Free at last free at last!
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
Free at last free at last!
I’m going back to my Strat and Tele and let someone else screw the legs on and off that heavy load of addiction.
- Craig Schwartz
- Posts: 713
- Joined: 18 Jul 2009 6:39 am
- Location: McHenry IL
-
- Posts: 1344
- Joined: 18 Jun 2004 12:01 am
- Location: Atlanta, Texas, USA
- Bob Hickish
- Posts: 2283
- Joined: 23 Feb 2004 1:01 am
- Location: Port Ludlow, Washington, USA, R.I.P.
- Stuart Legg
- Posts: 2449
- Joined: 1 Jun 2007 4:44 pm
Bo got tired of being overlooked every year for the Steel Guitar Hall of Fame.
Bo’s most notable contribution to PSG was his amazing revelation of the scientific approach to the technique of pick blocking as referred to in a previous topic,
In view of Bo’s statement here I really think it imperative that we take a second look since it may be lost forever.
click here
Bo’s most notable contribution to PSG was his amazing revelation of the scientific approach to the technique of pick blocking as referred to in a previous topic,
In view of Bo’s statement here I really think it imperative that we take a second look since it may be lost forever.
click here
- Bob Russell
- Posts: 511
- Joined: 1 Jun 2011 10:14 pm
- Location: Virginia, USA
- Contact:
I had overlooked this before. Finally, a detailed scientific explanation! Hall of Fame material, no doubt!Stuart Legg wrote:Bo got tired of being overlooked every year for the Steel Guitar Hall of Fame.
Bo’s most notable contribution to PSG was his amazing revelation of the scientific approach to the technique of pick blocking as referred to in a previous topic,
In view of Bo’s statement here I really think it imperative that we take a second look since it may be lost forever.
click here
- Chris Templeton
- Posts: 2576
- Joined: 25 Sep 2012 4:20 pm
- Location: The Green Mountain State
- Stuart Legg
- Posts: 2449
- Joined: 1 Jun 2007 4:44 pm
Reason number 1
I got tired of folks picking out 25 songs with a lot of steel guitar in them and at the gig tell me I didn’t play the steel parts like they were on the CD. All the while the drummer plays every country song “boom chicka” all night, the guitar player does his Chuck Berry imitation and the bass player is playing a solo. Not a down beat in 6,000 bars of music.
Geez if your going to screw up a country song at least get the words right.
I got tired of folks picking out 25 songs with a lot of steel guitar in them and at the gig tell me I didn’t play the steel parts like they were on the CD. All the while the drummer plays every country song “boom chicka” all night, the guitar player does his Chuck Berry imitation and the bass player is playing a solo. Not a down beat in 6,000 bars of music.
Geez if your going to screw up a country song at least get the words right.
- Alan Brookes
- Posts: 13218
- Joined: 29 Mar 2006 1:01 am
- Location: Brummy living in Southern California
- Dave Bertoncini
- Posts: 560
- Joined: 6 Oct 2011 4:36 pm
- Location: Sun City West, Arizona USA
- Alan Brookes
- Posts: 13218
- Joined: 29 Mar 2006 1:01 am
- Location: Brummy living in Southern California
- Stuart Legg
- Posts: 2449
- Joined: 1 Jun 2007 4:44 pm
-
- Posts: 1408
- Joined: 1 Oct 2009 4:16 pm
- Location: Silver City, NM. USA
I gave up alchohol 10 yrs ago and never looked at another beer since....I left the psg cause at the time I had to make a livin and there were more bass jobs at the time. But I never lost my craving for playin psg so I got me one and voila I'm still as mediocre as I was then but now I don't have any pressure to make the almighty $$$....WEEEEEEEEE... ....yeah Bo'll be back hehehe..
- Joseph Meditz
- Posts: 345
- Joined: 14 Nov 2005 1:01 am
- Location: Sierra Vista, AZ
If Bo had only said he was going to his Tele, then that might've meant a steel guitar divorce. But since he said Strat first that means the trem will be getting a lot of use. Sooner or later the question arises as to why one uses a trem when you have a steel. So, IMO, it's just a matter of time until he takes that contraption out of its case again and plugs it in
- Alan Brookes
- Posts: 13218
- Joined: 29 Mar 2006 1:01 am
- Location: Brummy living in Southern California
I understand him to a certain extent. I've noticed that, recently, having spent so much time and effort using a tone bar, when I come to play such things as the twelve-string guitar, I seem to have lost some of the strength I used to have in my left hand, and find myself rattling where I never used to rattle before. I used to be proficient on about 30 instruments, but you cannot retain proficiency without continual practice, and the steel guitar tends to take away the time spent on other instruments.
In reality, the instruments I am most proficient in are the cittern and the lute, and maybe the guitar. I'm planning on getting back to those instruments and coming up with a new mediaeval album, the last being over twenty years ago.
So I see where Bo is coming from.
But he won't ever give up the steel guitar, as neither will I, because it's part of an array of instruments at our disposal.
In reality, the instruments I am most proficient in are the cittern and the lute, and maybe the guitar. I'm planning on getting back to those instruments and coming up with a new mediaeval album, the last being over twenty years ago.
So I see where Bo is coming from.
But he won't ever give up the steel guitar, as neither will I, because it's part of an array of instruments at our disposal.
- Craig Schwartz
- Posts: 713
- Joined: 18 Jul 2009 6:39 am
- Location: McHenry IL
-
- Posts: 6870
- Joined: 27 Nov 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Oklahoma City, OK USA, (deceased)
- Contact:
To quote a famous person from the past: I am "free at last, free at last".
As a teen-ager, and for many years after, I was afflicted with steel guitar virus. The steel-guitar was the most important thing in my life, which excluded school, work, family, and income, for many years of my life.
Finally, I saw the the light on my 70th birthday while playing a country music show with a cast of musicians and dancers who collectively may have equaled my age of 70 years.
I then and there decided to end all of those years of being gone from my wife and my children and try to make up for lost time. I'll never be able to make up for my absent years, but I am still trying.
As a teen-ager, and for many years after, I was afflicted with steel guitar virus. The steel-guitar was the most important thing in my life, which excluded school, work, family, and income, for many years of my life.
Finally, I saw the the light on my 70th birthday while playing a country music show with a cast of musicians and dancers who collectively may have equaled my age of 70 years.
I then and there decided to end all of those years of being gone from my wife and my children and try to make up for lost time. I'll never be able to make up for my absent years, but I am still trying.
- Keith Davidson
- Posts: 433
- Joined: 19 Apr 2010 9:28 pm
- Location: Nova Scotia, Canada
- Daniel Policarpo
- Posts: 1941
- Joined: 5 May 2010 9:01 pm
- Location: Tulsa, Oklahoma