucinda Williams--I love her! And Bob Dylan would be pretty insane too. Let's add Willie Nelson (I have played shows with him when I played with Dickey Betts), John Scofield, Warren Haynes/Govt Mule, Aerosmith, and my good friends Joe Banasmassa and Eric Gales.
What’s next for your music career?
To continue writing, recording and performing as much as possible. I have about three records worth of new material in the can and I plan to get started recording new music in the Spring of 2022. I hope "Light of Love" connects with people and will help get us to the next level of touring/performing.
What's your favorite thing to do when you're not doing music?
Being with my family, playing and listening to music together, watching movies and sports, etc. The simple things! And reading of course; I particularly like autobiographies and biographies of musicians and historically important figures.
How can our readers find you online?
I encourage everyone to check out my website, andyaledort.com, where all of the latest news about music, gigs, lessons, writing and interviews is available. Facebook is facebook.com/AndyAledortMusic, Instagram is @AndyAledort, Twitter is @andyaledort, Spotify and iTunes is Andy Aledort.
San Diego–based rock band The Reckless debuts new single “What Could I Give.” It’s the kind of track built for big moments—anthem rock with a sweeping chorus that begs to be sung back at full volume. Shimmering guitar tones drift in over a steady, heartbeat-like rhythm section, giving the song a sense of urgency, while the spacious production sets a cinematic atmosphere and mood. The mix balances grit and clarity—layered guitars push the rock edge forward, while airy reverb and dynamic swells create an expansive soundscape.
“Our genre of music is all about rock. We have ballads, aggressive metal, punk songs - you name it. We have an alternative Red Hot Chili Peppers-style song and even have one reminiscent of The Strokes or what you might hear on college radio. ‘What Could I Give’ is more of a pop punk rock song, but again, if you like rock music of any sort, I’m sure there’s a song in our catalog for you,” shared Fritz Fayman, lead singer and guitarist.
Lyrically, “What Could I Give” taps into a raw sense of yearning and vulnerability. The words explore the tension between desire and limitation, painting a picture of someone striving to offer everything they can while grappling with feelings of inadequacy. There’s an intimate honesty in lines that oscillate between hope and doubt, giving the song a relatable, almost confessional quality. Coupled with the band’s soaring chorus and dynamic instrumentation, the lyrics don’t just tell a story—they make you feel it.
“I always encourage people to find their own meaning in it, but for us, we wrote the song from a place of grappling with the challenge of seeing other artists succeed while wrestling with our own progress,” continued Fayman. “Along with that frustration, there’s also this self-directed anger, as the thought pops up: shouldn’t we be genuinely happy for them? That tension comes through in one of the lines: ‘I wake up every day thinking I’m not all that close.’ It’s something we all struggle with, and everyone can relate. We all know how it feels to see the highlight reels on social media and start questioning yourself. That push and pull, the ups and downs of trying to make it in this business, is really what the song is about for us.”
As far as the business of making music, the band thrives on collaboration. A rough demo or skeleton of a song might start with one member, but it quickly becomes a full-band effort. In rehearsals and jam sessions, everyone contributes their parts, while ideas and feedback flow freely. There’s constant communication and a real sense of shared ownership—decisions are made democratically, even when opinions run strong, making every song a true group effort.
“We mostly record everything ourselves, especially since our drummer has a studio setup at home, but we also work with Cottee Embry a lot. He’s a great mixer and mastering engineer, and we’ve been working with him ever since I brought this group of guys together back in 2023,” said Fayman.
The band’s current lineup didn’t happen overnight. The story starts during COVID, when Fayman found himself with unexpected free time and a drive to make music. What began as a solo project quickly evolved as Fayman sought the energy of a full band. Over the next couple of years, he tried out a rotating cast of players, searching for the right chemistry. By the end of 2023, everything clicked: Fayman on lead vocals and guitar, John Kelly on lead guitar, Riku Myllykoski on drums, and Michael Kennedy on bass, with both Myllykoski and Kennedy also contributing backup vocals. With this lineup, the band finally hit its stride, blending individual voices into a cohesive, collaborative force ready to bring their music to life.
“The name ‘The Reckless’ actually started as a joke back in college,” Fayman explained. “Whenever one of us did something wild or silly, someone would say, ‘Oh, that’s so reckless.’ Over time, it stuck—and it became a way to capture both the fun, goofy side of what we do and the serious, energetic presence we want on stage. It just felt like the perfect name for the band.
While an official album isn’t on the immediate horizon, the band already has a full set of songs ready, with new music set to drop every month and a half to two months. They’re also hitting the road with a few live shows, including the annual Adams Avenue Street Fair in San Diego on Saturday, September 20, and a November 21 performance with Dirty Mondays at Harvard & Stone in Los Angeles.
The band has drawn fans to well-respected venues across San Diego County, as well as Los Angeles, Arizona, and the Bay Area, including SOMA, The Holding Company, The Viper Room, The Mint, and more. Their most recent project, the EP “Who Are You,” dropped in spring 2025 and racked up over 100,000 Spotify streams within its first few months. If you haven’t yet discovered The Reckless, check out their latest single, “What Could I Give,” on all major streaming platforms, and follow them on Instagram and TikTok for news and updates.