Bass lap steel?
Moderator: Brad Bechtel
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John Paul Jones
I just stumbled into THIS!!
I really love this band, and had no Idea that the bass on this tune was a 6-string slide bass. Looks like a Melobar design...this is rock, enjoy/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0TqnFVfDJTM
I really love this band, and had no Idea that the bass on this tune was a 6-string slide bass. Looks like a Melobar design...this is rock, enjoy/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0TqnFVfDJTM
RICK ABBOTT
Sho~Bud D-10 Professional #7962
Remington T-8, Wakarusa 5e3 clone
1953 Stromberg-Carlson AU-35
Sho~Bud D-10 Professional #7962
Remington T-8, Wakarusa 5e3 clone
1953 Stromberg-Carlson AU-35
That's John Paul Jones from Led Zeppelin by the way.
Kevin Maul: Airline, Beard, Clinesmith, Decophonic, Evans, Excel, Fender, Fluger, Gibson, Hilton, Ibanez, Justice, K+K, Live Strings, MOYO, National, Oahu, Peterson, Quilter, Rickenbacher, Sho~Bud, Supro, TC, Ultimate, VHT, Webb, X-otic, Yamaha, ZKing.
- Alan Brookes
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Re: John Paul Jones
It looks like a standard Melobar Skreemr to me. I wish he would stand still long enough to be able to examine it.Rick Abbott wrote:...Looks like a Melobar design...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0TqnFVfDJTM
But he's not playing on the bass strings.
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Yeah, I am a big fan of Led Zep. JPJ basically put together the band you see in the video, Them Crooked Vultures. The first time I heard them I felt the way I did when I first heard Cream...like my eyes were opened.
Also, Alan, listen harder, he is playing the bass part, and even harmonizing with the other guy who is playing a part of the bass section. Headphones, brother!
Also, Alan, listen harder, he is playing the bass part, and even harmonizing with the other guy who is playing a part of the bass section. Headphones, brother!
RICK ABBOTT
Sho~Bud D-10 Professional #7962
Remington T-8, Wakarusa 5e3 clone
1953 Stromberg-Carlson AU-35
Sho~Bud D-10 Professional #7962
Remington T-8, Wakarusa 5e3 clone
1953 Stromberg-Carlson AU-35
- Brad Bechtel
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Re: John Paul Jones
It's a custom bass lap steel made by Manson Guitars. Search this forum for previous discussions.Alan Brookes wrote:It looks like a standard Melobar Skreemr to me. I wish he would stand still long enough to be able to examine it.Rick Abbott wrote:...Looks like a Melobar design...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0TqnFVfDJTM
But he's not playing on the bass strings.
Brad’s Page of Steel
A web site devoted to acoustic & electric lap steel guitars
A web site devoted to acoustic & electric lap steel guitars
- Paul Seager
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I tried the concept of a bass steel to replace the bassist we cannot find. I have an 8 string that I don't much care for that has a 25" scale. With some heavy gauge strings, I managed to get it as low as an A (as on a bass guitar) and came up with more or less a diatonic tuning. That tuning provided open strings tuned to the 3 chords of most of the songs. There were a few exceptions but it was a start.
I tried a technique of hitting a bass string, grabbing a chord on my main steel before hitting the next bass tone. Sounded sloppy but a start. Then I started coming up with some more interesting bass lines but after a while I realised that I was just 'playing bass' and ignoring the steel.
Interesting exercise but for my goals, pointless. I also tried using an Octaver on a normal C6. If you want to test your Ocataver pedal's tracking, try it on a steel! The slightest movement of the left hand causes the octave to dance about all over the place. Another interesting but pointless exercise!
\ paul
I tried a technique of hitting a bass string, grabbing a chord on my main steel before hitting the next bass tone. Sounded sloppy but a start. Then I started coming up with some more interesting bass lines but after a while I realised that I was just 'playing bass' and ignoring the steel.
