Who started you on playing steel!

About Steel Guitarists and their Music

Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn

User avatar
Kenny Martin
Posts: 757
Joined: 4 Aug 2009 9:41 am
Location: Chapin, S.C. USA

Who started you on playing steel!

Post by Kenny Martin »

Let's see a picture of who started you playing steel!
This my Daddy that sit me behind his steel when i was 9 years old! I love him so much and miss him so bad!

thanks!
kenny

Image
User avatar
Bent Romnes
Posts: 5985
Joined: 28 Feb 2007 2:35 pm
Location: London,Ontario, Canada
Contact:

Post by Bent Romnes »

Kenny, a wonderful tribute to a great man and a father!

As for me, nobody in particular got me started on the steel. However I have people like my sister Tina, to thank for getting me interested in playing the rhythm guitar when she was 16 and I was 14.

Then I have Pete Drake, Tom Brumley and Lloyd Green to thank for making me sit up and pay attention to the pedal steel.

Then I have the world's best teacher, my hero, Jeff Newman to thank for opening doors in my mind and showing me how simple steel playing really can be. He taught me what little I was able to retain.
Bobby Burns
Posts: 757
Joined: 7 Apr 2009 10:02 am
Location: Tennessee, USA

Post by Bobby Burns »

A friend of my dad's left an old bakelite rick at our house and I messed with that some, but it was Herby Wallace who really did me in. I was very lucky that Herby had a store called the Music Mart just around the block from us. I road my bicycle there a lot when I was a kid. I was very impressed by the calibur of some of the musicians who visited Herby there. He had a lot of old early steels like Gibsons, Fenders, Multikords and other funky stuff to look at. I tried to soak up as much of his atmosphere as I could, and Herby was very patient. I know I asked a lot of questions and must have really been a pain. I started lessons with Herby when I was a senior in school, I was most likely still a pain, but at least now I was paying Herby for his time. I must say, I paid Herby for one hour lessons, and I never got away from Herby in one hour. He really did seem to enjoy spending time with folks who had an interest in the steel.
Herby's music mart was the kind of community music store that is about a thing of the past now. I know now how lucky I was to have him as a neighbor.
Paul Sutherland
Posts: 2732
Joined: 8 Mar 2007 3:45 pm
Location: Placerville, California

Post by Paul Sutherland »

Lloyd Green and JayDee Maness with their find playing on the Byrds "Sweetheart of the Rodeo" album. Before hearing that record I never listened to country music and had no clue what a pedal steel was.
Charles Davidson
Posts: 7549
Joined: 9 Jul 2005 12:01 am
Location: Phenix City Alabama, USA

Post by Charles Davidson »

Always loved steel,was a guitar picker for over thirty years,A band I played in years ago,The band leader was a friend of Lynn Owsley,Some times Lynn would come down and work the weekend with us,I stood next to him would look over his shoulder while he played. Knew then I had to play that thing. Got one in a couple of months got a job playing it. This was over twenty years,Have'nt played sixstring since. Don't even own one. So I guess Lynn did it to me. YOU BETCHA, DYK?BC.
Hard headed, opinionated old geezer. BAMA CHARLIE. GOD BLESS AMERICA. ANIMAL RIGHTS ACTIVIST. SUPPORT LIVE MUSIC !
User avatar
Ray Montee
Posts: 9506
Joined: 7 Jul 1999 12:01 am
Location: Portland, Oregon (deceased)
Contact:

That faceless stranger...................

Post by Ray Montee »

It was a faceless stranger selling violin and steel guitar instruction with the Oregon Conservatory of Music door-to-door, Instructor Leo Skipton. He'd heard my mother had a remarkable 'child' and they didn't want 'that child' to miss out on a musical education.
How 'bout that?
User avatar
Cal Sharp
Posts: 2873
Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
Location: the farm in Kornfield Kounty, TN
Contact:

Post by Cal Sharp »

I didn't know anybody personally who played steel guitar, so I got my inspiration from TV.

