Which popular BLUES standards to play live?
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- Jay Fagerlie
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Did anyone mention Hop Wilson?
This guy just does it for me- the
sound of these recordings is so great, it put's you right there in the gin joint....
I love his phrasing, note selection, etc....
One of my absolute favorites:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwufnpPilMU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BU4NRYV92Qk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VMVJSMDrzI0
This guy just does it for me- the
sound of these recordings is so great, it put's you right there in the gin joint....
I love his phrasing, note selection, etc....
One of my absolute favorites:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwufnpPilMU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BU4NRYV92Qk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VMVJSMDrzI0
- Jay Fagerlie
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- Location: Lotus, California, USA
- Contact:
- Dave Mudgett
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Hop Wilson threads I know about:
http://bb.steelguitarforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=121185
http://bb.steelguitarforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=166087
http://steelguitarforum.com/Forum2/HTML/002260.html
I like both Hop and Freddy Roulette - to me, they're just different, I couldn't argue I prefer one to the other.
BTW, that UNC link to (what I believe is) the old University of Mississippi archive material on Goldband records isn't working - here's where I found the stuff just now:
On Goldband in general: http://www2.lib.unc.edu/wilson/sfc/goldband/
On Hop Wilson in particular: http://www2.lib.unc.edu/wilson/sfc/gold ... op_wilson/
However, the stream files seem to be 404 (gone).
Also note that Michael Lee Allen put up a ton of cool and relevant pics on at least one of those threads. Unfortunately, a few years ago some posters started complaining about how long it was taking to load threads where he put pics up, and thus he started taking stuff down, including these.
http://bb.steelguitarforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=121185
http://bb.steelguitarforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=166087
http://steelguitarforum.com/Forum2/HTML/002260.html
I like both Hop and Freddy Roulette - to me, they're just different, I couldn't argue I prefer one to the other.
BTW, that UNC link to (what I believe is) the old University of Mississippi archive material on Goldband records isn't working - here's where I found the stuff just now:
On Goldband in general: http://www2.lib.unc.edu/wilson/sfc/goldband/
On Hop Wilson in particular: http://www2.lib.unc.edu/wilson/sfc/gold ... op_wilson/
However, the stream files seem to be 404 (gone).
Also note that Michael Lee Allen put up a ton of cool and relevant pics on at least one of those threads. Unfortunately, a few years ago some posters started complaining about how long it was taking to load threads where he put pics up, and thus he started taking stuff down, including these.
- Jack Hanson
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I agree with the statement Joachim made about the back neck sounding better for playing blues. If you translate the same line from E9 to C6, it's going to sound fatter on C6. I guess it's more so what you're used to though. I started playing rock on A6, so as soon as I got a double neck, I went to C6 for blues and rock. I also enjoy playing a squareneck tele in open D for this kind of stuff.
To answer the OP's question about what blues tunes to play on steel... Stormy Monday lends itself to E9 pretty well with all of those diatonic minor chords.
To answer the OP's question about what blues tunes to play on steel... Stormy Monday lends itself to E9 pretty well with all of those diatonic minor chords.
- Bob Simons
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PLEASE play anything but Stormy Monday. It is a standing joke around here when white guys play it. (Generally rather soullessly overplayed when non-blues players go after it.) For some reason everyone thinks they can play the blues and that it will benefit from speed and trickiness. Both wrong in my opinion.
Zumsteel U12 8-5, MSA M3 U12 9-7, MSA SS 10-string, 1930 National Resonophonic, Telonics Combo, Webb 614e, Fender Steel King, Mesa Boogie T-Verb.
Country played with 7th chords is not blues.Jack Hanson wrote:Personally, I hear a lot of blues licks from Ralph Mooney on the early Buck Owens stuff, and especially on the Haggard stuff with Roy Nichols. Lotsa sevenths and ninths were masquerading under all that twang.
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- Jack Hanson
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Totally agree. Sorry that my post may have been construed as misleading.b0b wrote:Country played with 7th chords is not blues.Jack Hanson wrote:Personally, I hear a lot of blues licks from Ralph Mooney on the early Buck Owens stuff, and especially on the Haggard stuff with Roy Nichols. Lotsa sevenths and ninths were masquerading under all that twang.
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- George McLellan
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- Location: Duluth, MN USA
summer time
Give Summer Time a try in Fmi on E9th neck. I'm not a blues person but at a rehearsal for a show one of the singers wanted to do it, it didn't sound too bad.
Geo
Geo
- Jake Hoffman
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J Fletcher wrote:The thing is, there is no tradition of steel playing, pedal or non-pedal, in classic electric blues. ie blues from say 1939 to 1969.
Lots of slide guitar playing, but steel has never developed its own voice in this music....
I agree. One example is Freddie Roulette. The 'tubes I've posted below are from the late 60's and early 70's (except the first one) and they most certainly represent classic, post-war, urban blues (the style most familiar to fans of the blues-rock sound).Jack Hanson wrote:Freddie Roulette plays incredible blues on his old 8-string Nationals. Most of his work is from after 1969, but he started working with Earl Hooker and Charlie Musselwhite long before then.
Freddie Roulette:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zX06XkUhkbs
With Charlie Musselwhite, from the album Memphis, Tennessee (Freddie's all over this album)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uVqrL8X6LDg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ppOKsvWEVaw
again from the Charlie Musselwhite album Goin' Back Down South
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPBPUkVeu8E
Keep on pickin'!
Glenn
Steelin' for Jesus