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Steel guitar web sites, videos and recordings on the Internet

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Christo Huntington
Posts: 67
Joined: 22 Aug 2022 6:49 pm
Location: Pennsylvania, USA
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New Forum Member Here!

Post by Christo Huntington »

Hi everyone!

My name is Christo Huntington and I am a new member on the Forum. I've been playing left-handed pedal steel since February 16, 2022, and I've loved every second of it! I wanted to make this post to introduce myself, connect with all the members on here, share my recent work, and ask for your steel gigging tips.

I am currently a full-time law student and MBA student at Villanova University in Pennsylvania. I live about 25 minutes outside of Philadelphia, PA. In the free time I get away from studying/reading, I try to religiously practice steel. As a testament to my willingness to learn and commitment to becoming a better steel player, I began a daily video series (called "Pedal Steel Everyday") documenting my steel study/journey over on YouTube the day I received my first steel guitar. Since that day, I've connected with many of you through Facebook and YouTube, and I'm incredibly thankful for all the advice and recommendations I've received. The community building around my channel is exciting and incredibly supportive, so thank you! If you'd like to check out my channel and subscribe, I'll leave a link at the bottom of this post.

I was first (properly) introduced to steel via Buck Owens's "Together Again" when it came on a random music streaming playlist I was listening to back in January of this year. I thought to myself, "Woah. That's no normal guitar. The sounds and sweeps are way too smooth to be any fretted instrument. I love that sound." And since hearing that song, I've sought out all the information about steel I could. Each day of practice has brought new excitement, challenges, and totally new mind-muscle connections. Although I had heard the steel sound on old country records when I was a kid, I hadn't been able to distinguish the instrument from a six-string guitar. Now, when I listen to any song new to me, my ears are keyed into listening for steel. So lets just say the instrument is always on my mind! I listen to some modern country (my favorites are Chris Stapleton and Luke Combs), but my recent music focus has been on the steel sounds of the 1950s-1990s.

Over the past 190 days, I've completed Paul Franklin's Foundations of E9 course with Modern Music Masters, seen Paul play live with Chris Stapleton in Lexington, KY, learned from some incredibly talented local steelers, purchased a beautiful, left-handed 1978 Sho~Bud LDG, and discovered so many great players. I recently visited Nashville for the first time where I saw a few excellent steel players play, and I plan to share my trip experience in an upcoming video over on YouTube.

I'm excited for all the steel-related learning and experiences to come, and I hope to begin gigging soon. Things are starting to really click for me on the instrument, so I feel somewhat prepared to get out there. I know it will be a shock to my system to be playing steel on stage for the first time (when it happens), but I'm ready to take the dive! I will make a separate post reaching out to anyone in need of a steel player in the Philly area over in the other Forum thread, but if you need a player, let me know! In the meantime, I'd love to hear any tips you have for gigging, recording steel, or anything related to steel. Feel free to leave a reply on this post, drop me an email, or comment on one of my YouTube videos.

Thanks in advance for the warm welcome, support, and advice. Have an awesome day wherever in the world you're playing steel!

Link to my YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/ChristoHuntington
Steels: Mullen G2 D10, 1975 Sho~Bud LDG, Custom "Lefty Steel" made in Missouri
Amps: Little Walter PF89, Fender Deluxe Reverb (Reissue)
Effects: Telonics FP-100D Multi-Taper Volume Pedal, Polytune 3 tuner, Dunlop CBM9 Wah-Wah, Exotic Effects SP Compressor, Exotic Effects EP Booster, Ibanez TS-9, Electro-Harmonix Q-Tron envelope filter, Boss DM-2w Delay (Waza Craft), TC Electronic Hall of Fame 2 reverb
Accessories/Extras/Software: Steelers Choice Sidekick (built August 2022), Shure SM57, Focusrite 2i2
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Jack Stoner
Posts: 22087
Joined: 3 Dec 1999 1:01 am
Location: Kansas City, MO

Post by Jack Stoner »

Welcome to the forum and the "wonderful" world of Pedal Steel Guitar.


(I'm from the Harrisburg area).
GFI Ultra Keyless S-10 with pad (Black of course) TB202 amp, Hilton VP, Steelers Choice sidekick seat, SIT Strings (all for sale as package)
Cakewalk by Bandlab and Studio One V4.6 pro DAWs, MOTU Ultralite MK5 recording interface unit
Joe Krumel
Posts: 1282
Joined: 5 Feb 2008 12:34 pm
Location: Hermitage, Tn.

New member

Post by Joe Krumel »

Hi Chris to. Nice to meet you. This is great resource to be a part of.Sounds like you are off to a solid start. I'm a Lefty,but play right handed. Enjoy the journey. Joe k.
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Larry Jamieson
Posts: 2414
Joined: 30 Jan 2001 1:01 am
Location: Walton, NY USA
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Post by Larry Jamieson »

Hi Christo, Welcome to this wonder Forum and the amazing world of pedal steel guitar. I looked at your video channel and you are making good progress learning licks. To go out and gig with a band, learn where to find all the chords in different keys, how to find minor chords, seventh chords and so on. practice some scales so you will be able to play melodies if you are called upon to "take a ride" in some tune the band is playing.
One thing that I did a lot when I was learning was put on a record (or a CD) and figure out the key, then play along with the song. This teaches you to hear chord progressions and keep up with the tempo of the song. You can also steal licks from the musicians who cut the record.
Good luck with your journey, and feel free to ask the good folks on the Forum any questions. They are always willing to help.
Rick Bernauer
Posts: 203
Joined: 15 Mar 2014 9:57 am
Location: Kansas, USA

Post by Rick Bernauer »

Hi, Christo. Glad to see you on the forum. Over the last few months I've watched a number of your videos. Not sure where you find the time at the end of semester in law school to practice - let alone post a video. I've enjoyed watching your progress and evolution of footwear. I'm hoping to see you add a volume pedal soon - there's a whole world of expression and technical challenges ahead of you there. Good luck and keep on playing every day.
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Sam Lewis
Posts: 745
Joined: 18 Mar 2005 1:01 am
Location: Conway, Arkansas, USA

A Warm Welcome, Chris

Post by Sam Lewis »

Chris, welcome to the great steel guitar forum, the best place in the world for information and fellowship. I started playin steel guitar at the tender age of 22, some 70 years ago, and I'm still learning. Just keep this in mind, "When you get so fustrated that you want to throw the thing out the window, just remember that the sweet sounds that come as it hits the ground are much sweeter than from any other instrument."

God Bless and Keep you,
Sam Lewis
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Robert Jones
Posts: 439
Joined: 23 Oct 2000 12:01 am
Location: Branson, Missouri

Post by Robert Jones »

Welcome to the Forum. There is a ton of great things a person can learn from the many talented steel guitar players. I can say that because I have learnt so much myself. Enjoy and best of luck for you. Robert.
Mullen Royal Precision D10 Red Lacquer Pearl inlay 8&8
"Life is too short for bad tone."
https://mullenguitars.com/
http://www.bjsbars.com/
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Bradley Greene
Posts: 4
Joined: 26 Aug 2022 9:38 am
Location: Alabama, USA

Post by Bradley Greene »

This is really cool! Keep it up!!
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