Pedal Steel with the US Navy
Moderator: Dave Mudgett
- Ray Jenkins
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Two months ago I drove 75 miles too our other campus too see David and hear him play.Guess what? He had already quit too stay home with his wife and new baby.If you go too the audition,you better like playing a lot of blue grass.The band is good.
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Steeling is still legal in Arizona<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Ray Jenkins on 14 February 2002 at 07:56 AM.]</p></FONT>
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Steeling is still legal in Arizona<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Ray Jenkins on 14 February 2002 at 07:56 AM.]</p></FONT>
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Hey Guys you are right those guys are great and the steel player they had when I heard them was from Va. and he was super. I think his last name Jerry Sutton or Simpson I can't quit remember but I got it some where around here.I invited him to the Rhode Island Steel Guitar Show two years ago and he was comming if they were not playing. i guess they played some where as he did not make the show. He was playing a new Emmons and he did not like it he said he wish he had the old Emmons back. he said the strings were to close together and it was messing him up. If that was true I wonder how much greater he could be.
Sam White
Sam White
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"Country Current" is an official part of the U.S. Navy Band. There equipment, including steel guitars, amps, etc., is furnished by the Navy and that's correct, they are not related to the USO which is a civilian organization.
From what I understand, it's a great gig. You get essentially free room and board, free uniforms, free transportation, and as I said, free equipment (that you don't get to keep when you leave) and your sole job is to practice and play the gigs.
Jeff Agnew occasionally posts on here and I know that he did a stint in this gig. Maybe he'll see this topic and post a thought or two.
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Rick Richtmyer
Good News
From what I understand, it's a great gig. You get essentially free room and board, free uniforms, free transportation, and as I said, free equipment (that you don't get to keep when you leave) and your sole job is to practice and play the gigs.
Jeff Agnew occasionally posts on here and I know that he did a stint in this gig. Maybe he'll see this topic and post a thought or two.
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Rick Richtmyer
Good News
- Gary Lee Gimble
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To be a member of the U. S. Navy Band, you are required to attend their music school. When I joined, they wavered my school because they felt a bluegrass/country musician is just a functioning illiterate. They were afraid I would fail what they refer to as "A" school. Anyway I had no intention of telling them that I could pass the "A" school, just send me out to my duty station so I could just pick. Many Navy musicians were furious that most of the country band members didn't have to take the "A" school and the country/bluegrass pickers were moving up in rank just like everyone else. For those of you who don't know, a military musician must pass an exam to move up in rank along with time in service and whatever else that was required. Not all country pickers had the "A" school wavered. I knew of a few that attended and it never interfered with their pickin. For what its worth, if you can put up with being owned, the job is ideal.
Gary Lee
Gary Lee
- Jack Stoner
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When I went into the Air Force, they had recruited a guy for the Air Force "Singing Sergeants". He was in our basic training squadron but when we completed basic training he automatically was promoted to SSGT and the rest of us got our first stripe.
I hate to say it, but that was June 1955 at Sampson AFB, Geneva N.Y.
I hate to say it, but that was June 1955 at Sampson AFB, Geneva N.Y.
Gary,
I am a graduate of the "A" school and the advanced Navy Music School course.
As an Army musician, it was required of all Army Pickers.....
The Navy sponsors the Music "A" school for the Marines as well as the Army..
I am well aquainted with the military music program
BTW, I am an E7 and I have taken all of those tough music tests...they are no joke....
See ya,
Tim
I am a graduate of the "A" school and the advanced Navy Music School course.
As an Army musician, it was required of all Army Pickers.....
The Navy sponsors the Music "A" school for the Marines as well as the Army..
I am well aquainted with the military music program
BTW, I am an E7 and I have taken all of those tough music tests...they are no joke....
See ya,
Tim
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Am I to understand that everyone in the military bands are enlisted? What do you think they would do if an officer (candidate) wanted to join the band after commissioning? Obviously this is a pretty distant possibility for me, but I'm always looking at my options. But all the same, I'd like to get my degree from college and be a commissioned officer, so perhaps the band isn't for me.
Garnett
Garnett
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Does that mean that if a steel player in the USN goes to sea and can't hold down his lunch, he's C6?
Sorry...
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Rick Richtmyer
Good News
Sorry...
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Rick Richtmyer
Good News
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- Gary Lee Gimble
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- Location: Fredericksburg, VA.
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