Woody Garcia on Chasing Tone, Reading the Room & Bringing People Together
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Summary
“The goal is to make people feel something.”
On this episode of SoCal Soundcheck, Brian sits down with longtime Southern California musician Woody Garcia, frontman of Woody and the Harrelsons, for a conversation about the long road from childhood guitar lessons to becoming one of the most recognizable live performers in the local music scene.
Woody traces his story back to growing up in San Dimas, learning guitar around age 11 or 12, and being shaped by the music of Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Smashing Pumpkins, Stone Temple Pilots, and the alternative explosion of the ’90s. He talks about early bands, reconnecting with childhood friend Eugene at a Save Ferris show, recording original music, playing punk shows with Cry Havoc, and eventually finding his way into the project that would become Woody and the Harrelsons.
What started as a leap into playing covers became something deeper. Woody shares how performing songs people already love taught him to see music as an emotional bridge -something tied to memory, people, and moments in our lives. For him, doing those songs justice is part of the responsibility.
The conversation also gets deep into the craft of live performance: reading the room, choosing songs in the moment, building a set without a setlist, and learning how to serve both the crowd and the venue. Woody explains why the band evolved from mostly ’90s rock into a broader mix of ’80s alternative, classic rock, hip-hop, R&B, soul, and funk - and why the goal is never to give people the exact same show twice.
Of course, there is plenty of guitar talk. Woody breaks down his Friedman Small Box amp, his his journey through guitars, amps and various pedals, the role of his hot pink gear aesthetic, string gauge, picks, and why an unforgiving amp can make you a better player. He also talks about the influence of David Gilmour, Prince, Radiohead, and how the musicians in his band are his biggest inspiration.
But the heart of this episode is bigger than gear. Woody opens up about taking better care of himself, learning how to sustain the physical demands of singing and performing for hours at a time, and trying to be his best self so the band can be its best self. Toward the end of the conversation, he reflects on seeing how music brings people together, helping people tune out the noise of the world for a moment, and remind us that we are more alike than we are different.
This is a conversation about guitars, gear, cover songs, and the grind - but even more than that, it’s about connection, presence, gratitude, and the kind of musician who wants every show to mean something.
Listen to this episode if you’re into: Southern California live music, guitar tone, cover bands, ’90s rock, Pink Floyd, Prince, Radiohead, local music stories, and honest conversations with working musicians.
Woody & The Harrelson's Website: https://www.woodyandtheharrelsons.com/
Woody on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/woodyandtheharrelsons/