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Artist
Francis "Rocco" Prestia is the bass player for Tower of Power. Born in Sonora, California, Prestia started playing electric guitar as an adolescent. When he auditioned for Emilio Castillo's band, Tower of Power, Castillo persuaded him to switch to electric bass. Prestia worked with the band for the next three decades, before he became seriously ill in 2001. His fans and friends created a foundation in order to help pay the artist's medical costs. On December 5, 2014, Prestia underwent successful kidney transplant surgery. Technique and Influences Prestia is a master of fingerstyle funk, a technique in which he lightly mutes the strings with his left hand to get a percussive sound, with the pitch remaining clear and accurate. That characteristic sound, in combination with a highly rhythmic approach to bass lines, makes Prestia's sound unmistakable. Along with James Jamerson, Stanley Clarke, Anthony Jackson and Alphonso Johnson, Prestia belongs to a generation of musicians that fostered a revolution on the electric bass—inspiring the innovative work of Jaco Pastorius in the mid-1970s. Prestia's influential style can be heard on classic Tower of Power tracks such as the 1973 hit "What is Hip". Prestia cites James Jamerson and the different musicians who worked for James Brown (particularly Bootsy Collins) as his main influences. Equipment Prestia's primary instruments are his Fender Precision basses (a purple transparent American Deluxe and a natural ash-bodied short-live