Anyone care to join me?
Moderator: Brad Bechtel
- Ray Montee
- Posts: 9506
- Joined: 7 Jul 1999 12:01 am
- Location: Portland, Oregon (deceased)
- Contact:
Anyone care to join me?
I for one, have a tremendous dislike for whomever it was the dreamed up the idea for roadway 'speed bumps'.
Not only is it annoying but when you have an expensive steel guitar standing up in the rear of your expensive VAN........ the violent rocking and
jumping around is not good for your cherrished instrument.
Likewise, I am extremely upset with whomever it was that dreamed up 'the term'......LAP STEEL or NON-PEDAL STEEL.
I was just listening to a Nov. 1939 radio broadcast recording and heard the emcee/announcer introduce JERRY BYRD on his 'electric Hawaiian steel guitar'.
Nearly all the sheet music of the day was labled for Hawaiian and/or plectrum guitar.
The electric Hawaiian Steel Guitar was here and established for several decades before Alvino Ray et al, started promoting steel guitars with pedal attachments added thereto.
Automatic automobile/truck transmissions came into vogue around 1949 some older fella told me. I don't recall them ever being refered to as a "clutchless" or "non-manual gear shifting" vehicle.
Bo or Stuart Legg are you gonna join with me to correct this unforgiveable situation? What a dilemma!
Not only is it annoying but when you have an expensive steel guitar standing up in the rear of your expensive VAN........ the violent rocking and
jumping around is not good for your cherrished instrument.
Likewise, I am extremely upset with whomever it was that dreamed up 'the term'......LAP STEEL or NON-PEDAL STEEL.
I was just listening to a Nov. 1939 radio broadcast recording and heard the emcee/announcer introduce JERRY BYRD on his 'electric Hawaiian steel guitar'.
Nearly all the sheet music of the day was labled for Hawaiian and/or plectrum guitar.
The electric Hawaiian Steel Guitar was here and established for several decades before Alvino Ray et al, started promoting steel guitars with pedal attachments added thereto.
Automatic automobile/truck transmissions came into vogue around 1949 some older fella told me. I don't recall them ever being refered to as a "clutchless" or "non-manual gear shifting" vehicle.
Bo or Stuart Legg are you gonna join with me to correct this unforgiveable situation? What a dilemma!
- Mike Anderson
- Posts: 731
- Joined: 26 Apr 2011 6:08 pm
- Location: British Columbia, Canada
Ray, since I got the bug I have only referred to it as "steel guitar". When I first mentioned it, at a party with my wife and some dear friends, I said "I think I need to get a steel guitar." You should have seen the funny looks - worth the price of admission alone!
Nothing's changed since then; I have never referred to my 7-string frypan as a "lap steel guitar", never mind a "non-pedal" anything - not once. Nor do I intend to, especially if I ever put it on a stand. So I'm on your side.
I think it's funny too that someone is inevitably going to chime in and say "what about resonators?" Those guitars are called "resonator guitars" - the question answers itself: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resonator_guitar. You don't see Wikipedia lumping them under "lap" or any other kind of steel. Weissenborns: why not call them "Weissenborns"?
"Console" steels are steel guitars, "lap" steels are steel guitars, PSGs are PEDAL steel guitars. I for one can't think why this question is still under debate, and I like your "clutchless vehicle" metaphor.
Two bits from a noob who also happens to love the English language.
Nothing's changed since then; I have never referred to my 7-string frypan as a "lap steel guitar", never mind a "non-pedal" anything - not once. Nor do I intend to, especially if I ever put it on a stand. So I'm on your side.
I think it's funny too that someone is inevitably going to chime in and say "what about resonators?" Those guitars are called "resonator guitars" - the question answers itself: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resonator_guitar. You don't see Wikipedia lumping them under "lap" or any other kind of steel. Weissenborns: why not call them "Weissenborns"?
"Console" steels are steel guitars, "lap" steels are steel guitars, PSGs are PEDAL steel guitars. I for one can't think why this question is still under debate, and I like your "clutchless vehicle" metaphor.
Two bits from a noob who also happens to love the English language.
Last edited by Mike Anderson on 24 May 2012 2:59 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- Posts: 116
- Joined: 19 Feb 2009 3:06 pm
- Location: British Columbia, Canada
OH RAY !! Too much time or just a slow day?
Speed bumps are usually marked. Where are you driving and at what speed? You had your "STEEL" standing up in a moving "horseless carriage"? See - names change as they evolve. Yes I have my '34 A22, '39 bakelite, '46 stamped steel Ricky "electric hawaiian guitar and proud to call them that. Then we get into all the variations of "steel" guitar that play everything but Hawaiian music. On the lap on a table or stand or with it's own legs they are steel guitars.
Cheers - Ray
Cheers - Ray
- Mike Anderson
- Posts: 731
- Joined: 26 Apr 2011 6:08 pm
- Location: British Columbia, Canada
- Benjamin Kelley
- Posts: 78
- Joined: 13 May 2012 10:26 am
- Location: Iowa, USA
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- Posts: 119
- Joined: 27 Aug 2009 3:07 pm
- Location: Lancashire, UK
I usually use the term "steel guitar" but then have to go through non pedal, lap, Hawaiian & streight steel while explaining the lack of pedals and the fact that it's not the shiny metal thing on the cover of the Dire Straits album.
Ray, in your one short post you used three different names to describe a metal box with a motor and a wheel at each corner. Steve or Ste or Stephen, Stevie, Mr.Baker...
Ray, in your one short post you used three different names to describe a metal box with a motor and a wheel at each corner. Steve or Ste or Stephen, Stevie, Mr.Baker...
