Nice pic of Jerry Garcia on Steel
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- Peer Desmense
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Thanks for this video, Glenn. Love this work.
Strange things happen over here (Netherlands).
There used to be times that people knew straight away what pedalsteel was, you just needed to say: Ya'll know TYC by CSNY and everybody would say: sure.(Or mention FBB and Sneaky Pete and people would say; wow yeah there's music for you)
Than it wasn't hard to explain pedalsteel.
Nowadays this doesn't work anymore: people respond with their shoulders high when you mention TYC - let alone CSNY. FBB means nothing anymore,
Last year I was on vacation in the USA when I met a family just walkin in a parking lot and the father wore a FBB t-shirt. I was so thrilled that I wanted to go over to the man and express my feelings. My wife kept me from doing so and I still wish I had followed my reflexes...
Jerry had (without knowing so)(and along with sneaky) an enormous influence over here.
Strange things happen over here (Netherlands).
There used to be times that people knew straight away what pedalsteel was, you just needed to say: Ya'll know TYC by CSNY and everybody would say: sure.(Or mention FBB and Sneaky Pete and people would say; wow yeah there's music for you)
Than it wasn't hard to explain pedalsteel.
Nowadays this doesn't work anymore: people respond with their shoulders high when you mention TYC - let alone CSNY. FBB means nothing anymore,
Last year I was on vacation in the USA when I met a family just walkin in a parking lot and the father wore a FBB t-shirt. I was so thrilled that I wanted to go over to the man and express my feelings. My wife kept me from doing so and I still wish I had followed my reflexes...
Jerry had (without knowing so)(and along with sneaky) an enormous influence over here.
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Maybe it was just a great song with a very catchy steel riff recorded by a group of very talented and popular inviduals, therefore it became a hit. The guitar hook on The Beatles "Daytripper" is fairly simple, not the most virtuosic riff from the 60's, but as soon as I mention the song I'm sure the vast majority of those reading this post can hear it in their head.Barry Blackwood wrote:Question. If TYC had not been the huge hit that it was, and had gone down in flaming obscurity, would any of us have even noticed or regarded in any way, the steel guitar accompaniment?
Not always, but the cream does have a tendency for the most part to rise to the top, so particularly back in that era when the corporate record industry wasn't as corporate, "Teach Your Children" couldn't help but become a hit.
I'm reading a book on Phil Spector. Weird as he is and likely spending the rest of his life behind bars, there's no doubt that when it came to producing records the guy possessed a certain level of genius, His first hit was with his own group The Teddy Bears and the song "To Know Him Is To Love HIm." According to the book there were about 500 copies pressed of the single, and in a handful of cities around the country people heard it on their local radio station and the phone started ringing off the hook at these stations with people asking where they could buy the record. Before long in 1958 it displaced the Kingston Trio's "Tom Dooley" as the Number 1 song in the country. 500 copies pressed isn't a very confident debut on the part of a record company. But look what happened.
Also mentioned in the book is how the great Howard Roberts had to "dumb down" his guitar playing on many of the subsequent Spector sessions, he was joking that for awhile every song had a chord progression of C-F-G.
What if they had gotten the Big E to play steel on TYC? It no doubt would have been technically superior, but would the song have been any more successful? We'll never know.
Just like Daytripper, I can hear in my head Garcia playing TYC right now. It seems to have become part of my DNA.
Mark
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- Peer Desmense
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Well Barry, i found a version of TYC by the Hollies (Got it a while back when Limewire still worked) and Graham Nash's voice is obviouisly there (can't miss that one) so it must date from the period that Graham was still a Hollie.
Perfect song...Jerry's part is played by a good leadguitar.
But this isn't the one that got famous. Why?
CSNY were huge back then, Deja vu was a musthave.
The Hollies were good AND I MEAN GOOD!!! Great harmonies and they scored many hits (Even after Grahams contribution)
But I think CSNY weren't beatable in popularity.
Perfect song...Jerry's part is played by a good leadguitar.
But this isn't the one that got famous. Why?
CSNY were huge back then, Deja vu was a musthave.
The Hollies were good AND I MEAN GOOD!!! Great harmonies and they scored many hits (Even after Grahams contribution)
But I think CSNY weren't beatable in popularity.
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also about howard roberts in the vintage guitar article...phil spector shot off his pistol during a session and howard became the only person to walk away from a spector session for good.
maybe a good producer, but a freaking lunatic...we're much safer with him behind bars forever...what a creep. too late for the chick he killed!
maybe a good producer, but a freaking lunatic...we're much safer with him behind bars forever...what a creep. too late for the chick he killed!
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Back to the topic... When it comes to Jerry Garcia and steel, why do most people always only talk about TYC? Jerry recorded a lot more on steel, and far more interesting songs than that one IMO. Check out the first New Riders' album which has him on all tracks and especially Workingman's Dead (Dire Wolf, High Time) and American Beauty (Sugar Magnolia, Candyman). Timeless classics. Jerry may not have been a technically great steel player (never claimed he was) but he sure had a unique voice and, most important, some fresh ideas. He came up with some stuff that nobody else has done before, he invented a style that was easily recognizable. You just know right away it's Jerry on steel. (How many newcomers to the instrument can say that these days?) Now that's what musicianship is all about.
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Great Post!Joerg Hennig wrote:Back to the topic... When it comes to Jerry Garcia and steel, why do most people always only talk about TYC? Jerry recorded a lot more on steel, and far more interesting songs than that one IMO. Check out the first New Riders' album which has him on all tracks and especially Workingman's Dead (Dire Wolf, High Time) and American Beauty (Sugar Magnolia, Candyman). Timeless classics. Jerry may not have been a technically great steel player (never claimed he was) but he sure had a unique voice and, most important, some fresh ideas. He came up with some stuff that nobody else has done before, he invented a style that was easily recognizable. You just know right away it's Jerry on steel. (How many newcomers to the instrument can say that these days?) Now that's what musicianship is all about.
Last edited by Pete Burak on 5 Aug 2011 4:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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i was going to mention that one...he got a cool phased tone on several things he's done.
jerry did have his own unique creative sound on everything. even on banjo. and a sensitive singer. lots of feeling in everything and utilized the new found acid sensibility in tone and phrasing.
he was a real pioneer, whether he chose to be or not.
jerry did have his own unique creative sound on everything. even on banjo. and a sensitive singer. lots of feeling in everything and utilized the new found acid sensibility in tone and phrasing.
he was a real pioneer, whether he chose to be or not.
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Wow! A Jerry post that hasn't gone south! I'm impressed. For an admitted non-player he did fine. Why? He was "musical." Like others said, he did much more than TYC. The note before the solo says it all...and it was the first take. He wanted more, but they about said that was it. The rest is history.
Thanks for not bashing Jerry. He was a treasure to some of us, and is sorely missed.
Thanks for not bashing Jerry. He was a treasure to some of us, and is sorely missed.
Mike
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JG didn't start playing steel until he was an established guitarist with the G.D. That, and the fact that he was missing half of his index finger on his picking hand makes it more interesting. No he wasn't a technical beast on the steel, but very tasteful and had a good feel for what works. He took his steel lessons at Scotty's in St. Louis I believe.
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