How many pedals and levers do we really use?
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
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How many pedals and levers do we really use?
I have watched many players, some have 8 pedals and 6 levers and over a 2 hour period most of them seem to use only the A and B pedals and the E raise and E lower levers. Do you think we are putting many pedals and levers on guitars just to impress?
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I often wonder the same when I see an instrument with 9x9 or some such, but figure they must know how to use them or why have them. ...I only have 3x5 on SD10; & try to find uses for all of them, altho really have no idea as to the full potential there....
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Too many?
Well, I guess some players need lot of pedals, and some don't. Myself, the vast majority of my playing is done with A,B, & C, and the "E" r/l.
I once had a visiting steeler ask me if I had the full-tone lower on the 6th, and the whole tone raise on the 1st. When I told him I had neither (even though I had 8 total pedals and levers on E9th), he said he wouldn't want to try and sit-in for a few songs.
I know that for me, it was a "numbers game" when I started. A lotta players would look down their noses if you didn't have at least 4 levers, so I added 6 to my original 2, and it looked very "professional". Trouble was, I ran into a couple of guys that could do more with 2 levers than I could with 8. Life is like that, sometimes.
In the end, I learned it ain't what you got, it's how good you are that counts!
Even to this day, it doesn't take much of a player to humble me.
I once had a visiting steeler ask me if I had the full-tone lower on the 6th, and the whole tone raise on the 1st. When I told him I had neither (even though I had 8 total pedals and levers on E9th), he said he wouldn't want to try and sit-in for a few songs.
I know that for me, it was a "numbers game" when I started. A lotta players would look down their noses if you didn't have at least 4 levers, so I added 6 to my original 2, and it looked very "professional". Trouble was, I ran into a couple of guys that could do more with 2 levers than I could with 8. Life is like that, sometimes.
In the end, I learned it ain't what you got, it's how good you are that counts!
Even to this day, it doesn't take much of a player to humble me.
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I have 5+5 and use them all - on both necks!
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Re: How many pedals and levers do we really use?
You must be watching typical country steelers playing standard country E9 steel. That stuff was born and raised on E9 3 and 2, or maybe 4. So naturally, you can play that stuff all night only using 3 and 2 to 4. And many players hardly ever use the C pedal. But if you watch Lloyd Green, you will see that C pedal get used. And if you watch Paul Franklin, you will see him use his Franklin pedal every now and then. So while average players may not use everything they have, top steelers do.tbhenry wrote:I have watched many players, some have 8 pedals and 6 levers and over a 2 hour period most of them seem to use only the A and B pedals and the E raise and E lower levers.
A lot of us average players have the extra stuff so we can try to learn to use it. We might fool around with it at home on special songs and arrangements; but when winging it on minimally rehearsed songs called out on a whim by the vocalist or upon request from the audience, we stick with the few pedals and levers we are really comfortable with. I don't see this as a bad thing. It is good for us to have an instrument we can grow into.
On the other hand, if you see a top pro take off on C6, you will see them use the center lever cluster and all the C6 pedals. The recent YouTube post of Tommy White playing C6 is a case in point. He even took his foot off the volume pedal at times to play pedals with both feet. Maybe the typical country steeler doesn't do much with the 6th neck on their D10 or uni; maybe there is not much call for it in a typical country band these days. Nevertheless, many of us like to have that 6th neck to fool around with at home. And you never know when a Western Swing number might come up on a gig; so it is nice to have it there if you need it, and you want to learn some of it, even if some nights you never touch it.
I'll admit that on country standards, I don't use much but E9 2 and 2. But I also play blues, rock, jazz and classical music on my uni. In all of those, I use 3 and 5 in E9 mode, and wish I had another knee to work more levers. In B6 mode, I don't use all the pedals yet, but I'm slowly learning. I certainly would not want my progress to be limited by not having the full complement of pedals, and someday I want to add a center cluster of levers for B6. However, on a uni, things do double duty, and there are other ways to get some of the stuff the traditional C6 pedals and levers give. So at the moment I am content to learn the basics of the one big tuning, without trying to exactly duplicate the two separate necks of a D10. If I didn't play a uni, I would certainly want a fully loaded D10. You don't have to use all of it all the time. But it is nice to have it all when you want it.
