Tom Doughty


Location: Northwich

Challenge: Quadraplegic

Website: www.tomdoughty.com

Tom Doughty is a unique voice among guitar players. His approach to the instrument and his playing style were developed through years of persistence and hard work as he overcame the physical limitations imposed by Spinal Cord Injury. This is encapsulated in his belief that the pleasure of making music must be available to everyone, whatever their restrictions.

Tom is an acclaimed musician, performer, songwriter, recording artist and teacher who has toured the UK and internationally. Today he is acknowledged as one of the world's finest lap steel guitar players.

Self-taught, Tom began learning as a child by watching and interpreting musicians such as Renbourn and Jansch, Martin Carthy, Nic Jones, Big Bill Broonzy and Led Zeppelin. He received his first guitar at the age of seven - a second-hand instrument brought from a jumble (yard) sale.

His older brother showed him a few basic chords and before long Tom was playing the riff from "Money", from With The Beatles. At 17, Tom was considered by his peers to be an accomplished fingerstyle guitarist. He played every day.

Everything changed in 1974, when Tom was involved in a motorcycle accident. The resulting complete spinal injury affected his 4 limbs, leaving him in a wheelchair and with little movement in his hands. Tom thought he would never play his guitar again. But, in time, profoundly, his impairment became the catalyst to a world of different opportunities. One pivital moment was hearing the album "Greenhouse" by Leo Kottke at a friend's house. As soon as he heard "Louise", the first song, Tom knew he had to somehow learn to play again.

He took a previously redundant guitar off the wall and placed it on his lap. To depress the strings, he used a tube on his forefinger. Soon, he began adapting picks, making twists and turns so he could hit the strings at the correct angle, raising the nut, and put extra weight into the tube to make it more effective. For Tom, this was a wholly new approach to guitar playing.

In 1999, following his attendance at a guitar seminar held in Columbia University, NY, Tom took the plunge into full-time musicianship, taking early retirement from his job as a social worker.

Today, Tom is writing and producing music that blends pop, jazz, folk and blues, allowing him to create his own unique acoustic sound. He has released four critically acclaimed albums: 2003's "The Bell", 2006's "Running Free", and 2008's "Have a Taste of This". His most recent album, "Can't Teach an Old Dog" was released in 2016.

Tom's music has taken him around the world, including playing in many of the UK's most famous venues. In 2019, Tom played on the hallowed stage of Ronnie Scotts' Jazz Club. He mostly performs solo but has played with orchestras, including the British Paraorchestra and Birmingham City Symphony.

Alongside his work as a professional musician, Tom is also a keen advocate of playing music as a form of release. He believes physical impairment should not be a restriction for anyone.

To this aim, Tom has toured hospital spinal injuries units across the UK to teach patients and therapy staff and provide concerts. He shows how creating music is possible even with limited mobility in your limbs. Funded was provided through the Bridgewater Hall, Manchester, and in partnership with Korg UK, The British Paraorchestra, Creative United (Take it away) and Music For All. Tom completed a similar tour in 2012 when he was supported by The English Arts Council.

Included in this piece of work are specific teaching videos for people with hand disabilities. His teaching for people with spinal cord injuries has also reached the Royal rehab centre, in Sydney, Australia.

Tom's style and approach have become instantly recognisable and unlike that of any other slide player. Exploiting his song writing and continuing to push boundaries, he has re-invented slide playing to suit his needs, finding voicing and chord structures that are unique to him.

Tom explains: "My disability forces me to be creative and resourceful. I believe my disability strengthens my musicianship. When I play the guitar well, the experience feels emotional, sensual, technical, controlled, yet spontaneous".

"Most people who hear me on the radio, buy tickets to see me in concert, or even buy my CDs are unaware of my physical limitations; they just like my music - job done!"

"I feel the actual impact of my disability, which imposes masses of restrictions has made me more creative and more interested in the world than had I not experienced it."

"It's directly linked to what happened to me and I think that's a fantastic thing. I have no desire to go back to the 'able' me and I'm at one. My creativity is linked to my impairment and I think that makes me a better musician. The very thing that limits me is the very thing that gives my music individuality and strength."


Tom Doughty - Journeyman Blues