Interesting exercise but for my goals, pointless. I also tried using an Octaver on a normal C6. If you want to test your Ocataver pedal's tracking, try it on a steel! The slightest movement of the left hand causes the octave to dance about all over the place. Another interesting but pointless exercise!
\ paul
\paul
Bayern Hawaiians: https://www.youtube.com/@diebayernhawaiians3062
Other stuff: https://www.youtube.com/@paulseager3796/videos
Bayern Hawaiians: https://www.youtube.com/@diebayernhawaiians3062
Other stuff: https://www.youtube.com/@paulseager3796/videos
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- W. Bill Schmidt
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Lest we forget the imitable Mr. Dave, quoted in 2003 saying: "...this baritone slide. I play bass parts and all of that on that instrument. So, it has a huge sound. And then I have my seven-string, which has kind of a low bass string on it, and then a regular six-string guitar tuning. So you can play bass and guitar at the same time."
- chas smith
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The 1st bass steel guitar that I built, back around 1990, was the 3rd neck on the 1st Guitarzilla. It has 5 strings and pups on both ends of the wood neck, and that is mounted on an aluminum channel.
The 2nd bass steel guitar I built, around 2000, was Junior Blue, 6 strings on a billet of 7075 T-8 aerospace aluminum. With pups on both ends of the neck.
The 3rd bass steel guitar I built, around 2004, was the 8 string neck on Guitarzilla2. This time the frame of the guitar is titanium tubing with aluminum details and again, pups on both ends of the neck. Also, The Replicant, a rod and plate instrument is attached.
The most recent bass steel guitar is a 7 string, machined from 6061 T-6 aluminum billet, that bolts on and off of the back of my Cadillac guitar. It's tuned to 3 octaves of A, starting at A0 on the bottom. If you saw the movie, Man of Steel, this is the bass sound on the bottom of the sound track.
The 2nd bass steel guitar I built, around 2000, was Junior Blue, 6 strings on a billet of 7075 T-8 aerospace aluminum. With pups on both ends of the neck.
The 3rd bass steel guitar I built, around 2004, was the 8 string neck on Guitarzilla2. This time the frame of the guitar is titanium tubing with aluminum details and again, pups on both ends of the neck. Also, The Replicant, a rod and plate instrument is attached.
The most recent bass steel guitar is a 7 string, machined from 6061 T-6 aluminum billet, that bolts on and off of the back of my Cadillac guitar. It's tuned to 3 octaves of A, starting at A0 on the bottom. If you saw the movie, Man of Steel, this is the bass sound on the bottom of the sound track.
- Alan Brookes
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- Alan Brookes
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- W. Bill Schmidt
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- Alan Brookes
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Thanks, Bill.
You're absolutely right. For years I used a regular solid electric guitar as a lap steel. The only problem is that, if you tune it to C6, or the equivalent, it makes it difficult to play without a tone bar. But, in those days, I tuned to open E.
You can also use a 12-string guitar as a mandolin, if you put a capo high up. Of course, it's not tuned in fifths like a mandolin is, but, since it has more strings, that's really no problem. I often wonder if the tuning of the mandolin, like a fiddle, doesn't come from the fact that the original mandolins were played by classical musicians who were used to violins.
You're absolutely right. For years I used a regular solid electric guitar as a lap steel. The only problem is that, if you tune it to C6, or the equivalent, it makes it difficult to play without a tone bar. But, in those days, I tuned to open E.
You can also use a 12-string guitar as a mandolin, if you put a capo high up. Of course, it's not tuned in fifths like a mandolin is, but, since it has more strings, that's really no problem. I often wonder if the tuning of the mandolin, like a fiddle, doesn't come from the fact that the original mandolins were played by classical musicians who were used to violins.
- Steffen Gunter
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Morphine's Mark Sandman (RIP) had a great sound using a 2-string slide bass. Here's a video about his bass guitar:Alan Brookes wrote:no-one has yet come up with a reason for not just using an electric bass guitar with a tone bar.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0OL4P5zHiPY
My YT channel: www.youtube.com/user/madsteffen
- Alan Brookes
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Mark Sandman (after feeding pizza to his dog) has just used a regular bass guitar with a tone bar. I don't understand why he removed two of the strings. All that does is limit the range of the instrument. It does nothing to the sound.