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I have 8+9 on my U-12,use em all and wish I had 1 or 2 more. I would say on honky tonk gigs,I play mostly E9 style and use 4 pedals and 5 levers a lot and 3 other levers a little. On swing gigs or cowboy gigs like The Riders of the Purple Sage,I play more 6th style and then I would use 4 other pedals and 4 other levers a lot and 2 or 3 pedals and levers a little. Or a third scenario would be no pedals and no levers and just go slant a while - as in my Stringmaster.
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I find 3+2 on E9 pretty indispensible. The 2/9 lower is my 3rd lever, and I use it quite a bit as well, especially string 9 for descending scales and coming off suspended IV's in the AB position. I would be completely happy with a 4th lever lowering the 6th and raising the 1st. I'll probably be adding it within a month or so.
I've had several guitars with 5 levers for the E9 - two Carters and an MSA. I never ever used the vertical, which was usually lowering the B's. I just couldn't adjust it for proper use with the AB pedals.
3+4 is more than enough for me. If it's good enough for Lloyd........
I've had several guitars with 5 levers for the E9 - two Carters and an MSA. I never ever used the vertical, which was usually lowering the B's. I just couldn't adjust it for proper use with the AB pedals.
3+4 is more than enough for me. If it's good enough for Lloyd........
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Amount of Knee Levers I can handle
I've had as many as 8 knee levers, but soon realized that 5 max is all I can handle! Probably don't really need all of them, but like the choices they give me.
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I'm strictly a newer E9th player on an S-10 3 + 4. So I can't offer an intelligent opinion.Chris LeDrew wrote:
3+4 is more than enough for me. If it's good enough for Lloyd........
But I do remember the outstanding article on Lloyd Green which appeared last year in The Country Music Journal. And I recall that in the early 70's when he took his D-10 Sho-Bud to the "chop shop" to have it converted into the original SD-10 LDG, that he consulted his recording sessions book, and if memory serves, in the previous 600 sessions, he had only used the C6th neck five times.
Depending on what one does musically, mileage is of course likely to vary, but as a newer pedal player, I thought this was a good "law of averages" example to follow to head down that initial path on on the instrument.
Mark
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I've been playing 9 and 9 for about 25 years, and I use them all - obviously some levers get more knee time than others, depending on the application - but there is nothing on my guitar that is there for display purposes only! Come to think of it, I haven't changed my setup much over the years either - it works real good for ME.
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I have a D-10 but almost never touch the C neck. So those pedals are pretty shiny.
I'm wondering if I shouldn't go back to an Extended E9th like I had on my roasted Sierra. I find that I currently use all 3 pedals and all 5 levers on most songs that I play. The one that gets used the least is my RKR which lowers 2 and 9. Maybe someone will suggest some good licks/phrases/chords to practice on that one. (I think I'll start a thread on that.)
If I DID go back to a single neck (on a double body) I think I would add the B to A lower on a pedal and maybe a G# to G lower on another pedal. But plenty of other changes come to mind that I'd like to have - none of which can't be played with some other combination.
I'm wondering if I shouldn't go back to an Extended E9th like I had on my roasted Sierra. I find that I currently use all 3 pedals and all 5 levers on most songs that I play. The one that gets used the least is my RKR which lowers 2 and 9. Maybe someone will suggest some good licks/phrases/chords to practice on that one. (I think I'll start a thread on that.)
If I DID go back to a single neck (on a double body) I think I would add the B to A lower on a pedal and maybe a G# to G lower on another pedal. But plenty of other changes come to mind that I'd like to have - none of which can't be played with some other combination.
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FWIW
On my SU12 8 and 5, I use them all, almost every time I sit behind it. It is tuned Bb6/Eb9.
There are songs where I don't use any pedals, trying to get the sound from that era.
Sometimes in rock and blues songs, I use no pedals. Play the pentatonic scales mostly on one or two strings.