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- Location: Queensland, Australia
- Peter Jacobs
- Posts: 982
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Northern Virginia
Unless I am playing it at the time, I also say "slide" guitar -- I might add that I play it on my lap (I actually stand) -- most non-musicians wouldn't have a clue what a steel guitar or a lap steel is. The last time I told someone I played Hawaiian guitar, she said, "Oh, I love Hawaiian music!"
Now I just tell people I play the banjo.
Now I just tell people I play the banjo.
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- Posts: 55
- Joined: 21 Dec 2005 1:01 am
- Location: United Kingdom
Please don't get too upset, Mr. Montee, just think what we in the UK have to put up with.
We hear of you drawing water from a fawcet whereas we get ours from a tap.
We walk along the side of the road on a pavement whilst you walk along the sidewalk.
You place your shopping in the trunk of your automobile whilst I will put mine in the boot of my car.
Even our engines, or are they motors, are kept in different places? Yours is under the hood whilst mine is under the bonnet.
Two great countries seperated by the same language, eh?
We hear of you drawing water from a fawcet whereas we get ours from a tap.
We walk along the side of the road on a pavement whilst you walk along the sidewalk.
You place your shopping in the trunk of your automobile whilst I will put mine in the boot of my car.
Even our engines, or are they motors, are kept in different places? Yours is under the hood whilst mine is under the bonnet.
Two great countries seperated by the same language, eh?
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- Location: Lancashire, UK
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- Location: Lancashire, UK
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- Joined: 19 Feb 2009 3:06 pm
- Location: British Columbia, Canada
Inner Rickenbacher memo-----
Please everyone - HELP - we have been fighting to get our latest cast aluminum amplified guitar through the @#$%$@ U.S.Patent Office. They can't find a listing for it, other companies are making our product and we can't stop them without a Patent. PLEASE come up with a unique name so they will give us the Patent.
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Only if you're from Ingland.Stephen Baker wrote:But we in the UK haven't got a grip of the language yet. What's it called Ing-lish?
"slide guitar"?
It's hard to be lower than the snakes in a sand hole that call the steel guitar 'non-pedal', but calling it slide is on the belly side of those snakes. It's time to man up for your instrument, and call it what it is, no matter who's in or how long the fight. And that's the way the dipsy doodle works.
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- Posts: 6895
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So why join the dummies and acerbate the miscommunication? If they called you by a different name you'd correct them, right, or not? It comes down to basic respect and education for the long and cherished heritage of the steel guitar. You either have it, or like someone just said... who cares? It's one thing for an ignorant public to not know, but if members of this forum don't care enuf, then that's a pretty sad statement.Chris Griffin wrote:Sure, it's on the snake's belly, but it's all in the name of komyoonikayshun.
- Ray Montee
- Posts: 9506
- Joined: 7 Jul 1999 12:01 am
- Location: Portland, Oregon (deceased)
- Contact:
Thanx to those who somewhat sided with me..................
I continually get the impression that most 'players' don't even recognize or have a clue, that the designation of "STEEL GUITAR" is derived from the stainless steel bar that is used to make those beautiful Hawaiian, country, jazz or pop musical melodies.
I guess perhaps if we started calling them ceramic guitars or stone guitars it would be easier for some to accept????
Huh?
I guess perhaps if we started calling them ceramic guitars or stone guitars it would be easier for some to accept????
Huh?
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- Location: Montello Wisconsin, USA
I'm with you on this one Ray, it is the BAR in the left hand, whether it is electrified or just an old weather beaten 1930 no name Sears accustic guitar with a nut to raise the strings on the left end of the neck.like the one I started on. It was a Steel guitar because of the BAR in the left hand that made all that [purdy] music whether it was from "Hawaii calls" or Country western from WSM, WWVA or the OZARK JANBEREE, OH I gess I should include wls.
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Well, some use the term "bottleneck guitar" as you're aware.
I just find "slide guitar" saves going into a long explanation about what we make music on, with people who don't really care anyway. When I told folks I played "steel guitar" they replied, "Oh, it has steel strings?" or "You mean like the one on the Dire Straits album?"
I know, as you likely do too, professional guitarists who don't have a clue about open tunings & the like. Let's face it, we're a misunderstood minority. It's a waste of time to go into an extended explanation with people who wouldn't know a saxophone from a kazoo. Talking amongst ourselves, of course it's a different thing. We're never going to educate the dumb masses.
Not really trying to upset anybody. We Aussies are overloaded with sarcasm genes & missing a respect gene. It's hereditary.
I just find "slide guitar" saves going into a long explanation about what we make music on, with people who don't really care anyway. When I told folks I played "steel guitar" they replied, "Oh, it has steel strings?" or "You mean like the one on the Dire Straits album?"
I know, as you likely do too, professional guitarists who don't have a clue about open tunings & the like. Let's face it, we're a misunderstood minority. It's a waste of time to go into an extended explanation with people who wouldn't know a saxophone from a kazoo. Talking amongst ourselves, of course it's a different thing. We're never going to educate the dumb masses.
Not really trying to upset anybody. We Aussies are overloaded with sarcasm genes & missing a respect gene. It's hereditary.
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when I was a young kid I took Hawaiian steel guitar lessons. Only after I got there did I realize I wasn't going to learn to play a Stratocaster, like my teenage cousin had. My teacher said my hands were too small to play a "guitar". Never in the 50's or 60's did I hear the name lap steel. In fact, only a few years ago did I hear that designation. It's steel guitar by me. Bringing a D-8 Stringmaster on stage has had some refer to it as a pedal steel (asking where the pedals were). Whatever. It's fun stuff to do, and often confuses others as to what it is exactly.
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