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Surf Rock icon Dick Dale dies aged 81

Amer­i­can gui­tarist Dick Dale, the pi­o­neer of surf rock, with songs like Let’s go trip­pin’ and Miser­lou, died on Sat­ur­day aged 81, ac­cord­ing to in­for­ma­tion pro­vided on US media yes­ter­day. Al­though the peak of his ca­reer was at the be­gin­ning of the 1960s, his wide­spread fame is largely thanks to Quentin Taran­tino’s film Pulp fic­tion (1994): Miser­lou is on the film’s fa­mous sound­track.

Dick Dale’s real name was Richard Mon­sour and he was born in Boston in 1937. His par­ents were of Pol­ish and Lebanese ori­gin, and this was a key fac­tor in the de­vel­op­ment of his unique and in­flu­en­tial style as a gui­tarist, be­cause the scales he used for Surf Rock got there in­spi­ra­tion from Mid­dle East­ern scales.In the mid-1950s Dick Dale’s fam­ily moved to south­ern Cal­i­for­nia where Dick was to fall in love with surf­ing and rock’n’roll and bring these pas­sions to­gether in Surf Rock.

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