What a shame about his heart attack at such an early age. It reminds us all of our own fragile mortality.
What a shame about his heart attack at such an early age. It reminds us all of our own fragile mortality.
- chas smith
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Alan, the vertical rods can be bowed with violin bows or struck with hammered dulcimer hammers. On the 1st Guitarzilla, the rods are welded onto thin plates with top and bottom "lips" front and back, that act like bridges, and they're woven in the strings. When the rods are struck, they make a bell like sound and that vibration gets transferred to the stings.
On the 2nd Guitarzilla, The Replicant does the same thing only the rods are welded on a thin plate of tool steel and that's mounted over 3 EMG pickups.
These are not for traditional melodic kinds of music. The rods are purposefully not in tune with an A-440 piano and they're overly long to get more complicated sounds.
On the 2nd Guitarzilla, The Replicant does the same thing only the rods are welded on a thin plate of tool steel and that's mounted over 3 EMG pickups.
These are not for traditional melodic kinds of music. The rods are purposefully not in tune with an A-440 piano and they're overly long to get more complicated sounds.
- W. Bill Schmidt
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Alan, it is my understanding the the mandolin and violin families are direct analogues, with the mandolin family fretted and plucked rather than bowed. Consider the following:
Mandolin - Violin
Mandola - Viola
Mandocello - Violincello
Mandobass - Double Bass
all of which share the same scale and tuning (normally).
Chas, awesome stuff! Loved the piece in Fretboard Journal.
Mandolin - Violin
Mandola - Viola
Mandocello - Violincello
Mandobass - Double Bass
all of which share the same scale and tuning (normally).
Chas, awesome stuff! Loved the piece in Fretboard Journal.
- Alan Brookes
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Chas, that sounds very intriguing. Do you have a video of the instrument in use?
Bill: many instruments come in complete consorts, ranging from small to bass. The bowl-backed mandolin is a member of the lute family. The flat-backed mandolins are technically small citterns, and were derived from the bowl-backed (Neopolitan) variety because all bowl-backed instruments slide around in the lap and are difficult to hold still. The comparisons that you list could be made with many other instruments, even wind instruments, that have various different sizes, but the violin developed completely independently of the mandolin, and any similarities are purely from parallel development. Indeed, early mandolins had a variety of tunings, many derived from the tuning of the lute, which itself had several different tunings.
This is the point that I was making, that the current tuning of the mandolin probably arises from classical composers who were used to writing for the violin.
Yes, the mandola is tuned the same as the viola, but the mandocello and mandobass are recent, 20th century instruments.
Bill: many instruments come in complete consorts, ranging from small to bass. The bowl-backed mandolin is a member of the lute family. The flat-backed mandolins are technically small citterns, and were derived from the bowl-backed (Neopolitan) variety because all bowl-backed instruments slide around in the lap and are difficult to hold still. The comparisons that you list could be made with many other instruments, even wind instruments, that have various different sizes, but the violin developed completely independently of the mandolin, and any similarities are purely from parallel development. Indeed, early mandolins had a variety of tunings, many derived from the tuning of the lute, which itself had several different tunings.
This is the point that I was making, that the current tuning of the mandolin probably arises from classical composers who were used to writing for the violin.
Yes, the mandola is tuned the same as the viola, but the mandocello and mandobass are recent, 20th century instruments.
- Alan Brookes
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- Alan Brookes
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Chas, I notice that you've used two pickups on the same strings, one near the nut and one near the bridge. Buddy Emmons mentioned experimenting with that at one time, and it has always tweaked my interest. As the player touches the strings with a tone bar, without any form of dampening, he divides the string into two sounding lengths, and, at the nodes, they would harmonise, whilst between them there would be a continual series of dischords, while one note slides up and the other down. Do have any recordings of this effect?chas smith wrote:...with pups on both ends of the neck....
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