Lynn Oliver wrote:Blake Wilson wrote:I think one of the most important and rewarding tools for getting to know a new instrument is transcribing and playing the songs you love...
I agree with this, but how do you find recordings in the tuning you are learning?
Good question. Unless you're clued in (via web research, this forum, a teacher), how to know what's out there and whether it's in your tuning?
Here's an answer: it doesn't matter! Just about any of the standard lap steel tunings are going to supply you with all or most of the chords you'll be using, and obviously you can pick out melodies in any tuning. The idea here isn't to copy the music you like (although that's fun too), but to learn your fretboard and train your ear.
An example: when I started playing I figured out most of the Don Helms playing on Hank's stuff...in C6th, without any books or web research. I was certain that my intonation and transcription were correct by playing along with the records, but could not believe he played so high up on the fretboard. Of course, I later found he's in a higher (E6th or 13th) tuning so he's not crunching the strings quite as much as you do in C6th...but all the barring, slants, etc, I learned is the same, just down several frets. So different tunings, but great results all the same.
And eventually, you'll get good enough to recognize the tuning just by hearing it. I am not there yet, but can hear when that 6th is prominent and can usually go from there.
A last note (get it?) on tunings: I use C6th and Leavitt. The latter is a quick and easy retune from the former, and if you've heard Roy Thomson's and Mike Ihde's stuff (both as performers and educators), you'll find this a lush, sophisticated tuning that works as a great complement to the standard C6th. Try it out after you've conquered the basics.
Blake