Dweezil Zappa talks with Paul Franklin for D'Addario

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Mark Nason
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Dweezil Zappa talks with Paul Franklin for D'Addario

Post by Mark Nason »

The latest episode in the D'Addario Guitar Power web series is an interview with Paul Franklin.

https://youtu.be/69-n32yvEEQ
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Larry Dering
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Post by Larry Dering »

Mark, thanks for posting. What a great insight into the things Paul plays and how he puts it in the moment. Thoughtful attitude and skill. What a master accomplished player.
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Bill L. Wilson
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Man What a Player.

Post by Bill L. Wilson »

I’m so impressed with Mr. Franklin, a genius to say the least. One of several things I learned from his commentary, is “I’m Still a Beginner “ You would think after “46” yrs. of playing this contraption, that I would’ve improved a lot more. At my age “72” I’m very thankful that I can still carry a D-10 and play well enough to make a little cash, playing for weddings, birthdays, and bars.
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Dave Little
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Post by Dave Little »

I guess I’ ve been asleep for some time now. ...
What is this “up to an octave” thing he speaks of?
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Randy Schneider
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Post by Randy Schneider »

Dave Little wrote:I guess I’ ve been asleep for some time now. ...
What is this “up to an octave” thing he speaks of?
Dave,

The way I understood it was that he was saying the Franklin guitar's mechanism was capable of raising (and maybe lowering?) the pitch of a string an entire octave.

I could be wrong about that, but that's what I thought he was saying...
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Dave Little
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Post by Dave Little »

Is this “common knowledge” ? Am I alone in being dumbfounded?
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Dave Little
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Post by Dave Little »

Is this “common knowledge” ? Am I alone in being dumbfounded?
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Mark Eaton
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Post by Mark Eaton »

Oh no! The dreaded "duplicate topic syndrome." Brad Bechtel started a thread yesterday, but I think this one takes precedence because it was started prior to Brad's.

And in regards to duplicate posts in this thread, Dave, you can go back and delete one of them - not sure if you know this.

At any rate, this is what I wrote:

That's one of the coolest things I've seen in a long time. Paul is freaking amazing!

And I'm one of the biggest Mark Knopfler fans on the planet - love the part around the 11:00 minute mark where Paul talks about sort of accidentally coming up with the Calling Elvis steel riff and MK is singing the lyrics on the phone.

Great job by Dweezil as the interviewer. He's a cool dude.
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Randy Schneider
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Post by Randy Schneider »

Dave Little wrote:Is this “common knowledge” ? Am I alone in being dumbfounded?
If it makes you feel better, Dave, you are not alone. There are at least two of us...
Kevin Fix
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Post by Kevin Fix »

Remarkable and a very humble player!!! :) :) :) :)
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Jon Light
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Post by Jon Light »

I have long read that Franklin steels have extraordinary leverage. I've taken it as a given that a Franklin can do large pulls with ease that push other steels to their limits. An octave? That's pretty mind blowing. Even if it's hyperbole, I'm pretty floored. I'd love a more detailed idea of what & how but it's not important.
This video is great and I cannot express how great an inspiration Paul is to me.
Franklin
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Post by Franklin »

Thanks for watching.... I'm so glad Dweezil made it more about the instrument than me......, Dweezil is as nice as he is great...He is obviously a very unique and amazing musician...It was an honor to spend time with him...

....The Franklin changer will raise and lower a whole octave....Why do that? Nobody would ever need to go to that extreme....but by having that capability, it keeps the travel short, and easy, for the multiple and more complex changes.

Happy New Year!

Paul Franklin
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Jim Cohen
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Post by Jim Cohen »

Franklin wrote:....The Franklin changer will raise and lower a whole octave....
Hi Paul, when I heard that, my immediate question was whether you have strings that will tolerate that?

Best wishes for the New Year and thanks for all you do!

Jim
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Post by Franklin »

Jim,

The reason is in my answer...As far as I know, there are not any plain strings that could raise a whole octave without breaking the first few times that pedal is used....two tone moves are musical and so is 5 or 6 changes on one pedal....If a changer maxes out at 3 tones, to accomplish a 2 tone raise or 6 changes on a pedal, imagine how far the travel would be, let alone how stiff the pedals would feel...

That is not much stress for a changer that has an octave range.

Happy New Year!

Paul
Bill McCloskey
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Post by Bill McCloskey »

off topic, but it is nice to see the Zappa siblings have worked out their differences.
Check out my latest video: My Biggest Fears Learning Steel at 68: https://youtu.be/F601J515oGc
ajm
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Post by ajm »

Paul: There is at least one person confused here (me).
It may be due to the wording/punctuation in the responses.

The Franklin changer:

1) Will it lower a whole octave?
That is conceivable.
Six stringers do it all of the time with their Strats and related whammy guitars.

2) Will it raise a whole octave?
THAT is the problem child, probably because I don't see how any string would tolerate it.
Unless of course you took an (example) 014 plain 4th E string and tuned it down an octave from normal.
Of course, that would probably be a sound/tuning that most people would not be drawn towards. ;>))
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Post by Franklin »

Franklin wrote:
..As far as I know, there are not any plain strings that could raise a whole octave without breaking the first few times a pedal is used....two tone moves are musical and so is 5 or 6 changes on one pedal....If a changer maxes out at 3 tones, to accomplish a 2 tone raise or 6 changes on a pedal, imagine how far the travel would be, let alone how stiff the pedals would feel...

The octave capability eliminates the stress on the changer for these types of requests..

Paul
AJM,

I can't say it any clearer....
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Richard Sinkler
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Post by Richard Sinkler »

Paul...

Thanks for the links. Yours was great of course. The one with Daniel Lanois was also great. I've heard the name, but not consciously heard him. Love what he did in the video.
Carter D10 8p/8k, Dekley S10 3p/4k C6 setup,Regal RD40 Dobro, NV400, NV112 . Playing for 53 years and still counting.
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