Palm-muting low strings - need for ramp/riser/supporty thing
Moderator: Brad Bechtel
- David Mason
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Palm-muting low strings - need for ramp/riser/supporty thing
Much of what I play involves a bit of overdrive and careful, precise palm-muting while sounding notes is essential. On my MSA Superslide I'm fine on the top strings as the lower ones guide my palm, but down on the last 3 or 4 strings the ball of my hand sort of falls off, provoking inconsistency. I know what to do - a gaily-decorated chunk of wood, 3/8" high or so, affixed with double-sided tape. I'm just wondering if anyone else has made these - pix if possible!
Bass players have chased down a solution for a somewhat different problem for years now, hence the name "ramp":
link to photos from Google.
Bass players have chased down a solution for a somewhat different problem for years now, hence the name "ramp":
link to photos from Google.
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- Bill Moore
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I don't play every note with my palm resting on the bridge. But the little gismo that I have put on the instrument does two things. One is that it helps to stop the accidental muting that sometimes occurs. And two, it keeps my hand from hitting the sharp edge of the bridge. A sharp edge is something I have not had on any lap, console or pedal steel I have ever owned. And I do have a tendency to overthink those kinds of things given that I work as a luthier.
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- chris ivey
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This is nothing new. Many single neck pedal steels have a pad where the C6 neck would be on a D-10.
Also, the steel is still a work in progress. If we aren't open to experimentation, we all could have saved a lot of time and hard work by just cramming a pencil under the strings of a guitar.
I am not seeking to re-invent the wheel with the instruments I am building, but I'm always striving to build them better.
Also, the steel is still a work in progress. If we aren't open to experimentation, we all could have saved a lot of time and hard work by just cramming a pencil under the strings of a guitar.
I am not seeking to re-invent the wheel with the instruments I am building, but I'm always striving to build them better.
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