The Spina Minor Bar
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- Doug Beaumier
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The Spina Minor Bar
I just picked up this oddball bar, circa 1930s/40s. Spina Mfg. Co., Albany NY. It works pretty well!
The little sliding piece is a "miniature bar" that touches one string behind the bar, and it pushes that string down slightly, just enough so that string clears the main bar. So the note produced on that string is one fret flat of the bar.
In other words... if the bar is on fret 7... one string can be "flatted" to fret 6 by pushing the mini-bar down slightly. It takes some getting used to, but it does work. To get a minor chord just push on the 3rd of the chord. Anyone here ever seen one of these?
The little sliding piece is a "miniature bar" that touches one string behind the bar, and it pushes that string down slightly, just enough so that string clears the main bar. So the note produced on that string is one fret flat of the bar.
In other words... if the bar is on fret 7... one string can be "flatted" to fret 6 by pushing the mini-bar down slightly. It takes some getting used to, but it does work. To get a minor chord just push on the 3rd of the chord. Anyone here ever seen one of these?
- Brad Bechtel
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I've never seen one of those before either. What a cool looking bar!
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An interesting gadget.
I guess it would be in tune for just the one fret placement at a time though?
So if you're playing at fret 7, then you'd need to slide the mini-bar (no pun) in a bit as you progress up the board, and outwards as you move towards F1,2,3 etc...
There's an interesting YouTube video that Steve Cunningham recently alerted us to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dzPUTDjOuio , which is somewhat related.
I'm amazed at all the variations people devise for SG. It seems a bit more innovative than the clarinet world that I also inhabit.
I guess it would be in tune for just the one fret placement at a time though?
So if you're playing at fret 7, then you'd need to slide the mini-bar (no pun) in a bit as you progress up the board, and outwards as you move towards F1,2,3 etc...
There's an interesting YouTube video that Steve Cunningham recently alerted us to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dzPUTDjOuio , which is somewhat related.
I'm amazed at all the variations people devise for SG. It seems a bit more innovative than the clarinet world that I also inhabit.
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- Doug Beaumier
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Yes, it works well for E tuning, flat the 3rd. I haven't tried it on other tunings yet... but placing the mini-bar over any string will lower that string.Probably works best for E tuning, right?
yes, as you move up the fretboard the frets get closer together so you need to adjust for that. I guess that's why the little bar slides in the slot. I was able to play a I, IIm, IIIm, IV pattern (A, Bm, C#m, D) by simply moving up the frets using the bar, frets 5, 7, 9, 10, E9 tuning. It's crude, but it does work. I guess Necessity really IS the mother of invention!...you'd need to slide the mini-bar (no pun) in a bit as you progress up the board
This was in the back room of an old music store in Rhode Island. I don't think it was ever used. It's cool to have the original box too. I love vintage steel guitar items like this.
Very cool. Reminds me of Sonny Landreth's technique of fretting behind the bottleneck slide. It looks like this would knock other techniques, like slanting and damping behind the bar, out the window. If so, the minuses outweighed the plus and that explains why the gadget never caught on. But what a wonderful find.
- Doug Beaumier
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So you rotate your wrist clockwise when you want the major chords?
When the bar is held normally (upright) the mini-bar does not touch the strings, so you have your normal tuning and chords. You need to turn the bar slightly to the left if you want the mini-bar to touch a string. Notice that the mini-bar is slightly higher than the main bar. In the last picture notice that I'm pushing down on the mini-bar and the main bar is turned slightly. Slants are possible although it's a little awkward to slant with the finger locked into that clip.It looks like this would knock other techniques, like slanting and damping behind the bar, out the window
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Ron "Bumblefoot" Thal, a heavy metal guitarist does this with a thimble on his picking hand, ala '80s guitar fret board tapping:Bill McCloskey wrote:...putting a little metal cap on your ring finger and pressing down when you wanted.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AAnG7WD5sBk
Fortunately, you only have to watch a bit to get the idea....
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Beats the bar I saw where you spun a rubber band around until the bar could spin. To get a slant, you just pick up the bar and it flips into position. Can't recall what made it stop rotating. Good find, Doug. Steel guitar is the klugiest of all instruments. Can you imagine an artificial set of lips for a flute player? No, only steel guitarists are this wacky!
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''Doug, I believe you're demonstrating it backwards in the photo. Am I wrong? Don''
I don't think it's designed to be played in front of the bar for a right hander, that is.
I'm a left hander, so I'd be able to, with my thumb on the mini-bar. Then again, I am practicing my string bending, so I probably wouldn't need one. The usefulness of the mini-bar would be diminished by the awkwardness imposed when slanting.
My guess is that there'd be just a small market for this device.
John
I don't think it's designed to be played in front of the bar for a right hander, that is.
I'm a left hander, so I'd be able to, with my thumb on the mini-bar. Then again, I am practicing my string bending, so I probably wouldn't need one. The usefulness of the mini-bar would be diminished by the awkwardness imposed when slanting.
My guess is that there'd be just a small market for this device.
John
- Doug Beaumier
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When I first saw the bar I too thought the "miniature bar" should touch the string on the front side of the bar, but after trying it... I realized it doesn't work that way. Check the picture below. That way feels all wrong... the bar is front heavy, the weight distribution is off, and the thumb doesn't work in the mini-bar because the thumb has to hold the bar on that side. The position of the finger slot is way off too. When I turned the bar the other way (as shown above) the bar felt comfortable and it worked fine and I could hear the string (the note) drop down a half step when I pressed on the mini-bar.Doug, I believe you're demonstrating it backwards in the photo. Am I wrong?
Backwards:
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- Doug Beaumier
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3 5/8" longDoug could you post some rough dimensions?
5/16" wide
the side section extends 1 5/8" from the main bar
I started to record an audio clip using the bar... and I quickly realized that I would need a lot of practice with this before I can play minor chords in tune! The technique involved in using the bar smoothly would take some time to master. I can move between the majors and minors, but its rough and the tuning is kind of iffy.