Mark Speer

Songwriter

Birthday November 9, 1979

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Houston, Texas, U.S.

Age 44 years old

Nationality United States

#21076 Most Popular

1979

Mark Speer (born November 9, 1979) is an American musician and songwriter, best known as the guitarist and one of the founding members of the musical trio Khruangbin.

Mark Speer was born November 9, 1979, in Houston, Texas.

The first music video he remembers seeing on MTV is Grandmaster Flash’s "The Message", the production of which he found intriguing.

At the time, Speer thought that rock and roll music "was terrible", and thinks that people continue to associate him with rock music just because he plays guitar.

One of the first concerts he attended as a child was that of Parliament-Funkadelic.

Speer initially wanted to play drums but could not afford them, so he started playing bass guitar.

Later, he borrowed a four-track cassette recorder from a friend of his dad, and was making tracks with Casio drums by playing them with his fingers.

He wanted to put chords on them, so he borrowed a guitar from a friend and started learning jazz fusion chords.

2004

Speer met future bandmate DJ Johnson in 2004 while playing in Rudy Rasmus' St. John's Methodist Church gospel band in Houston, Texas.

The church employed Speer as the guitarist and Johnson as the organist.

He later met Laura Lee through mutual friends, where they initially connected over a shared love of Afghan music and Middle Eastern architecture.

2010

In 2010, Speer and Lee went on tour with Yppah and Bonobo.

During this time, they recruited DJ on drums and formed Khruangbin.

2015

Speer has recorded three studio albums with Khruangbin: The Universe Smiles Upon You (2015), Con Todo el Mundo (2018), and Mordechai (2020).

His family owns a barn in Burton, Texas, where Khruangbin records all their music, while the overdubs are done in SugarHill Recording Studios in Houston.

A notable part of the band's visual style is the black wigs that Speer and his bandmate Lee wear on stage, and during promotional interviews and photoshoots.

Originally this was to help them move from the stage to the merchandise stand without being recognised during early tours.

Speer uses a Fender Stratocaster which is the only guitar he has.

He replaced its neck and bridge pickups with DiMarzio Cruisers to avoid 60 cycle hum in studio settings.

He uses D'Addario Chromes flatwound strings, buying .012-.052 sets and an additional single .010, throwing away the .052, and tuning to standard EADGBE.

Due to the consistency of tone throughout the lifespan of flatwounds, he only changes his strings approximately once per tour.

Similarly, Speer only has one guitar pick, which is worn to a round tip.

In the studio, Speer uses a Fender Deluxe Reverb '65 Reissue guitar amplifier; live, he uses a '68 Custom Deluxe Reverb.

He connects his guitar into a Dunlop Cry Baby pedal that he never turns off.

From there, the connection goes to a Boss PH-3, Boss DS-1, MXR Dyna Comp, Electro-Harmonix Holy Grail, and Strymon El Capistan with an expression pedal.

Sometimes, he uses his amp's vibrato effect.

Much of Speer's guitar style comes from seeking to emulate the harmonic and timbral characteristics of other instruments, such as the krar, bağlama, rubab, shamisen, mbira, and djembe.

Speer prefers the band's compositions to center primarily around bass and drums, instead of guitar.

He provides occasional vocals for the band, although he dislikes singing in general.

Speer has mentioned Roy Ayers, Prince, Roots Radics, Mark Knopfler, Steely Dan, Lata Mangeshkar, Sezen Aksu, DJ Sun, and Ernie Isley as his biggest influences.

He described Kassav's album Lagué mwen as an album that changed his life.

A self-professed "world music nerd" and a devoted crate digger, Speer is interested in music from all over the world, preferring music that is not in the English language, and tones that are not very prevalent in Western music.

In Khruangbin, Speer tries to replace the lead singer's role with his guitar, so he listens to a lot more singers than he does to guitar players.