Gotta' Question About Waylon's Telecaster
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
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Gotta' Question About Waylon's Telecaster
I watched a YouTube video on my big screen smart TV last night of Waylon doing an Austin City Limits gig and noticed something I'd never seen before.
Waylon kept fiddlin' with something on the back side of his Telecaster headstock and after awhile it looked to me like it was a tuning key of some sort that may have been connected to the first (top) string.
Maybe this has been covered before here on the forum but I don't want to scour the archives and try to find it.
Can anybody fill me in on this anomaly?
BTW, Ralph sounded great playing that Mooney pedal steel sound on his Sho-Bud, even doing a few dobro licks on
the duet featuring Waylon and Jessi Coulter doing, "Honky Tonk Angels".
Waylon kept fiddlin' with something on the back side of his Telecaster headstock and after awhile it looked to me like it was a tuning key of some sort that may have been connected to the first (top) string.
Maybe this has been covered before here on the forum but I don't want to scour the archives and try to find it.
Can anybody fill me in on this anomaly?
BTW, Ralph sounded great playing that Mooney pedal steel sound on his Sho-Bud, even doing a few dobro licks on
the duet featuring Waylon and Jessi Coulter doing, "Honky Tonk Angels".
- Jerry Jones
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- Joachim Kettner
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You can see him switching the tuner at 1:51.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NvlE14cM-zk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NvlE14cM-zk
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Saw the video clip Joachim, 'ya gotta' pay attention to catch it but it shows a good view of Waylon turning the Scruggs peg.
Lee, I think Marty Stuart plays the original Clarence White b-bender telecaster. It's interior mechanism housed in the body of the guitar has spring levers that bend the "B" string by lowering the neck which activates the pull on the lever of his guitar strap at the body.
You can see him do it if you watch his show on RFD-TV and it gives a bit of the pedal steel sound on some of his instrumental fills.
Lee, I think Marty Stuart plays the original Clarence White b-bender telecaster. It's interior mechanism housed in the body of the guitar has spring levers that bend the "B" string by lowering the neck which activates the pull on the lever of his guitar strap at the body.
You can see him do it if you watch his show on RFD-TV and it gives a bit of the pedal steel sound on some of his instrumental fills.
- Lee Warren
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Hi Bill,
Yup, that's it, the prototype Clarence White B bender guitar.
Marty and Ralph Mooney also installed a plunger mechanism to lower the 1st string a half step.
With the banjo pegs, B bender and E flattener (is that a word?), it's a very cool and interesting guitar, especially to see those pulls in action.
Weighs a ton, so I've heard!
Yup, that's it, the prototype Clarence White B bender guitar.
Marty and Ralph Mooney also installed a plunger mechanism to lower the 1st string a half step.
With the banjo pegs, B bender and E flattener (is that a word?), it's a very cool and interesting guitar, especially to see those pulls in action.
Weighs a ton, so I've heard!
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I prefer the Hipshot D-tuner. Easier to use. My Baritone Strat.
Last edited by John Billings on 13 Jun 2014 8:37 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Yeah Lee...E-flattener works for me so I guess is IS an acceptable word.
Marty's B-bender Tele may weigh a ton but I'll bet it doesn't weigh much more than a Gibson D-18 top tension Mastertone 5-string.
There are two things you start noticing about a 5-string banjo player who's been around a while...he starts leanin' to the right when he stands and the fingers of his right hand are shaped into a pepetual claw.
Marty's B-bender Tele may weigh a ton but I'll bet it doesn't weigh much more than a Gibson D-18 top tension Mastertone 5-string.
There are two things you start noticing about a 5-string banjo player who's been around a while...he starts leanin' to the right when he stands and the fingers of his right hand are shaped into a pepetual claw.
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Scruggs pegs were intended to change pitch while playing, rather like we do with pedals. To change pitch and leave them that way you are much better off with a Hipshot B-bender, but it's better still to go the whole hog and fit a Hipshot Trilogy, which allows three separate tunings for each of the six strings at the flick of a switch. They also make eight string versions, which are used (the latter) mainly on lap steels.
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- Kevin Raymer
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I added a scruggs tuner with the drop "D" setup for a friend of mine to his tele.
I had to drill the string hole out just a little to allow the Low E string to pass through.
It works fine, but he said it was a lot of trouble..
He got the idea from seeing Waylon use his too..
I had to drill the string hole out just a little to allow the Low E string to pass through.
It works fine, but he said it was a lot of trouble..
He got the idea from seeing Waylon use his too..
Kevin Raymer
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On a side note, I was at Joe Glaser's luthier shop in Nashville and in walked Reggie Young with Waylon's leather tele. We were talking and he said that two of those guitars were made for him.
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I have a Schaller D-tuner on the 6th string of my American Nashville B-Bender.I don't use it a lot,but it's handy to have around....One time I worked out the six-string intro to "Point of Rescue" using it to drop down to the D notes(playing in Em,capo 1st fret)that are implied but not actually played on the studio version.And if someone requests "Detroit City",I'm ready!
- Lee Baucum
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Back in the early 1980's, the band I was playing in was the opening act for Waylon. Back stage, there was a rack holding 3 or 4 of those leather-covered Tele's. I walked over to look at them and one of the roadies barked at me to stay away. When I was setting up my Emmons next to Ralph's Sho-Bud, I turned around to take a closer look at his guitar and another roadie barked at me to keep away. Real friendly folks...
Lee, from South Texas - Down On The Rio Grande
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There are only two options as I see it.
Either I'm right, or there is a sinister conspiracy to conceal the fact that I'm right.
Williams Keyless S-10, BMI S-10, Evans FET-500LV, Fender Steel King, 2 Roland Cube 80XL's,
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I think Waylon had Keith keys on both of his E strings. The Tele Marty plays has a double body because the first Parsons White bender was not routed into the guitar, instead it was mounted to the outside. Sometimes when Marty turns just right you can see the double body seam. Sounds good though. I have drop D keys on both of my Teles and wouldn't do without them. I am even thinking of putting one on my main acoustic for those quick tunings.
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