Hip young bands embracing steel guitar...the future?

About Steel Guitarists and their Music

Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn

Joel McCoy
Posts: 74
Joined: 21 Aug 2011 5:49 pm
Location: Georgia, USA

Post by Joel McCoy »

Jon Alexander wrote:Talented artists like to hear their music in different contexts.If they use steel it is to embellish,compliment,etc. that muse. They are not constrained by "traditional" perceptions of how pedal steel was utilized in the past.Scott's statement that people love the sound of it and are fascinated with its function is very real.I would only add that this cuts across age,ethnicity, and genres.As for the future,players are going to do what they will.Nobody saw Robert Randolph coming any more than they foresaw Hendrix.Good musicians will be in demand as long as people are interested in good music.
good point. Robert Randolph exploded out a niche among niche's in the sacred steel/gospel world with a sound big enough for the largest festivals. I'm really glad there is so many young cats getting their rule breaking hands on a steel guitar and making it do what they hear in their head. Would they benefit from learning the finer points of this complicated instrument? Sure, I would too. I happen to be one of those "Rock Kids" who never even saw a steel guitar growing up in NY but was cut to the bone by the sound and when I got my chance to own one, I jumped at it despite needing other things at the time. It was the same with the B3 organ. I learn by playing the thing, and my playing is band based instead of solo accompaniment which like "Chord Melody" style jazz is very hard to do. Unlike most other instruments, the Steel resides almost exclusively in most peoples minds as a Country thing...I for one would like to change that a bit.
'64 Sho-Bud Fingertip D-10 9+1, Goodrich VP, Sho-Bud/Evans Compactra 100 Custom, Sho-Bud/Evans Compactra 100 Head unit, '75 Tele, '77 Guild D25, '71 YBA-1, Marshall 4x10 and a Les Paul.
User avatar
Bob Hoffnar
Posts: 9244
Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
Location: Austin, Tx
Contact:

Post by Bob Hoffnar »

Different types of music demand different skill sets. When people critique others using what they are good at as a template just ignore them. "Real musicians ....can read, can
Improvise, know the night life intro....." . All that goofy stuff.
I will say that you will have more success branching into different forms of music if you can play in tune. Really work on that. That out of tune twangy sound loved by the alt country guys does not work outside of that very limited context.
Bob
User avatar
Mike Neer
Posts: 10990
Joined: 9 Dec 2002 1:01 am
Location: NJ
Contact:

Post by Mike Neer »

Very good advice, Bob.
User avatar
Dave Grafe
Posts: 4457
Joined: 29 Oct 2004 12:01 am
Location: Hudson River Valley NY
Contact:

Post by Dave Grafe »

Last weekend I took part in an open potluck/jam at a friend's barn near here. A couple hundred folks showed up in the course of the day/evening, and at least four young steelers spent significant time on my Emmons, including one for whom this was a first time playing in public. Out here on the Upper Left Edge at least, the pedal steel is winning the hearts and minds of the youth...
User avatar
Daniel Policarpo
Posts: 1941
Joined: 5 May 2010 9:01 pm
Location: Tulsa, Oklahoma

Post by Daniel Policarpo »

One area I can really see the pedal steel working is in certain strains of border and Latin music. I grew up on this stuff so I work on it at home, mostly taking the string arrangement as a template...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bFgWzj5iZsk
Li'l Izzy for Guvner
Post Reply