Image
C#
Me: Steel Guitar Madness
Latest ebook: Steel Guitar Insanity
Custom Made Covers for Steel Guitars & Amps at Sharp Covers Nashville
User avatar
Jim Cohen
Posts: 21749
Joined: 18 Nov 1999 1:01 am
Location: Philadelphia, PA
Contact:

Post by Jim Cohen »

In my case, the fire was lit by Rusty Young ("Kind Woman"), then more fuel was dumped on the fire by guys like Scotty, Emmons, Newman, Anderson, Franklin and Jernigan.
User avatar
Allan Munro
Posts: 1046
Joined: 10 Aug 2009 8:41 pm
Location: Pennsylvania, USA and Scotland

Post by Allan Munro »

I don't really play steel - 'play with it' possibly. Bass and guitar was my thing back then. However, the influence to leave home and have a go in the music world in my case came from a few generously long conversations with Gerry Hogan. He gave me the courage to get out and try it. He also gave me a lot of information regarding where to go to meet musicians and bands in and around London.
It was a move well made - thanks Gerry.
Only nuts eat squirrels.

Television is the REAL opiate of the masses!
User avatar
Bernie Gonyea
Posts: 1464
Joined: 20 Nov 2006 1:01 am
Location: Sherman Tx. 75092 ,U.S.A. (deceased)

A Neighbor Played a D-8 National Steel

Post by Bernie Gonyea »

:D :whoa: :lol: :roll:


My long departed friend whom lived down the street worked at a small country hotel every Sat. Nite; doing Round & Square Dancing. He played much like Johnny Siebert [ Carl Smith Fame ] I adored that double finger picking style so much. I was about 16 at the time. This man could play the old " Song Of The Island " and Hawaiian War Chant".My sister started me out on a small 6 string carvin guitar [ LAP ]. Took it to the Navy with me and four years later, came home with my 1953 Harlin Bros. Multi-kord Pedal Steel, which I still own today. Guess I have to give credit to Don Helms for leading me to good C/W Music..He and Hank, Sr. were my Idols..Bernie :whoa: :whoa: :whoa:
2007 Zum S-10; 1967 Sho-Bud [ D-10 ]; 85 S-10 Sierra; 1953 Multi-Kord [ 6 String- 4 pedals ] A Sho-Bro six String Resonator Guitar; Nashville 112 Amp; hilton Vol. Pedal
User avatar
Chet Wilcox
Posts: 234
Joined: 30 Jan 2007 3:24 pm
Location: Illinois, USA (deceased)

Post by Chet Wilcox »

what got me started was going to see Marty Robbins, when i was 15 years old. and watching James Farmer as he would modulate ,Marty into another song with out stopping. after that it was Ralph Mooney on Wynn Stewarts records.
User avatar
Geoff Cline
Posts: 748
Joined: 6 Jul 2009 7:36 am
Location: Southwest France

Post by Geoff Cline »

Buddy Emmons' Flying Fish albums "Buddies" (with Buddy Spicher & Lenny Breau) and "Minors Aloud" with Lenny Breau. Beyond inspirational to me.
Joseph Barcus
Posts: 2372
Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
Location: Volga West Virginia

Post by Joseph Barcus »

Image
User avatar
Ernest Cawby
Posts: 3716
Joined: 6 Aug 2003 12:01 am
Location: Lake City, Florida, USA, R.I.P.
Contact:

here tiz

Post by Ernest Cawby »

Well Little Roy and don Helms. I lived 2 blocks from Hank and his band members hung out at the american Guitar studio, where Nan and I took lessons.
Also Fred Cronier that played with the country band for the campain of Big Jim Folsom while runnig for
Governor of Alabama

ernie
Stephen Fissel
Posts: 44
Joined: 24 Mar 2009 3:23 pm
Location: New York, USA

Post by Stephen Fissel »

I had always been interested in the pedal steel, but Bob Hoffnar definitely sealed the deal for me. Great player, great teacher, great guy! If you have the chance to have a lesson with him, take it!
Steve
User avatar
john widgren
Posts: 2623
Joined: 24 Nov 1998 1:01 am
Location: Wilton CT

Emmons

Post by john widgren »

Buddy Emmons. Someday soon solo, and it was all over for me. The first time I heard it, I was not even sure what a pedal steel was, but I knew at that moment that's what I wanted to do. To this day it's understated beauty in perfect marriage to and lyric and melody makes me weep. Pure perfection.
Steel Guitar Services:
Live performance and recording. Instruments, repairs and lessons. Fresh bait/discount sushi.
(203) 858-8498
widcj@hotmail.com
User avatar
Brett Day
Posts: 5041
Joined: 17 Jun 2000 12:01 am
Location: Pickens, SC
Contact:

Post by Brett Day »

