80's steel and beyond
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
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80's steel and beyond
I just wanted to thank everyone that purchased my latest steel guitar course on Modern Music Masters . I realize that had I taught some of those solo's back in the cassette days but now It's hard to find a good cassette player:), So I thought it was time to do a new course.
I decided to show how I played a few of my solo's from songs that were big hits in the eighties. In addition I tried to tell a few stories about how the session came about and how the solo's went down. It was fun to revisit those old memories. The eighties were a great decade for country music. Fiddles , steels and telecasters ran free on the airwaves and everyone had solo's. Things have changed as they always do and we"ve all had to adjust to the modern music landscape. I'm still excited about steel guitar . We'll never go back to Ray Price and the Texas Troubadoors but i believe we're due for a neo-traditional renaissance in music.
We've also got to back to some normalcy in our day to day. Hopefully this covid virus will be tamed soon so we can start playing live again.
In the meantime I've been exploring some ambient soundtrack music for film and TV and just released my first album for Audio Network in the UK. I'm posting a link. Keep in mind that this is not a steel album but a collection of sonic vignettes to be sliced and diced for the screen I played all of the stringed instruments and my friend Neil Williams played the keyboards and mixed the record. I wrote and recorded everything at the house. https://www.audionetwork.com/browse/m/a ... icana_3461
I decided to show how I played a few of my solo's from songs that were big hits in the eighties. In addition I tried to tell a few stories about how the session came about and how the solo's went down. It was fun to revisit those old memories. The eighties were a great decade for country music. Fiddles , steels and telecasters ran free on the airwaves and everyone had solo's. Things have changed as they always do and we"ve all had to adjust to the modern music landscape. I'm still excited about steel guitar . We'll never go back to Ray Price and the Texas Troubadoors but i believe we're due for a neo-traditional renaissance in music.
We've also got to back to some normalcy in our day to day. Hopefully this covid virus will be tamed soon so we can start playing live again.
In the meantime I've been exploring some ambient soundtrack music for film and TV and just released my first album for Audio Network in the UK. I'm posting a link. Keep in mind that this is not a steel album but a collection of sonic vignettes to be sliced and diced for the screen I played all of the stringed instruments and my friend Neil Williams played the keyboards and mixed the record. I wrote and recorded everything at the house. https://www.audionetwork.com/browse/m/a ... icana_3461
Last edited by Bruce Bouton on 26 Jan 2021 7:32 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Larry Dering
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I bought your course through Modern Music Masters and its fantastic. The stories are an added bonus and I have enjoyed the couple I've heard so far. The course goes very good with the Paul Franklin course because you demonstrate practical uses for the harmony scales and what I believe to be the permutations. That being said, the intro to Shameless was worth the price of admission so far.
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- W. C. Edgar
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Thanks for all you do for the steel guitar world pal!
The last time we spoke it was after you'd recorded with Ricky and we were in a two-room suite in St Louis during Scotty's International Steel Guitar Convention.
In that suite that night were, Jimmy Crawford, Stu Basore, Buddy Emmons and a slug of other heavyweights including Jim Vest I think.
They had two or three guitars set up and Crawford was doing some things where he detuned a few strings and showing everyone some cool things on the front neck.
Emmons was playing and I turned to you and said "so, how do you like playing with Ricky Skaggs' to which you turned to me and whispered, "don't speak when the master is playing".
I never forgot that.
Thanks Bruce! I still feel that way about 'the master'.
The last time we spoke it was after you'd recorded with Ricky and we were in a two-room suite in St Louis during Scotty's International Steel Guitar Convention.
In that suite that night were, Jimmy Crawford, Stu Basore, Buddy Emmons and a slug of other heavyweights including Jim Vest I think.
They had two or three guitars set up and Crawford was doing some things where he detuned a few strings and showing everyone some cool things on the front neck.
Emmons was playing and I turned to you and said "so, how do you like playing with Ricky Skaggs' to which you turned to me and whispered, "don't speak when the master is playing".
I never forgot that.
Thanks Bruce! I still feel that way about 'the master'.
First owner of Steelseat.com
1980 Sho-Bud Pro II & 1977 Sho-Bud Pro l
Lawrence 610 Pickups
1979 Peavey LTD
1980 Peavey Nashville 400
Goodrich L-120
Toured with Tim McGraw, Alan Jackson & more
wcedgar.com
1980 Sho-Bud Pro II & 1977 Sho-Bud Pro l
Lawrence 610 Pickups
1979 Peavey LTD
1980 Peavey Nashville 400
Goodrich L-120
Toured with Tim McGraw, Alan Jackson & more
wcedgar.com
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- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
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- W. C. Edgar
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LOL
No way,
You were right, when in the masters presence you did not speak when he was playing.
Wish he was still here...
WC
No way,
You were right, when in the masters presence you did not speak when he was playing.
Wish he was still here...
WC
First owner of Steelseat.com
1980 Sho-Bud Pro II & 1977 Sho-Bud Pro l
Lawrence 610 Pickups
1979 Peavey LTD
1980 Peavey Nashville 400
Goodrich L-120
Toured with Tim McGraw, Alan Jackson & more
wcedgar.com
1980 Sho-Bud Pro II & 1977 Sho-Bud Pro l
Lawrence 610 Pickups
1979 Peavey LTD
1980 Peavey Nashville 400
Goodrich L-120
Toured with Tim McGraw, Alan Jackson & more
wcedgar.com
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I bought the Neo Country course today and after briefly watching some of the video content, I feel that it is money well spent, for me anyway, as I am no great player by any stretch of the imagination.
The band I am sitting in with, pre-covid, plays a couple of the songs listed in this course. Now maybe I can try to get the intros and solos at least somewhat correct now, hehe. Maybe by the time Covid is gone and the bands get back to playing, I will have practiced the intros and solos on those songs that I can play them halfway fluidly.
Thanks a million Mr. Bruce!
The band I am sitting in with, pre-covid, plays a couple of the songs listed in this course. Now maybe I can try to get the intros and solos at least somewhat correct now, hehe. Maybe by the time Covid is gone and the bands get back to playing, I will have practiced the intros and solos on those songs that I can play them halfway fluidly.
Thanks a million Mr. Bruce!
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My pleasure. I meant this to be a broad overview of the solos and how I played them. That’s why I didn’t include tablature. Everything can be slowed down if one is having trouble grasping a part. None of it is really difficult once you recognize the patterns I was using thirty something years back. I talk about how I came up with the solos and what influenced many of the licks. I realize that I stumbled a few times when explaining the fingering but I go through it enough that it shouldn’t be a problem.