Keeping time is serious business in all music and definitely never a laughing matter in jazz, where reputations are made or broken in the passing of a dotted eighth note. The saga of Duke Ellington sideman Freddy Guy is a woeful chapter from the annals of American rhythm sections. Born near the close of the 19th century, he was self-taught and leading his own bands by the early '20s. He started out on banjo, but was one of the influential players whose decision to switch over to guitar pointed the way toward the exit sign in terms of the banjo's involvement as a crucial part of a jazz rhythm section. He never led his own band again after going to work for Joseph Smith, and in 1925, got the banjo chair in what would become one of the great American big bands, Duke Ellington & His Orchestra. Many members of this group were known for their extensive loyalty and Guy was not the only player whose entire career was spent helping Ellington realize his personal musical vision. However, unlike a lot of these purveyors of Ellingtonia, such as clarinetist Barney Bigard and baritone saxophonist Harry Carney, Guy was not an important soloist, did not inspire his boss to write works featuring him, and is actually not credited with contributing much of anything to the band's music, other than keeping time. Not that this wasn't a contribution, at first. Great as it was, the music of various Ellington outfits from the mid-'20s on have been described as lacking a steady rhythmic compass. These are the opinions of nit-pickers, perhaps, because many jazz listeners enjoy these sides without falling to pieces over situations where the drummer might be pushing the tempo whilst the bassist is laying back. Guy was supposed to have been the only one who actually could keep the right time in these groups, at first on banjo and then on guitar around 1935 under the advice of Eddie Lang, a totally despised fellow among many banjo players due to this sort of advice. The arrival of bassist Jimmy Blanton was a dynamic event for Ellington's band, as he was not only one of the first acknowledged virtuosos on the instrument in jazz, but because his sense of time was flawless. Now the guitarist really had nothing to do, his rhythmic chording rendered superfluous. He stayed in the band until 1949, nonetheless, and then retired from music. He began working as a dancehall manager in Chicago, and committed suicide in 1971. In a morbid bit of irony, the Internet adds insult to injury as surfers looking for information about Freddie Guy tend to be confronted with endless information about horror film character Freddie Krueger, for some reason constantly identified as "that Freddy guy." Perhaps the story of this guitarist should be called "Nightmare on Duke Street." ~ Eugene Chadbourne, All Music Guide
A guy is a term for a line (rope) attached to and intended to control the end of a spar on a sailboat. On a modern sloop-rigged sailboat with a symmetric spinnaker, the spinnaker pole is the spar most commonly controlled by one or more guys.
There are two primary types of guys used to control a spinnaker pole:
The afterguy, working guy, or simply guy and sometimes know as a brace is attached to the windward clew of the spinnaker, and runs through the jaws on the outboard end of the pole and back to the cockpit. The afterguy is used to rotate the outboard end of the pole around the mast in order to optimize the sail's effectiveness, depending on the direction of the wind. Because a spinnaker has two clews, there is always a second line identical to the afterguy attached to the leeward clew of the spinnaker. This is called the sheet and serves a slightly different function. When the boat jibes, the spinnaker pole will be moved from one side of the boat to the other, causing the sheet to become the guy and vice versa.
A foreguy may also be used to control the height of the spinnaker pole. It is attached either to the end of the pole or to a bridle on the bottom of the pole, and runs through a padeye on the foredeck rather than directly aft to the cockpit. The foreguy is used to keep the end of the pole from lifting up under heavy wind. In addition, it can be used to change the shape of the spinnaker slightly to make the sail more efficient. The foreguy may be referred to as a downhaul if it is attached to a bridle at the pole's midpoint, but this term is used for other parts of a boat's rigging as well.