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Guitar theft puts band’s dream on hold
By Rodika Tollefson
KP News
A small group of local musicians
had big dreams: After playing together for a few years
as “amateurs,” they decided to make a recording and go
commercial. With the help of Tacoma’s Jerry Miller, of
the ’60s band “Moby Grape” fame, and producer Robert
Yeager, Key Pen’s Wes Wilson and father-son duo Bob and
Matt Bentley were ready to try out the big times.

Bob Medley performs
at a party in
Purdy recently. Bob is playing one of
the guitars later stolen, the Taylor
G12C. Photo courtesy Wes Wilson |
Only a couple of weeks before the
scheduled studio time, Bob Bentley came to his
Longbranch home on Jan. 9 to discover five guitars gone.
Three of those cannot be replaced, and two were handmade
through hundreds of hours of work by Wilson. The stolen
1995 Taylor was the group’s main sound—they wrote their
original songs and practiced them to that sound.
“When you write songs, you produce
them for the guitars,” Wilson said. “They are all
unique; they are our sound… They (the thieves) took our
sound we’ve been working on (for months).”
The guitars, with a total value of
nearly $10,000, were taken without cases. Wilson thinks
they may have been taken by kids — since nothing else
was stolen, and there was thousands of dollars worth of
equipment in the house. The group has been trying to
spread the word in hopes to get the guitars back, but
Wilson doesn’t hold out much hope. He doesn’t think the
guitars will reappear, and the thieves would have a
difficult time selling them because they are easily
identifiable.
The band, however, is moving on.
Called “The Ruston a Way Band” (a play on words for
Ruston Way, where Miller grew up), the five-member band
(Wilson, Miller, the Bentleys, and a drummer, Billie
Jones, en route from Texas) plans to overcome the
setback. Wilson said the timing was good for the group,
which had played around the Key Peninsula (sans Miller
and Jones) at various events.
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If you have information
about the stolen guitar,
contact Bob at 884-3477 or Wes at 884-2757.
The missing guitars are a 1995 Taylor G12C, a
1975 Fender Stratocaster, a Washburn D-10,
a handmade jazz base, and a handmade
Stratocaster copy. |
Wilson and Bentley, longtime
friends, started playing together on Herron Island in
1981. Wilson said Matt, a Peninsula High School graduate
now in his early 20s, has come of age, and created his
own following. The two friends’ desire to showcase
Matt’s talent, coupled with Miller’s interest in teaming
up with them (though he plays with other bands as well)
has compelled them to create the new band. “This is the
first time we were going to make a business out of it,”
Wilson said.
Their plan is to buy new guitars,
redefine their sound, reschedule studio time — and make
a debut in spring at the Longbranch Improvement Club.
“We’ll practice a lot, and we’ll put on a show,” he
said.
Wilson is grateful for the
community support and the help of the local sheriff’s
detachment in trying to locate the guitars. “We hope
people keep an eye out,” he said.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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