Tom, I don't want you to think I'm just bustin' your chops here. I think that tone is important, but I just don't think it's the panacea that so many think it is. You did mention "touch", and that's where a portion of the tone comes from, but I just wanted to emphasize that there's many more important aspects of a player's talents than just getting "good tone". The feeling and emotion in the playing, the note selection (voicings), the smooth flow of the left hand, the precise right-hand technique, the manipulation of the pedals, the creativity of the player, and playing in tune, are <u>all</u> just as important, IMHO, in what we hear in the final product. I've heard players say..."Brumley has a great tone", or "Emmons has a great tone", or "Lloyd has a great tone". A great tone in what? All of these players have made drastic changes in their tones, depending on what and when they were playing. Sure, Buddy's always had a fine tone, but what he's done lately bears little similarity, tone-wise, to what he did 40 years ago. The same is true for Lloyd and Tom. Tones change with the times and the player's whim, but their
real individuality is found in those other areas I mentioned.
I admit that tone
will get you noticed, and it may even become a trademark of certain players, but that's not what really makes them great, IMHO. If you stuck Curly Chalker and Ralph Mooney on the same stage, Ralph's trebly "tone" would get far more attention than Curly's chops. That's not to say Curly had a "bad" tone, or that Ralph was a better player. Curly's tone just wasn't as sharp and "slap you in the face" as Ralph's. I've seen a dozen or more times how a player who sounds like Don Rich could literally "steal the show" from one who sounded like Chet Atkins. Of course, we all know who was really the more accomplished player!
Another thing that amazes me is how many steelers will ask a famous player..."How did you set your amp on so-and-so?" Do you
really think how the amp was set got the player his job? Do you
really think that how the amp was set made it a great intro or a memorable ride? If you do, then I think you're missing something, something mighty significant...the overall skills of the player.
And believe me, it goes a <u>lot</u> deeper than just his "tone".
Peace.

<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Donny Hinson on 27 October 2005 at 02:41 PM.]</p></FONT><font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Donny Hinson on 28 October 2005 at 07:10 AM.]</p></FONT>