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Posted: 19 Nov 2007 5:51 am
by Rick Alexander
Good work Jamie!
That makes 11 contributions - all we need now is Jeff Au Hoy's rendition to make it an even dozen . .
edited
Posted: 19 Nov 2007 6:55 am
by George Piburn
edited
Posted: 19 Nov 2007 7:18 am
by Rick Alexander
George, I just didn't want to seem like I was trying to steal your thunder so to speak.
You've done so much for the Steel Guitar community with your beautiful guitars and your excellent tutorials. I hereby nominate you for the HOF . .
But since you asked - here are my CCH instructional videos for A6 tuning:
(it's my own arrangement - no attempt was made to emulate Don or Hank)
1 -
Chords
2 -
Intro
3 -
Verse Part I
4 -
Verse Part II
5 -
Verse Part III
6 -
Verse Part IV
7 -
Entire Verse
8 -
Ending
9 -
Instrumental Version
10 -
Version 2 - with Vocal
Download backup track:
Hawaiian Backup
Swing Backup
Full Backup
I have a feeling CCH will be one of the songs we jam out on at the TSGA Non-Pedal Session - everybody oughta know it inside out and backwards by then . .
Ambassadore' Rick --
Posted: 19 Nov 2007 8:52 am
by George Piburn
Everyone checkout Ricks A6th Videos, they are great
Here are a few more clips/tabs:
Ending Part 1
Ending Part 2
Ending Mute/Block
I will work on the remaining videos , please feel free to join in the fun and glory
GB
Cold Cold Heart
Posted: 19 Nov 2007 9:45 am
by Michael Scdoris
Thanks again George for these very terrific videos.
The only section that I can't quite get right, is the "bridge or walk-up between verse one and verse two".
Posted: 19 Nov 2007 11:06 am
by Jamie O'Connell
Thanks! I still have tons to learn: I have been playing steel for a year and half, although bass and guitar for 40+ years. I love steel guitar :)
George, The TAB arrangement I used for Cold Cold Heart is available here in the forum: "Your Cheating Heart", by Don Helms. It comes with a great CD with both backing tracks and performances by Don, himself. The tuning that he calls E13 is really E6/Amaj7 in my mind (Hi-Lo: G#-E-C#-B-G#-E-C#-A). The top 6 strings are just C6 transposed up 2 whole steps, and are the only strings used in the song.
I may do another version with performed backing when I get a little time.
Posted: 19 Nov 2007 1:22 pm
by Ron
Norman Hamlet had a jamb sesson at his house a few years ago and a lot of musicans showed up and each song was maybe kicked off with Norm than some one sang a verse than another insterment would take a brake than another verse than another insterment, guitars banjo accordian fiddle and what ever. It was a different version and was very interesting.
Another time I was to a bluegrass get to gather and at one of the jambs along side a long moter home some one requested the wilde wood flower. He gritted his teeth and played one verse and passed it to his left than he to his left untill it went around the entire circle twice and I never heard the same version twice.
I think cool cold heart would be good!
By the way I cant find the notes in my machine. Could you bundle all the notes up and send them to me and I will see if I can find a place to plug them in
Robro Ron
Posted: 20 Nov 2007 3:54 pm
by Rick Alexander
Andy Volk's cool bossa nova rendition had to be relocated to an equally cool server.
So here it is:
COLD COLD HEART - Bossa Nova Style by Andy Volk.
Posted: 20 Nov 2007 6:07 pm
by Mitch Druckman
I'm still on a slow dialup connection and can only view videos if I download them first onto my computer. Unfortunately the videos that Rick posted are at Utube and cannot be downloaded, only viewed. I can download the backing tracks but not the video instruction. Is there anyway that the videos can be made downloadable? I wonder if there might be others in the same situation.
Posted: 20 Nov 2007 6:54 pm
by Keith Wells
Mitch Druckman wrote:... Is there anyway that the videos can be made downloadable? I wonder if there might be others in the same situation.
I am. You can go
here to download YouTube videos to your 'puter.
Or you can order the vids direct from Rick and he'll send you a DVD. That's what I did. I think it was $20 -- well worth it.
Posted: 23 Nov 2007 6:58 am
by Rick Alexander
The Cold Cold Heart videos were created after my
Steel Guitar Basics DVD, so they're not on it.
They are the beginning of a new project I'm doing, which will include a CD of backup tracks, a book with chord charts and a DVD showing how to play each song phrase by phrase (and more).
