A stand up pedal steel
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- Pat Dawson
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A stand up pedal steel
I saw an interesting steel guitar on a Opry video of Porter Wagoner from the mid-60's. It was a Sho-Bud with 8 strings and 2 pedals. The player stood to play it. Familiar with that one? I wonder who the player was? He sang harmony too. That steel guitar sounded really great.
- Michael Douchette
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That was Don Warden, who now is Dolly's manager.
Mikey D... H.S.P.
Music hath the charm to soothe a savage beast, but I'd try a 10mm first.
http://www.steelharp.com
http://www.thesessionplayers.com/douchette.html
(other things you can ask about here)
http://s117.photobucket.com/albums/o54/Steelharp/
Music hath the charm to soothe a savage beast, but I'd try a 10mm first.
http://www.steelharp.com
http://www.thesessionplayers.com/douchette.html
(other things you can ask about here)
http://s117.photobucket.com/albums/o54/Steelharp/
- Chris LeDrew
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Did Don play on Porter's original recording of The Carrol County Accident? There was a very nice Fender steel sound on Porter's songs of this period, and I always wondered who was playing.
Jackson Steel Guitars
Web: www.chrisledrew.com
Web: www.chrisledrew.com
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Ralph Mooney Could!
Remember, Jeff Newman said Mooney had an extra foot, so he could work the vol pedal & stand up & play, I am surprised he never has, he just don't want us to know about that extra foot, you have to have great eyes to catch him using it!!
Ernie
Ernie
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Don Warden tuning & copedant
Does anybody out there know how his guitar was set up?
- Bent Romnes
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Chris, that particular song you are talking about did have the electric banjo w/benders on it. Man, I used to dig that sound... Buck was quite the musician...
Once I saw him play steel..on Hee Haw I think it was. He did a killer version of My Shoes keep walking back to You.
Can anyone elaborate on his proficiency on steel? It would be great to know...
Once I saw him play steel..on Hee Haw I think it was. He did a killer version of My Shoes keep walking back to You.
Can anyone elaborate on his proficiency on steel? It would be great to know...
- Chris LeDrew
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Thanks for the tip about the banjo, guys! You learn something new every day.
Jackson Steel Guitars
Web: www.chrisledrew.com
Web: www.chrisledrew.com
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Unofficial Sho-Bud page
Good info on the Unofficial Sho-Bud page
Buddy's 1957 tuning:
E, B, G#, F#, D, B, G#, E,
but no mention of Don's tuning.
jamie
Buddy's 1957 tuning:
E, B, G#, F#, D, B, G#, E,
but no mention of Don's tuning.
jamie
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- Garry Vanderlinde
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Check it out to the right of the Melobar. White Sho-Bud, White platform shoes and White curly-cord... 28)
Man...I bet that knee(?)lever was a hard one to hit!
[/img]
Man...I bet that knee(?)lever was a hard one to hit!
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Last edited by Garry Vanderlinde on 1 Jan 2008 12:06 am, edited 1 time in total.
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I loved Don Wardens style especially on the show. All you had to do was listen for that first lick and you knew it was Don Warden. An incredible and unique style.
It seemed Don could milk that steel for every mouth watering lick possible. I miss hearing that particular
pedal steel sound on mainstream radio.
Dan
It seemed Don could milk that steel for every mouth watering lick possible. I miss hearing that particular
pedal steel sound on mainstream radio.
Dan
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- Pat Dawson
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Around the late 90's, I had Sierra make me long legs and rods for my Sierra S12U, and attempted to do a stand up steel thing with a rock-a-billy band.
I had lever extensions made for LKL/RKR (my E>F & E>Eb's).
It was pretty much un-do-able.
At that height, just playing the thing made it sway back and forth from left to right (i would have needed some kind of stabalizer legs I guess).
You could either play pedals, or use the volume pedal, but not both at the same time.
It looked cool, though!... as does Rusty's rig.
I had lever extensions made for LKL/RKR (my E>F & E>Eb's).
It was pretty much un-do-able.
At that height, just playing the thing made it sway back and forth from left to right (i would have needed some kind of stabalizer legs I guess).
You could either play pedals, or use the volume pedal, but not both at the same time.
It looked cool, though!... as does Rusty's rig.
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Price Porter from Marble Falls TX uses a stand-up MSA E9/B6 Uni with 7 pedals and 2 wrist levers. The guitar was originally converted by Tom Bradshaw and a cameo pic of it appears on the cover of Tom's catalog from eons ago. I re-did the guitar for him in 1995 making a small 'second' pedal rack that relocated the pedals rearward without disturbing anything else. There are short connector rods going to cranks that then pull the pedal rods. Price also plays lead and sings, so he wanted something that he could use while doing just that/those things, then jump on steel and still have pedal changes without having to suddenly sit down. As far as I know, he still drags it out to a gig here and there, now and then. Last time I worked on it was about 3 years ago. I re-made/re-mounted the wrist lever mechanisms to make them more user-friendly including replacing the levers themselves. I found that after about a half hour of messing with it, I could actually play it!!
PRR
PRR
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