Mark Lettieri on Groove, Restraint, and the Art of Playing With Others
PodcastFrom Gospel Roots to Global Stages
Mark Lettieri didn’t take the traditional route into the guitar world. No music school. No formal path. His education came from gospel gigs in Fort Worth, where songs were learned by ear, harmony moved fast, and groove mattered more than anything.
That environment sharpened his timing, taught him to listen deeply, and introduced him to the community that would eventually bring him to Snarky Puppy.
Arranging for Three Guitarists: The Fearless Flyers Lesson
Some groups need one guitarist. Some need two. Snarky Puppy and the Fearless Flyers often need three.
Mark breaks it down in a way that makes the complexity feel logical:
- Divide the chord into registers so each player owns a range
- Learn every part — chords, melody, bass lines — because roles shift constantly
- Follow the exact voicings from the demos so the harmony speaks clearly
- Blend with horns, keyboards, and rhythm sections the way a section player would
It’s a mindset that turns guitarists from “lead players” into musicians who serve the whole arrangement.
Developing Feel Beyond the Metronome
Mark’s rhythm concepts aren’t about speed or mechanics. They’re about feel — the space between attacks, the push and pull of a phrase, and how restraint can make a groove heavier than a thousand notes.
He talks about eliminating the urge to “pull the ripcord” early in a solo — letting the story build instead of jumping straight to fireworks.
Tone as a Lifelong Project
One of Mark’s favorite stories comes from a gig where he felt great… until an older guitarist told him:
“You should start thinking about tone.”
It wasn’t an insult — it was direction.
Sound isn’t static. It’s a lifetime of micro-decisions, touch, phrasing, and intention. Mark has been chasing that refinement ever since.
Designing the PRS Fior: A Guitar With a Voice
The Fior didn’t come from a design meeting — it came from decades of real gigs. Mark built it around how he actually plays:
- A warm neck pickup that holds up in both trios and big bands
- A bridge humbucker with enough bite for leads but enough clarity for clean parts
- Multiple switching combinations for funk, chords, or melodic work
- A feel that encourages expression instead of fighting against it
Even the artwork connects back to his family — the Fior logo was drawn by his mom, with the name inspired by his daughter.
Creative Flow Without Overthinking
Mark doesn’t follow a meticulous practice routine. Instead, he chases curiosity: writing, improvising, solving problems in sessions, and refining phrasing over time. It’s intuitive, human, and grounded in doing the work rather than planning the work.
What This Episode Represents
Conversations like this capture the heart of Sonora — learning through real stories, real players, and real experiences. Mark’s journey is a reminder that feel, community, and musical honesty outlast any trick or trend.