The Steel Guitar Basics DVD doesn't assume the student knows anything at all about Steel Guitar - it explains everything from scratch.
But this new project builds on the material in the Steel Guitar Basics DVD.
If anyone would like a DVD of the Cold Cold Heart videos and a CD with the backup track, just let me know.
Posted: 24 Nov 2007 8:26 am
by Mitch Druckman
A generous offer from Rick. Thanks.
Posted: 24 Nov 2007 11:22 am
by Alan Brookes
Posted: 25 Nov 2007 11:03 pm
by Alan Brookes
Posted: 26 Nov 2007 4:07 am
by Rick Alexander
No.
That version wasn't submitted here - and it uses pedals.
It is interesting though . .
Posted: 26 Nov 2007 4:24 am
by basilh
So, are pedals out in this exercise ?
Just as I was about to do a version..
What if I play my pedal guitar but don't use the pedals ?
Baz
Posted: 26 Nov 2007 4:29 am
by basilh
Chuck S. Lettes wrote:I had some fun working up my arrangement for Cold, Cold Heart, featuring my Dobro, lap steel and (gasp!) pedal steel. Thanks, Rick, for the rhythm track and for all of your efforts to promote the lap steel.
Chuck
http://rickalexander.com/BigSteel/ColdC ... Lettes.mp3
Is this disqualified then ?
Posted: 26 Nov 2007 4:51 am
by basilh
Jeff's second (And last) post in this thread that he started says :-
Jeff Au Hoy
From:
Honolulu, Hawai'i
Post Posted Thu Jun 21, 2007 7:04 am
Hmm... I had it in mind that the control in this experiment would actually be the song itself. I think we should allow for different kinds of accompaniment...different rhythms... and even reharmonization... but not too much straying from the melody.
Maybe the thread has strayed a bit TOO far from the original concept.
Posted: 26 Nov 2007 5:38 am
by Rick Alexander
Sorry Bas, I'm not trying to make rules, I hate rules.
By all means pedal away if you please.
Ricky Davis has an incredible pedal version of it somewhere on YouTube I think . .
But neither of those versions were entered here, so it might be presumptuous to put them on the list.
I'd love to hear your rendition, whatever instrumentation you employ.
Maybe the thread has strayed a bit TOO far from the original concept.
Maybe it has. I bet Jeff's rendition would get it back on track.
The good thing about the Forum is that subjects don't go away: as long as someone remembers them and gets back to them they can be resurrected at any time.
True enough Alan, no time limit was ever mentioned.
Posted: 26 Nov 2007 6:24 am
by basilh
Rick, I was waiting for Jeff's version before tackling it myself just so I could get his perspective and maybe it would color mine..BUT, I'll do mine AFTER this :-
http://www.hsga.org/forum/cgi-bin/yabb2 ... 1195829051
Posted: 26 Nov 2007 6:40 am
by Rick Alexander
Now
that looks like it'll be a ton o' fun!
Posted: 26 Nov 2007 11:51 am
by Andy Sandoval
I don't think pedals vs non pedal was ever considered. As the original Hank tune was a non pedal recording I would think that even played with a pedal steel that a non pedal feel can still be attained but I'm not against hearin a full on pedal steel sound at all
Bas, get it on bro! and Happy Birthday.
Posted: 26 Nov 2007 12:02 pm
by basilh
Thanks Andy, it's actually the 3rd of December but gigs and all prevented the ACTUAL day, this is a compromise..
(I've just found a set of Sennheiser HD 600's hidden under the bed, probably Pat's present for me.. Unless someone has been recording !!! )
I played my version of CCH at the last convention and disguised it as a Hollywood Hawaiian tune ... NO ONE guessed it's name..yet they all recognized it when I played it straight..
Posted: 26 Nov 2007 6:02 pm
by Alan Brookes
basilh wrote:...I've just found a set of Sennheiser HD 600's hidden under the bed, probably Pat's present for me.. Unless someone has been...
According to "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy", if enough scientists believe and can prove something exists, then it will spontaneously appear ...viz the Quantum Impossibility Drive. Maybe enough people believed that you had Sennheisers under the bed that they spontaneously came into existence...
Posted: 25 Dec 2007 12:52 pm
by Doug Beaumier
Here's my contribution ---->
<b>Cold Cold Heart</b>
E6 tuning. 6-string Valco lap steel.