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Posted: 13 Sep 2002 4:23 pm
by Russ Young
It was Buddy Cage playing on "Panama Red." I went out and bought every New Riders album. Then I heard Commander Cody & The Lost Planet Airmen, featuring Bobby Black. Back to the record store! And then I saw David Lindley with this funny little Bakelite guitar in his lap, playing behind Jackson Browne...
The bad news is I procrastinated for the next 25 years or so before buying a lap steel -- the good news is I'm having a ball.
Posted: 13 Sep 2002 10:12 pm
by john buffington
Buddy Charleton playing "Another Bridge To Burn", Buddy Emmons "Half A Mind", Sonny Curtis with George Jones. Jerry Roller doing the Charleton turn around by tuning the the E string down to Eb (before knee levers on his guitar).
John Buffington
Mullen D-10, Webb Amps
Posted: 14 Sep 2002 4:24 pm
by Bobby Lee
Marty Pollard wrote: <BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica">quote:</font><HR><SMALL>The song that made me decide to learn the durn thang was Lloyd Green's version of Steel Guitar Rag on a Readers Digest compilation set.
Now I can do a whole lot of things and am pleased w/my overall progress to date but I STILL can't play that song the way he did.</SMALL><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>Maybe that was back when he played C6th. That would explain it, sort of.
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<small><img align=right src="
http://b0b.com/b0b.gif" width="64" height="64">
Bobby Lee - email:
quasar@b0b.com -
gigs -
CDs
Sierra Session 12 (
E9), Williams 400X (
Emaj9, D6), Sierra Olympic 12 (
F Diatonic) Sierra Laptop 8 (D13), Fender Stringmaster (
E13, A6)
Posted: 14 Sep 2002 6:54 pm
by Jerry Johnston
With me it wasn't a particular song. It was all of Eddy Arnolds early stuff. Still inspires me.
Started with no talent--still have most of it.
Jerry
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Posted: 14 Sep 2002 8:55 pm
by Dave Horch
Man! What a thread! <font size=-1>Okay my two cents...</font>
Rusty Young and Poco did it for me. I got the chance to see him/them in concert twice in the 1972~ days. Right up close <font size=-2> (elbow on the stage, takin' pictures of the band</font>. The way he moved between lap steel and pedal steel so quickly on
"Grand Junction" really got me.
20+ years later, after miles of rock and roll on guitar and bass, I finally got a steel! (it was a money thing...). Best, -Dave
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Mullen (See! No "S") D-10 <font size=-1>
<a href=
http://www.davidhorch.com/music>Photo page</a> </font>
<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Dave Horch on 14 September 2002 at 09:57 PM.]</p></FONT>
Posted: 15 Sep 2002 5:54 am
by Reggie Duncan
Everything Hal, Sonny, and Weldon played on the weekend!
Posted: 15 Sep 2002 8:03 am
by Jerry Johnston
With me it was not a single song but all of Eddy Arnold's early hits. They still inspire me.
Started with no talent--still have most of it.
JJ
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Posted: 15 Sep 2002 10:53 am
by John Macy
Buddy and Sneaky Pete on the Linda Rondstat albuum that was 1/2 live (Sneaky) and 1/2 studio (Buddy), and also Red Rhodes on "Joanne"...
Posted: 15 Sep 2002 11:13 am
by John De Maille
What a revealing anthology of players ages, and locations of Americana. For me, it was Sweetheart of the Rodeo, Poco,New Riders, and all the country rock bands with a steel guitar that followed. It was a great learning curve for me.
Posted: 15 Sep 2002 11:17 am
by David Wright
Maurice Anderson.........
Posted: 16 Sep 2002 9:42 am
by Emmett Roch
From the first time I heard steel on a song, I was permanently "damaged", but most of my life I couldn´t afford one...but the song that made me go ahead and save the money for that first old used MSA was¨"Lost In The Feeling".
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___________________
GFI S-12 extended E9
Posted: 16 Sep 2002 10:09 am
by Bob Hoffnar
Sorta interesting:
About 40 percent of the the guys posting on this thread got into steel because of the hippie bands coming out of California 30 or so years ago.
Bob
Posted: 16 Sep 2002 10:17 am
by Rich Weiss
And it's been downhill ever since.
Posted: 16 Sep 2002 11:20 am
by scott murray
Hey, John Macy! Which Ronstadt album are you talking about??? Sounds like a winner.
As for me, it was everything Jerry Garcia played on, including a tape of rehearsals from '87 with Bob Dylan, and a New Riders show from '70 where they played "Together Again" (if any of you have this tape, I really need another copy!!!)
