When did you start playing steel?

About Steel Guitarists and their Music

Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn

In which decade did you start playing steel?

1930s
0
No votes
1940s
4
1%
1950s
12
3%
1960s
22
6%
1970s
114
30%
1980s
47
12%
1990s
31
8%
2000s
44
11%
2010s
76
20%
2020s
33
9%
 
Total votes: 383

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b0b
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When did you start playing steel?

Post by b0b »

The age of players is one thing, their experience is another. I thought it might be fun to poll members on when they actually put the bar to the strings.

I might have played a bit in the 1960s, but I don't remember that decade very well. I voted 1970s cause that's when I remember getting into it.
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Ian Rae
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Post by Ian Rae »

A lot of people don't remember the 60s very well!
I also had trouble determining a start point.
I owned a partly-working instrument for years before I knuckled down. I could have said 1990 but 2013 is when I got serious and joined this forum, for which I'm ever thankful.
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Jack Stoner
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Post by Jack Stoner »

I started on lap steel in late 40's trying to copy Little Roy Wiggins. Started on pedals Oct 69.
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Ken Byng
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Post by Ken Byng »

I remember very clearly when I first played steel guitar. It was when I bought my first Santo & Johnny record (Teardrop). 1963 to be precise, and I was 14 years old. My father had a small music combo, and his guitarist also played lap steel. He had a spare lap steel for sale so I bought it. It wasn't long before I could play Sleepwalk on an E13 tuning. Unlike a lot of guys of my age in the UK, I remember the 60's very well, maybe because I steered clear of smoking substances. :roll: :roll:
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Richard Sinkler
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Post by Richard Sinkler »

Late 1970 for me. 16 years old and a Junior in high school. I was a drummer that couldn't practice st home with the band. I took a cheap acoustic and a knife or something for a slide and played "dobro" at practice. A short time later, my brother bought me a triple 8 National from a local music store for $75. It's been dowhill ever since. 😋
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Jon Light
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Post by Jon Light »

I clicked '80s when I bought my first PSG but it did not occur to me that I could have clicked 70's for the pencil under the strings of my import flat top dobro explorations after hearing the 'Will The Circle' album in 1972. For real, it counts.
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Dan Kelly
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Post by Dan Kelly »

Ever since I was a toddler, and listening to Country Music on my father's car radio, I knew, deep down, I had to play the PSG. However, I got side tracked in the acoustic world for a few decades. In 2014, I saw David Hartley on YouTube. After realizing, so late in life, that I was born to play PSG I jumped in with both feet.

<b>Wait a minute... 1930's?????</b> :-)
Last edited by Dan Kelly on 6 Jul 2021 8:33 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Joe Krumel
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putting bar to strings.

Post by Joe Krumel »

Appx. mid 80's for me. Always had an ear for steel bends and twang despite my Rock drumming days from the 60's.....
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Lee Baucum
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Post by Lee Baucum »

Early 1970s, thanks to Buddy Cage.
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Larry Ball
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Post by Larry Ball »

I started playing six string as a teenie bopper in the 50’s,,,listening to the fabulous “Ventures” . Rock and Roll then later years Country. That’s when I heard and also played many times on stage throughout the years with steel players. I always loved the sound of a steel, however for some reason never bought one. Then in my Golden Years I woke up one morning and decided to buy one. So I bought a new “Mullen” SD10 and I was hooked. I have never touched a six string since (and I have 15 of them). I practice ever day and was gigging twice a week until things shut down because of COVID. I am still hooked on this fantastic instrument head to toe.
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Roger Rettig
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Post by Roger Rettig »

Early-'70s, thanks to JayDee, Rusty, Buddy Cage and the Big E.

As for 'remembering the '60s', I'd been a pro since '59. I saw at first hand how much trouble substance-abuse could get you (this was back when it was mainly the preserve of the jazz-world - it took hold in pop maybe '62, '63) so I found it easy to steer clear of all that.
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Bob Womack
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Post by Bob Womack »

I bought a Magnatone lap steel I found in the window of a pawn shop in 1974. It was horrible. I had a sleeve of 1974 S pennies. Like a dolt, I sealed them into a long Coricidin bottle with candle wax and it became my first bar.

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Pete Finney
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Post by Pete Finney »

Bought my first steel, a Sho-Bud Maverick, in July of '73 a month after high-school graduation; I'd been a pedal-steel obsessed guitar player since about 1970 and finally took the plunge.

