bottleneck slide guitar telecaster questions
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bottleneck slide guitar telecaster questions
I am just starting to learn to play bottleneck slide on my telecaster. I was wondering what string guages most people use. I want to be able to still be able to play with the fingers as well so i dont want my action too high, but I need it high enough to use the slide.
Right now, I am trying .011 guage strings and I raised the action some. should I go with a higher guage string. I'm up for any suggestions
Right now, I am trying .011 guage strings and I raised the action some. should I go with a higher guage string. I'm up for any suggestions
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You'll need to change your bridge setup considerably. A Tele has a curved neck and the bridge is set up to capture that. For bottleneck, you'll need to raise the action and make sure the strings are lined up in a flat plane across. Regular lights (.10) or mediums (.11) are fine but you probably would get better tone the thicker the strings.
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I've been fooling around in open D. I find is nice and rich, fairly easy to play, and its a tuning I'm familiar and can play a few tunes with. It also is easy to retun it to standard tuning should I need to. I dont how in the world people play slide in standard tuning. Seems to me it would be too easy to make a mistake.
Anyway, thanks everyone. I've got to get a new nut to raise the strings higher and i may later go to a .012 guage.
Anyway, thanks everyone. I've got to get a new nut to raise the strings higher and i may later go to a .012 guage.
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I wouldn't raise the strings at the nut if I were you. One of the (many) things that separates bottleneck slide from lap steel is the ability to combine fretted notes with the slide work. If you raise the action at the nut you'll basically have another lap steel...Ben Godard wrote:I've got to get a new nut to raise the strings higher
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You should be fine with 11s.
That said, Kirk Lorange, who plays a mean slide in regular and Dropped D tuning (lo-to-hi; D-A-D-G-B-E) has his first 3 strings at 17-18-20 unwound. He intersperses his slide with fretting.
http://www.bottleneckguitar.com/
Click on the link above and then click on "watch some videos". Oh yeah, Kirk uses bare finger pick blocking. Great stuff to watch from a technical basis.
That said, Kirk Lorange, who plays a mean slide in regular and Dropped D tuning (lo-to-hi; D-A-D-G-B-E) has his first 3 strings at 17-18-20 unwound. He intersperses his slide with fretting.
http://www.bottleneckguitar.com/
Click on the link above and then click on "watch some videos". Oh yeah, Kirk uses bare finger pick blocking. Great stuff to watch from a technical basis.
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Muddy Waters played slide on a Tele, but I never liked the way it sounded on my Teles--can be very harsh and nasal. I did a bottleneck recording session last year with my Tele, though, and it worked out great. I still think a Strat is my favorite guitar for bottleneck.
I always used heavier strings like .012s or .013s, but I think it may have been overkill. I liked flatwounds, too, like Ry Cooder. You will want a fairly high action, though, only because it sounds much better and you don't want to bottom out with the slide.
I always used heavier strings like .012s or .013s, but I think it may have been overkill. I liked flatwounds, too, like Ry Cooder. You will want a fairly high action, though, only because it sounds much better and you don't want to bottom out with the slide.
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I use open G (DGDGBD) and use the Ernie Ball Not Even Slinky dropped tuning string set (with a .015 subbed for the .012 that comes with the set).
Tuning those down to open G leaves me plenty of room to finger the strings also, with a somewhat raised bridge. The PRS 25" scale helps - the longer Fender scale makes a difference. As does tuning up to open E, which gives enough tension to use standard gauge strings...
Tuning those down to open G leaves me plenty of room to finger the strings also, with a somewhat raised bridge. The PRS 25" scale helps - the longer Fender scale makes a difference. As does tuning up to open E, which gives enough tension to use standard gauge strings...
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Danelectro u-1/u-2 re-issues are also nice for bottleneck.Steinar Gregertsen wrote:Not meaning to hijack, but I just bought this one for bottleneck slide. Cost next to nothing, and after replacing the silly little pots with solid 500K's, it's got a killer bottleneck sound. Set the action at 2,75mm on the treble side and 3mm at the bass side with 011-049 strings, tuned to E.
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Well,,,, I played bottleneck a lot onstage, with my regular Tele. 10 gauge set. I used my Hipshot B and G bender, with three toggles that lower the Es to D and the A to G. Never had any problems, but it does take a light touch. Although my preferred slide is a Dunlop heavy, chrome-plated brass, on the Tele, a light thin glass slide sounded best. Playing a song like Jackson's version of "Mercury Blues," I had to be able to play regular guitar, dobro licks, and hot slide, all in rapid succession. No way was I taking three guitars to play one song! You can do it with a regular set,,,, but you must practice the technique required. Light left hand.
Now that I've retired, I have my two National archtops to play. My Dunlop heavy slide. One guitar is in G tuning, the other is in D tuning. I use the same set of strings for both; Thomastik-Infeld Jazz BeBop, 14 through 55. They sound wonderful, and last three or four times as long as cheaper strings, without losing their tone. Worth the price!
I guess it depends on just how much slide you're going to play, but I could never have played the Gatton and Hellecaster stuff with 11s or 12s. Well, maybe with 11s, as I don't really feel much of a difference.
Now that I've retired, I have my two National archtops to play. My Dunlop heavy slide. One guitar is in G tuning, the other is in D tuning. I use the same set of strings for both; Thomastik-Infeld Jazz BeBop, 14 through 55. They sound wonderful, and last three or four times as long as cheaper strings, without losing their tone. Worth the price!
I guess it depends on just how much slide you're going to play, but I could never have played the Gatton and Hellecaster stuff with 11s or 12s. Well, maybe with 11s, as I don't really feel much of a difference.
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So that would be like open E but tuned down 5 frets? Sounds great!Steve Cunningham wrote:How about .14 - .68, open B?
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Using .011 guage seems to sound Ok. but I am having trouble with using light pressure. I am not use to it. No matter what i seem to do, I cant get it right. I'm either too light and causing string buzzing aginst the slide, or too heavy and accidently hitting the frets causing buzzing that way. I cant raise the bridge any higher because when I fret notes, they are starting to go out of tune when I fret them. I am still considering going to .012 guage strings.
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You might need to start out on a dedicated slide guitar, with pretty high action. You'll have more fun that way.
The light touch will come with time, to allow you to both fret and play slide on the same guitar.
The light touch will come with time, to allow you to both fret and play slide on the same guitar.
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