Also John McFee on the Grateful Dead tune "Pride of Cucamonga", Buddy Cage on the 'Panama Red' album, and Pete Drake on Dylan's 'Nashville Skyline' album.
All of this made me aware of the steel.
The songs that made me finally get a steel came a little later when I was heavily into bluegrass (also thanks to Jerry!)...
I heard Mike Auldridge play some steel on his 'Old Dog' album, and Jeff Newman on the 'Slidin Smoke' album w/Auldridge.
The 'Sweet Moments' album by the Blue Velvet Band also made quite an impact (Bill Keith on steel) as well as Gordon Titcomb's steel on Bill Keith's 'Beating Around the Bush' album, and Larry Campbell's playing in an animated film called 'The Tune'.
Whew!
The first tune I learned was "Pleading" by Pete Drake.
Posted: 18 Sep 2002 5:17 am
by Bob Schaedler
Always loved the sound, but aren't seen much around here. What finally made me search out and buy was hearing Junior Brown.
Posted: 18 Sep 2002 6:53 am
by Chris Forbes
It's kinda weird, I grew up on country, a lot of Haggard and Jones, but it was a song by a "rock" group that got me. It was Tears by the Pure Prairie League. That John David Call sure could pick a little!
Posted: 18 Sep 2002 8:49 am
by Roger Osbourn
A song in the early 60s by Rocky Caple of Tulsa called Sawed-Off Shotgun. That song was on the local Bowl and Grills jukebox. You could get 6 plays for a quarter. They hated to see us come in cause we would play it six times in a row.We loved the song plus we were just a little bit mischevious. Imagine that!!!!!!!
Posted: 18 Sep 2002 9:05 am
by Tony Orth
Buddy Cage (NRPS) breaks on "Hello, Mary Lou" and "Sweet Lovin' One".
Posted: 18 Sep 2002 9:43 am
by John Macy
Scott--
It was the one with the brown cover. It was her third album, circa 1971, and is self-titled. The tunes were:
1. Rock Me on the Water
2. Crazy Arms
3. I Won't Be Hangin' Round
4. I Still Miss Someone
5. In My Reply
6. I Fall to Pieces
7. Ramblin' Round
8. Birds (Young)
9. I Ain't Always Been Faithful
10. Rescue Me
Some great playing on some great tunes
.
Posted: 18 Sep 2002 11:07 am
by Bobby Lee
I think it was Bill Keith on Goeff & Maria Muldaur's "Pottery Pie", playing the song "Brazil". That whole album opened my eyes to the possibilities of the pedal steel, but "Brazil" probably pushed me over the edge.
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<small><img align=right src="
http://b0b.com/b0b.gif" width="64" height="64">
Bobby Lee - email:
quasar@b0b.com -
gigs -
CDs
Sierra Session 12 (
E9), Williams 400X (
Emaj9, D6), Sierra Olympic 12 (
F Diatonic) Sierra Laptop 8 (D13), Fender Stringmaster (
E13, A6)
Posted: 18 Sep 2002 1:47 pm
by John Macy
b0b,
I loved what Bill used to play. We played a lot of gigs together on a package show in the early 70's. He'd be warming up playing Charlie Parker and Bach on the banjo backstage, then go play his unique steel stuff. Way cool...
I guess he doesn't play steel anymore
<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by John Macy on 18 September 2002 at 07:11 PM.]</p></FONT>
Posted: 18 Sep 2002 6:15 pm
by scott murray
Actually I heard he's gettin' back into it.
Call 1-800-ASK KEITH and ask him yourself!
Posted: 18 Sep 2002 7:43 pm
by Kevin Hatton
Red Rhodes playing "Don't Bogart That Joint"
from Easy Rider.
Posted: 19 Sep 2002 1:32 am
by Rick Garrett
Green Light with Hank Thompson and the Brazos Valley Boys. Bobby Garrett on steel of course. Also I loved the sound on Oklahoma Hills. Must have been about 4 years old when I heard those old classics and I still remember the feeling I got. The Steel must be the only instrument I've ever heard that reaches right down in your heart. We're all pretty blessed by this PSG and the rich sounds it makes. By the way I got that same feeling again when I finally got the hear Buddy Emmons do Night Life live in St. Louis. Just incredible.
Rick Garrett
Posted: 19 Sep 2002 7:36 am
by Wade Medlock
Curly Chalker's 'Danny Boy' with Charlie McCoy. Decades later, that ride still gives me chills.