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Posted: 15 Dec 2001 8:03 am
by Mike Weirauch
Buddy Emmons with ET at the Opry. I'm surprised I was old enough at the time to remember it! Image

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 8:33 am
by Richard Sinkler
Would have to be either Rusty Young (Poco) or Jerry Garcia (New Riders of the Purple Sage).

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Carter D10 9p/10k
Richard Sinkler


Posted: 15 Dec 2001 8:45 am
by Darvin Willhoite
It was Dave Musgrave around 1970 at the Tulsa State Fair in Tulsa, Ok. Dave and Shot Jackson were travelling around promoting Sho Bud guitars. I had heard E9 playing and liked it but when I heard Dave cut loose on C6, man I was hooked for life. Now, 31 years and thousands of dollars later, I still can't play like that, but I'm still trying.

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Darvin Willhoite
Riva Ridge Recording

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 8:51 am
by Jay Ganz
Back in the early 60's I saw some guy
playing outdoors with a band at a
stock car race track. I had never seen
a steel up until then.
10 years after that, I decided to
try & figure out how to play one.
I'm still tryin'!!!

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<a href=http://members.localnet.com/~jsganz/66EmE9.mp3></a>

<a href=http://members.localnet.com/~jsganz/65EmE9a.mp3><font face=BinnerD>"Quick Lick" </a> </font> <font size=1> (mp3 audio)
<font face=loosiescript>



Posted: 15 Dec 2001 8:55 am
by Marc Muller
Buddy Cage at the Capital Theater in NJ 1973.

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 9:40 am
by Al Udeen
I was pumping gas at a station in El Monte, Ca. in 52 or 53, 1/2 a block from the El Monte Legion, where I went and saw Speedy West playing a Bigsby with a leather panel covering the front & the pedal rods, He was playing in Cliffie Stones Band, with Jimmy Bryant, & Tennesse Ernie Ford, Molly Bee, Joanie O'Brian, & others. At the time, I didn't know a steel from an ear of corn, Funny how I wound up playing steel & still do! au

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 10:03 am
by Don Walters
I think the man's name was Don Worden (sp?) with Porter Wagonner in the middle 50's. Porter's big hit at the time was Satisfied Mind and the steel man was part of the trio. He played standing up and used the "Bud Isaacs" lick through the entire performance. I can still remember the chills from hearing it live for first time!

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Don Walters
Carter D-10, 8p/6k
Session 500 with Lemay Mod



Posted: 15 Dec 2001 10:09 am
by Gene Jones
For Jim Ashton: I heard about Anderson, but he had left just before I arrived in Okinawa and that left only me to play all those jobs seven days a week.....my main question is: did you know Randy Woods, a fine standard guitar player that came back to Okinawa to live and play music after discharge from the Army. We worked together there for about two years...if you need a memory jog there is a picture of him in the "Misc Bands" page of my website. I saw him one time after that playing in a band on television in Oregon but could never get in touch with him....hope you can help. www.genejones.com

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 11:36 am
by Paul Graupp
The summer Webb Pierce put out Slowly, Carl Smith was appearing at Himmelreiches Grove in PA near my home. Someone was playing a Bigsby with a piece of masking tape over someone elses name on the guitar. I wasn't able to catch his name but that evening, Hank Williams SR dropped by and sang a few songs himself. They were on their way back to Nashville from another show. It was surely a night to remember !! Image Image Image

Regards, Paul

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 2:51 pm
by Jim Bob Sedgwick
Jimmy Day with Ray Price, El Paso texas at the Coliseum, 1959. Song 24th Hour. Been a steel addict since that time.

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 3:37 pm
by Bill Myrick
WOW !!!! Talk about interesting history-- this thread is becoming loaded with it !! Great reading !!! Image

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 4:19 pm
by Frank Parish
It was Paul Carry (or Carie) in Vincennes, Indiana September 1979. Good player too.

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 5:34 pm
by Pat Burns
..if memory serves me (it was the 70's afterall!) it was a twofer..a free concert in New York's Central Park in 1972 where I saw both Buddy Cage with The New Riders of The Purple Sage and Bobby Black with Commander Cody and The Lost Planet Airmen...then when I got back from the Army in Germany, it was Rusty Young with Poco at the Capitol Theater in Passaic, N.J, that would've been in the spring of '75....good stuff back in those days..

