Ralph Mooney: staccato picking thing
Moderators: Dave Mudgett, Brad Bechtel
- John Larson
- Posts: 577
- Joined: 8 Jul 2020 10:00 am
- Location: Pennsyltucky, USA
Ralph Mooney: staccato picking thing
I had a playlist going on a long drive in the car of 60s Haggard and I noticed that Mooney does this like stutter thing, super staccato, chicken picking thing. How does he do that?
The steel break at like 1:20 in "The Bottle Let Me Down" is a good example Moon hits some flutter swells on the volume pedal and then does the bit I'm talking about. Or am I off base is that Roy Nichols guitar. Hard to tell given Mooney's absolute telecaster esque in your face tone.
"Swinging Doors" has what I'm trying to describe as well.
The steel break at like 1:20 in "The Bottle Let Me Down" is a good example Moon hits some flutter swells on the volume pedal and then does the bit I'm talking about. Or am I off base is that Roy Nichols guitar. Hard to tell given Mooney's absolute telecaster esque in your face tone.
"Swinging Doors" has what I'm trying to describe as well.
Rejoice in the Lord, O ye righteous; praise is meet for the upright. Give praise to the Lord with the harp, chant unto Him with the ten-stringed psaltery. Sing unto Him a new song, chant well unto Him with jubilation. For the word of the Lord is true, and all His works are in faithfulness. The Lord loveth mercy and judgement; the earth is full of the mercy of the Lord.
- Psalm 33:1-5
- Psalm 33:1-5
- Joe Bill Moad
- Posts: 284
- Joined: 18 Aug 2024 7:03 am
- Location: Oklahoma
- Contact:
Mooney did more for early “Honky Tonk” aka Wynn Stewart, Buck Owens, Merle Haggard and many more Artists, and ended with the “Outlaw” movement aka Waylon Jennings run and beyond. He had a style that is noted and will stay in the books as time goes on. Plus, he was a Great ambassador for the Steel Players community and from Duncan Oklahoma. He was a Natural Talent!
Don’t Worry About The Mule! Load The Wagon!
- John Larson
- Posts: 577
- Joined: 8 Jul 2020 10:00 am
- Location: Pennsyltucky, USA
Agree Joe, Mooney was one of a kind, to me the Bakersfield sound IS the sound of Steel Guitar and he helped pioneer that sound.Joe Bill Moad wrote:Mooney did more for early “Honky Tonk” aka Wynn Stewart, Buck Owens, Merle Haggard and many more Artists, and ended with the “Outlaw” movement aka Waylon Jennings run and beyond. He had a style that is noted and will stay in the books as time goes on. Plus, he was a Great ambassador for the Steel Players community and from Duncan Oklahoma. He was a Natural Talent!
Rejoice in the Lord, O ye righteous; praise is meet for the upright. Give praise to the Lord with the harp, chant unto Him with the ten-stringed psaltery. Sing unto Him a new song, chant well unto Him with jubilation. For the word of the Lord is true, and all His works are in faithfulness. The Lord loveth mercy and judgement; the earth is full of the mercy of the Lord.
- Psalm 33:1-5
- Psalm 33:1-5
- John Swain
- Posts: 1602
- Joined: 12 Feb 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Winchester, Va
- Joe Bill Moad
- Posts: 284
- Joined: 18 Aug 2024 7:03 am
- Location: Oklahoma
- Contact:
- scott murray
- Posts: 2995
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Asheville, NC
check out Lew Houston with Conway Twitty while you’re at it:
https://youtu.be/FOZ4AWWLtXw
https://youtu.be/FOZ4AWWLtXw
1965 Emmons S-10, 3x5 • Emmons LLIII D-10, 10x12 • JCH D-10, 10x12 • Beard MA-8 • Oahu Tonemaster
-
- Posts: 1673
- Joined: 6 Sep 1998 12:01 am
- Location: Nashville Tn.
Roy Nichols is not playing guitar on the original Capital versions of "The Bottle Let me Down" or "Swinging Doors". That would be James Burton.
They're both fantastic players of course, and there are some later Hag records that they both play on. And Haggard re-recorded some of his early hits later for other labels that Nichols played on, and some live versions.
They're both fantastic players of course, and there are some later Hag records that they both play on. And Haggard re-recorded some of his early hits later for other labels that Nichols played on, and some live versions.
- scott murray
- Posts: 2995
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Asheville, NC
-
- Posts: 1673
- Joined: 6 Sep 1998 12:01 am
- Location: Nashville Tn.
- Brendan Mitchell
- Posts: 1545
- Joined: 26 Nov 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Melbourne Australia
John, I believe he is sliding the bar back and forth as well as squeezing the volume pedal on and off. But I could be wrong.Giroy Hollister explains here: https://youtu.be/7m1xIaErpfE?si=TIaljI6sEQAXwXSd
- Fred Treece
- Posts: 4512
- Joined: 29 Dec 2015 3:15 pm
- Location: California, USA
I could never figure out whether Tele players were imitating steel players or vice-versa. It doesn’t really matter when they both sound great.
The call and response interlude (reprising the intro) on Tonight The Bottle that starts with steel at 1:20 and hands off to guitar at 1:26 is a perfect example. I mean, there has never been a cooler bit for a straight ahead honky tonk song as this defining moment.
The guitar is the one doing the chicken-pickin in this case. Doing that on steel is all about the muting - palm blocking is probably the best bet. If you want the clucking sound, you mute the string all the way so no pitch is heard. If you want a staccato note, then you let the picked note ring a split second and then mute. Piece o cake. Not.
Hope that’s clear as mud. The Gilroy Hollister vid demonstrates the pedal steel part pretty well. Imitating the guitar part on steel is a whole nuther kettle of shrimp.
The call and response interlude (reprising the intro) on Tonight The Bottle that starts with steel at 1:20 and hands off to guitar at 1:26 is a perfect example. I mean, there has never been a cooler bit for a straight ahead honky tonk song as this defining moment.
The guitar is the one doing the chicken-pickin in this case. Doing that on steel is all about the muting - palm blocking is probably the best bet. If you want the clucking sound, you mute the string all the way so no pitch is heard. If you want a staccato note, then you let the picked note ring a split second and then mute. Piece o cake. Not.
Hope that’s clear as mud. The Gilroy Hollister vid demonstrates the pedal steel part pretty well. Imitating the guitar part on steel is a whole nuther kettle of shrimp.
- John Larson
- Posts: 577
- Joined: 8 Jul 2020 10:00 am
- Location: Pennsyltucky, USA
Yep I'm realizing this, only time I've heard steel with that much clucking is Lloyd Green's Little Darlin' records stuff for Paycheck and such. Expert palm blocking mode. Real hard to do faster than a mid tempo. That Lloyd lick in The Byrds "One Hundred Years From Now" comes to mind.Fred Treece wrote:Doing that on steel is all about the muting - palm blocking is probably the best bet. If you want the clucking sound, you mute the string all the way so no pitch is heard. If you want a staccato note, then you let the picked note ring a split second and then mute. Piece o cake. Not.
Rejoice in the Lord, O ye righteous; praise is meet for the upright. Give praise to the Lord with the harp, chant unto Him with the ten-stringed psaltery. Sing unto Him a new song, chant well unto Him with jubilation. For the word of the Lord is true, and all His works are in faithfulness. The Lord loveth mercy and judgement; the earth is full of the mercy of the Lord.
- Psalm 33:1-5
- Psalm 33:1-5