But, a western swing song, old time Southern Gospel song I may use all I got.
Just one man's experience.
On my SU12 8 and 5, I use them all, almost every time I sit behind it. It is tuned Bb6/Eb9.
There are songs where I don't use any pedals, trying to get the sound from that era.
Sometimes in rock and blues songs, I use no pedals. Play the pentatonic scales mostly on one or two strings.
But, a western swing song, old time Southern Gospel song I may use all I got.
Just one man's experience.
Maybe some of you should take a moment and go back and listen to Jimmy Day, Steel and Strings. 8 strings, NO Knee Levers. Take a look and listen to some of the old clips up on YouTube. Maybe this is too "primitive" to all you "high tech" players who look down your noses at "Basic Old School Country". Can someone please tell me what is wrong with "Basic Old School Country"? For that matter, what is wrong with simple, melodic, "Just Play what the Song needs" playing in any type of music ? I thought the focus was music, not pyro tech playing or flashy mechanics.
I have owned, and played as my main working instruments, some of the most collectible guitars and amps ever made. Originals, Not Reissues, 50's Les Paul's with PAF pickups, 60's Strats, Vox AC 30 , Tweed, Brown, Black Fenders, 60's Marshalls, etc. Yes, some of them I wish I still had, but I get as good a sound with a "made in China" Gretsch fitted with only a single old "Junk Box" Filtertron in the Bridge position, an $ 80 Solid State Vox amp, and a handfull of simple Boss pedals, because I know How and When to use them to add to the feeling of the song.
I have just put the two Chromatic strings and Knee Levers back on my PSG after playing it as an 8 string, NO knee levers PSG for the past few months. I've been trying to get a feel of the Basics. I believe I should even learn to play a little Without ANY pedals if I really want to understand the instrument.
Please do not mistake me for a "locked in the past nut case" who is out of touch with tech. I have made my living as a tech for the past 25 years. And I am not a Purist by any means, I play Day setup and I do not use any pics at all.
I applaud anyone who works at bringing the art of PSG making and playing into the present and future, but sometimes the attitude of some of the posts on this forum remind me of a Sat afternoon at Guitar Center, or a MIT party.
If You want and / or need it, great, use it. If someone else does not, do not prejudge their talent, gifts, or understanding.
If you were walking past a stage that was setup for a free concert in the park, and there was an old beat up Maverick setup on the side in front of a Crate Keyboard amp would you be as interested in hanging around until the band started playing, or would you just dismiss the player before hearing them based on your judgement of their equipment ?
Hmmm
I have owned, and played as my main working instruments, some of the most collectible guitars and amps ever made. Originals, Not Reissues, 50's Les Paul's with PAF pickups, 60's Strats, Vox AC 30 , Tweed, Brown, Black Fenders, 60's Marshalls, etc. Yes, some of them I wish I still had, but I get as good a sound with a "made in China" Gretsch fitted with only a single old "Junk Box" Filtertron in the Bridge position, an $ 80 Solid State Vox amp, and a handfull of simple Boss pedals, because I know How and When to use them to add to the feeling of the song.
I have just put the two Chromatic strings and Knee Levers back on my PSG after playing it as an 8 string, NO knee levers PSG for the past few months. I've been trying to get a feel of the Basics. I believe I should even learn to play a little Without ANY pedals if I really want to understand the instrument.
Please do not mistake me for a "locked in the past nut case" who is out of touch with tech. I have made my living as a tech for the past 25 years. And I am not a Purist by any means, I play Day setup and I do not use any pics at all.
I applaud anyone who works at bringing the art of PSG making and playing into the present and future, but sometimes the attitude of some of the posts on this forum remind me of a Sat afternoon at Guitar Center, or a MIT party.
If You want and / or need it, great, use it. If someone else does not, do not prejudge their talent, gifts, or understanding.
If you were walking past a stage that was setup for a free concert in the park, and there was an old beat up Maverick setup on the side in front of a Crate Keyboard amp would you be as interested in hanging around until the band started playing, or would you just dismiss the player before hearing them based on your judgement of their equipment ?
Hmmm