As a kid, I always wondered what instrument I could play, and while I was figurin' it out, I heard great steel sounds by guys like Bruce Bouton, Paul Franklin, John Hughey, Sonny Garrish, and Dan Dugmore, but at the time, I was tryin' to figure out what instrument to play and I'd started lovin' the steel when I was nine. While I'd been playin' keyboards by ear with one hand in 1996, a band called Ricochet had released their first single called "What Do I Know" and I loved how the steel solo sounded and I realized later on that the steel was played by Ricochet's steel player Teddy Carr and I then decided in 1998 that I really wanted to play steel. So, that same year, I went to Dollywood and met steel guitarist Stoney Stonecipher and he got me interested in playin' steel. The guys I heard on those records all made me want to do it and are now my heroes, and it makes me glad that I'm a steel player now and always, even with cerebral palsy in my left hand. Stoney's the man who got me started playin' steel after hearin' those records.

Brett
Jody Sanders
Posts: 7055
Joined: 12 Apr 2000 12:01 am
Location: Magnolia,Texas, R.I.P.
Contact:

Post by Jody Sanders »

Little Roy Wiggins on the Eddy Arnold recordings. Jody.
User avatar
W. C. Edgar
Posts: 724
Joined: 28 Feb 2005 1:01 am
Location: Iowa City Iowa, Madison CT, Nashville, Austin, Phoenix, East Coast Soon!
Contact:

Post by W. C. Edgar »

:) A great guy from Douglasville Georgia named James Morris nicknamed (Whitey). He built some steels with the great late Mac Atcheson from Stone Mountain Georgia in the 1960's from what I hear and I also have one of those custom built D-10 guitars. Nice guy and mighty fine player. When he died he willed me his Sho Bud Pro 2 and thats what I play today.
WC Edgar

www.wcedgar.com

www.myspace.com/wcedgar
Billy Tonnesen
Posts: 1882
Joined: 2 Oct 2006 12:01 am
Location: R.I.P., Buena Park, California
Contact:

Post by Billy Tonnesen »

Agnes K. Roberts, my NIOMA teacher. She was a real "Pistol" and a great organizer. My Mother signed me up and made sure I practiced. Later on when I was playing in Dance Halls at 14 years old I think Mom had second thoughts !
User avatar
Johan Jansen
Posts: 3328
Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
Location: Europe
Contact:

Post by Johan Jansen »

Frans Doolaart on TV with a lot of Hawaii-Girls dancing around him :) He was playing his self-built Dooley-special.I was 10 years old.
When I told him that for a few years he was very amused :)
I believe Frans is not among us anymore..... :cry:
Dean Richard Varga
Posts: 88
Joined: 14 Aug 2005 12:01 am
Location: Arizona, USA

what got me started on PSG

Post by Dean Richard Varga »

I was in a Sunday Night Church function for teenagers in 1970 (BYF-Baptist Youth Fellowship)at the First Baptist Church of Van Nuys.

The music that night was provided was by a group called "The Rice Krispies"- The groups nucleus was made up of three family members,Wayne, Jimmy,and Joe Rice. This Country/Bluegrass bands 3,4,5 part vocals sent chills through the audience

One of the Rice brothers, Jimmy,took a seat at the pedal steel and " brought the house down" when he launch into one of the most popular intros on American Airwaves from 1970-"Teach Your Children".

The sound went thru me like only a pedal steel can do. I have been obsessed with the sound ever since.

The group later changed there name to "Brush Arbor", winner of the ACM "vocal group of the year" in 1974.

Check 'em out.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6XIfvGs3crk

Thank You Jimmy Rice.

dean
Robert Thomas
Posts: 1728
Joined: 23 Oct 2000 12:01 am
Location: Mehama, Oregon, USA

Post by Robert Thomas »

Hi Ray Montee,
I think I may have had the same salesman call on my parents back in 1944.
Jack Francis
Posts: 1892
Joined: 16 May 2001 12:01 am
Location: Queen Creek, Arizona, USA
Contact:

Post by Jack Francis »

b0b...
In that picture of me I'm playing the Sho-Bud that he sold me.
DESERT ROSE D-10 8/5...Joe Naylor "SteelSeat"...
Gallien-Krueger MB200 amplifier through an Alessis MicroVerb w/15'Peavey cab.
TELES & STRATS...
FENDER TWIN & SEYMOUR DUNCAN 50W tube amps...1-12" 2-12" & 4-12" cabs and a FENDER MUSTANG-3
Post Reply