Two months later, on my 18th birthday and after a summer of playing constantly at home I sat in with the band at the local tavern in my small Maryland town and they hired me to join the band, playing every Friday and Saturday night. Within a year or so I was playing 5 nights a week at a much bigger place in the city (Washington D.C,) and I stayed with that gig for 3 years. I got very lucky early on having good situations to learn to play with older, seasoned musicians (back when there were a lot of gigs!).
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Jack Hanson
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Post by Jack Hanson »

I remember the '60s and '70s quite well; just don't ask me about last week...

One cold winter afternoon in the late '70s I waltzed into Suneson Music Center on East Lake Street in Mpls with the intent of purchasing a set of strings for my Ovation Glen Campbell. Walked out with a brand-spankin' new black plastic-cladded Red Baron in a matching plastic case, a Sho-Bud tone bar, the Winnie Winston book, and signed up for lessons with the great Cal Hand.

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Thousands upon thousands of dollars later, the rest is history. Roger Suneson (RIP) could have sold ice to Eskimos.
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Jerry Jones
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Post by Jerry Jones »

When I was living in Mississippi in 1974, I was mostly into 6-string guitars. But having heard the song "Red Neck Friend" by Jackson Browne, I became fascinated with the sound of David Lindley's lap steel. Being the guy who always likes to make things, I set out to build my own lap.

I saw an ad in Guitar Player Magazine for Pedal Steel Guitar Products (Tom Bradshaw) and, thinking this might be a great source for lap steel parts, I ordered Tom’s catalog. I didn't order any guitar parts from Tom but I did see the notice included with the catalog about the upcoming Scotty's Steel Guitar Convention.

I had never even seen a steel guitar at that point but that convention did sound interesting. So I flew to St. Louis in Sept 1974 and needless to say a whole new world opened up to me. That weekend I saw the best of the best from a world I had mostly been unaware of. Changed my life....thank you, Tom.

Ordered an MSA semi-classic from Scotty when I returned home.
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Fred Treece
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Post by Fred Treece »

I’ve been a Fender Stringmaster owner since 1978, and actually played a gig on it (terribly badly awfully) around that time. But to say I’ve been a player since then would be an insult to both the instrument and all the great players of the world. Started on pedal steel for real about 5 years ago.
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Paddy Long
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Post by Paddy Long »

1978 for me :-} ... I was already a working guitarist, so I at least knew what I was looking for hehe...
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Mike Neer
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Post by Mike Neer »

2001 to be exact. I was a lap steel owner but I couldn’t play it.
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b0b
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Post by b0b »

I had expected to see the wave of baby boomers in the 1970s, but the rise of new players in the 2010s surprised me. Very interesting. :mrgreen:
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Ken Pippus
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Post by Ken Pippus »

A number of us 2010’ers are boomers whose left arm gave out on fretted instruments.
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Gary Newcomb
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Post by Gary Newcomb »

Good thread! I’m an oo’s bloomer though I had steel in the late 90’s but didn’t really play it.
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Post by Paul King »

April 1979 for me.
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Post by Floyd Lowery »

I started taking lessons around 1947 on a $10.00 round hole guitar with the strings raised. A few months later I was able to get an electric 6 string lap guitar, then a Gibson 6 string. After about a year I was playing on WVOK in Birmingham and bought a double neck Fender new. Stopped playing around 1955. Bought an 11 string MSA around 1969 and tried to learn how to put it together and tune it. :roll:
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Larry Carlson
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Post by Larry Carlson »

Ken Pippus wrote:A number of us 2010’ers are boomers whose left arm gave out on fretted instruments.
That's exactly what happened to me.
I played acoustic guitar (finger picking) since about 1955.
Around 2015 or so I started losing my left hand strength and couldn't fret anymore.
I was aware of lap steel but never saw or played one.
I ordered the cheapest one I could find just to see if I liked it, a Rogue.
That was 8 guitars ago.
I have stuff.
I try to make music with it.
Sometimes it works.
Sometimes it doesn't.
But I keep on trying.
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Henry Matthews
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Post by Henry Matthews »

I started playing on my birthday in 1984. I was 40 years old. I wanted a steel because I heard Weldon on radio kick off Then and Only Then and wife bought it for me for my birthday. The sound so intrigued me that I thought, I’ve got to have one of those. I was already a guitar and fiddle player so knew chord structure which made it a little easier. In a month I was playing on stage and sounded like, well, really bad I’m sure. First guitar was a single neck BMI with 3 & 1.
Henry Matthews

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