How many 10 string Bigsby steels are known of.
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How many 10 string Bigsby steels are known of.
I remember seeing a list of compiled Bigsby steel guitars known to exist. Does anyone know how many of the 60 or so out their have 10 string necks. Just seems like an interesting question.
- chas smith
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A fellow named Grady Lindler had a late 50's T10 with eight pedals, I have a picture of it but the guitar's been destroyed since. Bobbe owns the Dick Waring guitar which had two 10 string necks and one eight string and nine pedals, Bob White's guitar has 2x10's and single 8 with four pedals. Tom Morrell's ( which wasn't originally built for him ) is a T10 and didn't Bobbe used to own a T10 which was built for Whit ( taylor or something )? I don't have my list on this computer but Marian Hall had a doubleneck with at least one ten string neck. All in all, there's far more guitars than just 60 or so, we're probably talking about around hundred Bigsby steels.
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Jody Carver's [(“Stolen”-“Mis-placed”)] Bigsby is a T–8.
Last edited by John Bechtel on 14 Feb 2009 6:36 pm, edited 1 time in total.
<marquee> Go~Daddy~Go, (No), Go, It's your Break Time</marquee> L8R, jb
My T-10 Remington Steelmaster
My T-10 Remington Steelmaster
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Sometime in the middle 50's I took my foot pedal in to Paul for a new pot. He had an S-10 he was finishing up for Ernie Ball. I don't remember exactly but I believe there were 8 pedals. I was a stand up, no pedal player then and that was the first pedal steel I had seen. I thought that was the most beautiful guitar ever built.
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- Ray Montee
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Okay Jussi............give us the rest of the story.......
Jussi, please let us in on YOUR SECRET.
Let's face it. You're on the other side of the world and yet, you've managed to gather all of this INSIDE INFO' on Bigsby guitars.
How'd you do it?
Let's face it. You're on the other side of the world and yet, you've managed to gather all of this INSIDE INFO' on Bigsby guitars.
How'd you do it?
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Bob White's
I own Bob's Bigsby if anyone has a specific question I can probably answer it.
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Bigsby Ten string guitars
My Father once owned the Grady Lindler steel and I somehow ended up with two ten string pickups. I guess I am fishing for information to find out just how rare these things are.
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Well, in a vintage guitar world, it don't get much rarer than a ten string Bigsby PU
And Ben, I myself, and I'm sure many others too are curious and would appreciate the tunings and set up Bob had on that guitar. I have the Joe Carson recordings with Bob on steel on which I believe he's playing an E13 with a whole tone pedal change on the fifth note, in other words, the familiar E9 change. I might be wrong too...
And Ben, I myself, and I'm sure many others too are curious and would appreciate the tunings and set up Bob had on that guitar. I have the Joe Carson recordings with Bob on steel on which I believe he's playing an E13 with a whole tone pedal change on the fifth note, in other words, the familiar E9 change. I might be wrong too...
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- chas smith
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- chas smith
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This was back when cables and phenolic aircraft cable pulleys were used for the undercarriage. Bigsby used to frequent Lockheed surplus. The pulleys needed a lot more real estate than the modern setups do. Normally, there would be an 8-string or 10-string neck without changers, in the front position.Whats up with Reeces guitar? I have heard players joke about a Polish Loafer, but that actually looks like one!
Up until today, I had only heard of one, although Jussi, Lee Jeffries, Bobbe and others are far more informed than I am.Chas, I know very little about Bigsbys, do you mean that it was thought that there was only one S-10 made, Reese's?
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I just was informed about an S-10 Bigsby that surfaced in Canada, originally owned by a steel player named Bruce Armstrong. Anyone know of him?
My rig: Infinity and Telonics.
Son, we live in a world with walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with steel guitars. Who's gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinberg?
Son, we live in a world with walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with steel guitars. Who's gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinberg?
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Marian Hall spoke of a double neck with a non-pedal 8 in back and a 10 on the front with 6 pedals. She told me that once she discovered that a 10 string E13 w/pedals would cover all she wanted to play,she took off the back neck and put a pad on there. So apparently she "loafed" before Lloyd. She appeared to play standing up but was sitting on a high stool so she could work the pedals and a volume pedal. That ax also had one of those maple skirts w/the same finish as the guitar that came all the way down to the pedal rack which was quite big because of the heigth of the guitar.I'm sure that instrument still exists but I don't know who ended up with it when she passed. There's a great article w/a lot of pix in the Sept 04 issue of Vintage Guitar and that guitar and her copedant is in there as well as a Bigsby D-8 she had previous to that. I spent time with her in the last couple years of her life but I never saw that guitar - just a picture of it.She was so stove up with arthritus and her hands were so twisted up I don't think she wanted to be around a guitar so I didn't push the issue of having her pull it out and set it up. We mostly just passed the time talking old times and listening to records - mostly Joaquin Murphey records. She had trouble getting around but her memory never failed her and she was articulate to the end.
At her home in Laguna Beach in 2004.
At her home in Laguna Beach in 2004.
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