Disagree...with all due respect Scott..Scott Duckworth wrote:Been thinking about this topic this AM... here is what I am thinking...
1) We need more men and women to come down off the professional high horse and be willing to sit on the pony to encourage kids, youth, etc.
2) I believe we need to teach the basics first. Pedal steel is intimidating. Start them with non pedal, standard tunings, and teach some good basic music, such as the Nashville Number System.
3) We need to refurbishers that will take some of these older cheaper steels and put a little time in them to make them a little more playable and be willing to take a little less for them. I applaud people like Doug Earnest and GFI who are producing good "starter" guitars that are of near pro quality for a cheaper price.
4) We need to invite younger folks to steel jams and shows (and make sure they are "clean" shows) and some of the participants / exhibitors take a little time with them.
We've went through / are going through the same thing in ham radio. Sending a text on an cell phone is heard to compete with. But doing a demo with a top dollar rig isn't going to bring them in, because they know right off the bat they can't afford it. But bring in some older, cheaper, but proper working equipment, teach a little theory, show them how to solder, make antennas, etc. and it becomes a little more interesting.
All this comes from a newbie approaching a one year anniversary of playing steel, and loving the heck out of it! And, I had to save and scrimp to get into steel. I sold 3 other 6 string and bass guitars and amps to even get started. I built my own steel seat, music / tab rack, and guitar neck pad, and everything I have is used! I am still playing a GFI Student and a Rogue C6 lap steel. Sure, I'd like to trade up, but hard to do on SS fixed income. But until them, I am going to use and enjoy what I have, and every time I can get someone here at the house, or somewhere else that will listen to me, I am going to play a little for them and tell them my story about steel guitar.
There you go, my thoughts...
If a young person wants to learn steel, HERE'S what they need to do..
Go buy a steel, best one they have the money for.. .. See how its tuned, learn how to tune the stops, and start playing along to CD'S.. In our day it was records.. I was a crappy guitar player, and learned steel in just a few months by practicing 6- 8 hours a day every day,, No one needs a "mentor" to learn pedal steel.. they need a pedal steel, some AMBITION, and time..
Thats it.. most of us are self taught, and proud of it.. Todays kids can do it IF they want to.. If they need mentors, and "old guys" to show them the ropes, they simply don't want it bad enough... bob