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 6:04 pm
by Ray Montee
They didn't have pedals when I saw my first live steel guitarist.....

however, Bob Meadows.....toured thro' this isolated, culturally lacking region with the Tex Ritter contingent. He was playing a Bigsby at the time and did a knock-out job.
Enjoyed his fine MERLE TRAVIS.....work.

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 6:16 pm
by Gary Morrison
Let's see....Bill....here's another one with Buddy Emmons. This would be about 1962. I was eleven years old. My dad took me to the Emmons Guitar Factory in Graham, NC and Buddy and the guys from Ray Price's band were jammin' in the front showroom. I was eleven years old then. Ronald Lashley was there. I'll never forget it.

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 6:40 pm
by Mel Culbreath
This will really date me, but the first pro I ever saw live was "Little" Roy Wiggins with Eddy Arnold at the Victory Theater in Tampa, FL in the late 1940's.

Mel(older than dirt)Culbreath

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 6:53 pm
by Jack Stoner
I mentioned the first "pedal" steel I saw. But if we are talking steel players, period. The first live steel player I saw was Leonard Zinn and the 101 Ranch Boys.

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 7:55 pm
by George Rozak
Although there were others earlier, Pete Drake - circa 1965 - on a package show at the Arie Crown Theater in Chicago is the first that I can actually remember, probably because he was given a couple of solo spots on the show.


Posted: 15 Dec 2001 8:26 pm
by Roger Shackelton
In May 1963 I was in the Army, stationed at Fort Chaffee, Ark. I went to Nashville to see the Grand Ole Opry, prior to going overseas. I saw Pete Drake on the Opry and also later at the Earnest Tubb Record Shop on The Midnight Jamboree.

I actually saw a steel player with Kitty Wells in Nov. 1960 at a Grand Ole Opry road show in Montevideo, Minnesota. I don't have any idea who it was.
Johnny & Jack, Bill Phillips and Marvin Rainwater were on the show with Kitty.

Roger


Posted: 15 Dec 2001 8:37 pm
by Merv Dawson
Bobby Garrett. Mint Club in Gladewater, Texas in 1952 with the Gene Wortham band.

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 11:26 pm
by Al Marcus
I might be dating myself, but the first steel player I saw in person was Alvino Rey in 1939 playing his Gibson Console Grande double 9 string.

He had a couple of wires on the side which he was already experimenting with pedals.

That really turned me on to Steel, I had to get one but mine had 8 strings on each neck. I missed that low E , he had.

Then in 1941 I saw him play his new Gibson 6 pedal Electra-Harp, and that turned me on to have to get one of those.He had E6 tuning with E as no 1, and a Low E, as 9nth string.Mine came with 8.......al Image Image

Posted: 15 Dec 2001 11:48 pm
by Dyke Corson
Julian Tharpe at Demons Den mid 70s Playing his 14 String Sho-Bud. I bought the Jet Age album from him at the gig. Got my first steel not long after that.

Posted: 16 Dec 2001 11:12 am
by slick
Julian Tharpe,Birmingham Alabama in the 70s.


Wayne

Posted: 16 Dec 2001 11:20 am
by Jerry Hayes
I'd have to say it was either Speedy West with Cliffie Stone in the early 50's or Bob White with Hank Thompson. I can't remember which I saw first. I was visiting my grandmother in Kansas one summer and they had a concert which they called the Battle of the Bands. It featured Lefty Frizzell and his band and Hank Thompson and the Brazos Valley Boys. I remember that Lefty's steel man was standing up with no pedals while Hank's (Bob W) was sitting down at his Bigsby. A year or two later I saw Ralph Mooney and he changed my life.

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Have a good 'un! JH U-12



Posted: 16 Dec 2001 11:47 am
by Ernie Renn
Buddy Charleton and our own illustrious Smiley Roberts. I think Charleton was first, but I don't remember for sure.

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My best,
Ernie
Image
The Official Buddy Emmons Website
www.buddyemmons.com