<SMALL>Bobby, if what you say is true then why do you use the equipment that you use? I've made three lap steels and one console and whatever you use from the nut material to the bridge material all makes a difference.</SMALL>
I'm not saying that there isn't a difference in the sound from different materials and different instruments. I'm saying that the quality of the
music comes from the player, not from the instrument used.
Consider the fact that Bobbe Seymour himself once toured with a Sho-Bud Maverick, a guitar that is almost universally considered a piece of junk. The fact that he is a great
musician is what made this possible. The quality of the music does not start or end with the instrument. It comes from the player.
To answer your question, I have 3 pedal steels because I play multiple tunings. I play a D-10 for country gigs and an S-12 for rock gigs. The other S-12 is experimental. I have two amps for different sized gigs (40 watts vs. 100 watts). Actually, I believe that the choice of amp affects tone more than the choice of guitar, but that's a topic for the Electronics section of the Forum.
To me, the bottom line is that the quality of the
music comes from the player, not from the guitar. If I'm not playing the right notes at the right time, no amount of money spent on equipment is going to fix it.
To turn Bobbe's quote on its side: a good guitar won't make up for sucky sounding hands.
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<small><img align=right src="
http://b0b.com/b0b.gif" width="64" height="64">
Bobby Lee - email:
quasar@b0b.com -
gigs -
CDs
Sierra Session 12 (
E9), Williams 400X (
Emaj9, D6), Sierra Olympic 12 (
C6add9), Sierra Laptop 8 (D13), Fender Stringmaster (
E13, A6),
Roland Handsonic, Line 6 Variax<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Bobby Lee on 30 March 2003 at 10:43 AM.]</p></FONT>