The Steel Guitar Forum Store 

Post new topic One for the old guys,who played the steel on this??????
Reply to topic
Author Topic:  One for the old guys,who played the steel on this??????
John Davis


From:
Cambridge, U.K.
Post  Posted 4 Nov 2016 11:22 pm    
Reply with quote

Gene Autry With The Pinafores & The Cass County Boys / Gene Autry With The Cass County Boys ‎– Blue Canadian Rockies /
Not much steel on this but enough to spark my interest way back in the 1950's this was one of my fav.78's
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website

Roger Kelly

 

From:
Bristol,Tennessee
Post  Posted 5 Nov 2016 5:01 am    
Reply with quote

I believe the Steel Player would be Frankie Marvin.
Here is some info on Frankie.

Biography

Frank James Marvin (Butler, Oklahoma on January 27, 1904 - January 1985) was a country musician, he played guitar, washboard and steel guitar.
Early in his career he was a vaudeville performer with his brother Johnny. The Marvin brothers assisted a young Gene Autry at the start of Autry's career. Later Frankie played steel guitar in Autry's band where he became one of the most recognizable components of Autry's sound.
His interest in music came early. His mother had recorded for Victor and his brother Johnny, 6 years his senior, became a successful composer and recording star.
By the time Frankie was 25 years old he had become popular on radio and had signed a contract with a major record label in New York. He and his brother Johnny often worked as a duo in those early years. Frankie played guitar, washboard and steel guitar. He can be seen on screen in B-western movies playing other instruments as well, but eventually, the steel guitar was to play a key role in his long-term success in western music.
Frankie composed a number of western songs, e.g. the classics "There's an Empty Cot in the Bunkhouse" & "Cowboy's Heaven," as well as "Oh, For the Wild and Wooly West" and " Oklahoma Blues," and he was the co-composer (with Joe Marvin ) of "The Two-Gun Cowboy" & "Oklahoma, Land of the Sunny West." Gene Autry, Jimmy Wakely and others recorded the best-known of these, and Marvin recorded all of them.
In 1928, when young Gene Autry was planning his first trip to New York in search of a recording contract, he met Frankie's mother in a cafe she was managing in Butler. When she learned about Gene's plans, she asked him to look up her sons in NY. Gene did, and Frankie, Johnny & Gene became close friends. One story even has them sharing an overcoat in the cold NY winter! Frankie did more than let Gene use his winter coat. He introduced Gene Autry to recording executives in NY, to get him started professionally. Gene's first attempts at recording were not well-received, so Frankie advised him to change his style, suggesting that he learn some yodel songs. Autry took the advice. It paid off, and Frankie and Johnny Marvin played on Gene's first recordings (The first song Gene ever recorded was a Frankie Marvin composition, "My Dreaming of You." Gene couldn't yodel well enough yet, so Frankie did the yodels on those first records).
Later, when Gene went to Hollywood to begin work in movies, he took Smiley Burnette and Frankie Marvin with him and Nat Levine, head of Mascot Studios, signed all three. Frankie appeared in most of Gene's films and on his radio & TV shows and recordings, and on records made by Tex Ritter, Eddie Dean and The Jimmy Wakely Trio. Frankie produced many of Gene Autry's recording sessions. Art Satherley was the line producer, but the person responsible for getting the musicians and arrangements together was Frankie Marvin.
Frankie played steel guitar on those sessions, and the style he developed on that instrument set him, and Gene Autry's music, apart. Frankie's smooth approach, easing his way into the notes rather than striking them forcefully, played an important part in establishing a style of western music that is easy to distinguish from the country music recorded East of the Mississippi. In so doing, he paved the way for others who played steel guitar on western ballads in the genre's Golden Era. You can hear it reflected in Jerry Compton's work with the Reinsmen, some of Noel Boggs' work with Jimmy Wakley, Bonnie Dodd's recordings with Tex Ritter, a couple of Charles Roberts' early records with The Sons of the Pioneers (Joaquin Murphy also applied the technique on the Pioneers' record of "Room Full of Roses") and others.
Frankie Marvin retired from the Gene Autry organization in 1955, and passed away in Frazier Park, California, in January 1985.
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail

John Davis


From:
Cambridge, U.K.
Post  Posted 5 Nov 2016 11:34 pm    
Reply with quote

Thank you Roger for a great reply! so I have Frankie to thank for my steel guitar interest.... that was a real interesting read, I still love that laid back easy style of playing. Smile
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website

Roger Kelly

 

From:
Bristol,Tennessee
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2016 7:04 am    
Reply with quote

John,
Many years ago I used to play with a very good singer and rhythm guitar player who loved Gene Autry and his style of music. I liked playing with him and he sound a lot like Gene. That was where I found out at an early age that a few steel slides into a chord went a long way to enhance the song and not get in the way of the singer. Smile
View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail


All times are GMT - 8 Hours
Jump to:  

Our Online Catalog
Strings, CDs, instruction,
steel guitars & accessories

www.SteelGuitarShopper.com

Please review our Forum Rules and Policies

Steel Guitar Forum LLC
PO Box 237
Mount Horeb, WI 53572 USA


Click Here to Send a Donation

Email admin@steelguitarforum.com for technical support.


BIAB Styles
Ray Price Shuffles for
Band-in-a-Box

by Jim Baron
HTTP