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Posted: 11 Jan 2001 7:50 pm
by John Sims
Thanks Fred!

More to come. Send me your e-mail. I have some good stuff

Mine is <c3i@netside.net>


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Regards,

John

Steelin' is a way of life!

My PSG website-Carter SD-12-U, 8p/5k, Nashville 1000


Posted: 12 Jan 2001 6:12 pm
by John Sims
[tab]
E9th tuning

1_____________________________________________________
2_____________________________________________________
3_________10B-10__10~__________10B-10~________10B-10__
4__10-10C_10C-10__10~___10-10C_10C-10~_10-10C_10C-10__
5__10-10C_______________10-10C_________10-10C_________
6_____________________________________________________
7_____________________________________________________
8_____________________________________________________
9_____________________________________________________
10____________________________________________________

[/tab]

This lick with the the b and c pedals is played over the 6m-4-5 in the key of G. Up tempo...

Posted: 13 Feb 2001 3:11 pm
by Chuck Hall
Great work folks. Image

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MCI D10 8/4 and ZumSteel S10
Nashville 400

Posted: 11 Apr 2003 7:36 am
by Dave Van Allen
bumping up a "classic" thread newbies may have missed...

Posted: 11 Apr 2003 3:36 pm
by ebb
mooney
repeat fast to taste
pedal goes in/out as bar goes back/forth

[tab]
1 _______________
2 _______________
3 _7______5______
4 _7______5______
5 ___7~5A___5A~7_
6 _______________
7 _______________
8 _______________
9 _______________
10_______________
[/tab]

Posted: 18 Apr 2003 2:13 pm
by Sonny Jenkins
There's some good stuff here for old and young alike. Let's keep it going

Posted: 13 Mar 2005 1:53 pm
by John Lockney
This is a great thread from 2 years ago. Lots of intros, endings, riffs and fills for a newbie to work on.

I've been playing along with songs on CD by grabbing notes out of the chords, it sounds OK but I'd like to add some classic riffs to my "tool-box".

Got any more ?

Posted: 14 Mar 2005 9:00 am
by Phil Sikes
Thanks for bringing this one back to life folks. Aa a new (about 2 months) player I have really enjoyed this thread as a way of learning some licks to go along with the chords. Please keep these little tidbits coming along.

Also, thanks to everyone who recommended the Joe Wright Techniques book. Those exercises were just what I needed to get going..

Thanks - Phil

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MSA U12 Classic

Posted: 14 Apr 2005 12:07 pm
by John Poston
I'm bumping this again since I rediscovered it in a search and it's useful.

Most of these standbys are the for country stuff.

Anyone have any favorite standby rock/blues licks as well?

Posted: 16 Apr 2005 8:27 am
by Sonny Miller
When you try the Mooney lick above, use the Bflat lower on the 5 string LKV instead of the A pedal for a different hot lick. I would say this will prabably be one of your best licks once you get it down. Yes, it is still Mooney all the way. Going from fret 3 to fret one is a G lick, and works good going down 2 frets from the open position.
More info from Sonny; moved here
This is like Ebbs lick above except you use your Bflat LKV on it instead of the A pedal.
I tried to explain the Mooney lick to someone and he thought i said to use the LKV in stead of the A pedal. And this is what we ended up with. Quite a good lick! Naturally do it faster as you learn it.

It sounds real good , how about comparing these two good licks. With some feedback from you guys?

Please move this to Sonny Jenkens discussion below. Use it as in the Ebb lick<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Ricky Davis on 16 April 2005 at 09:45 AM.]</p></FONT>

Posted: 21 Apr 2005 4:37 am
by Pat Kelly
^

Posted: 21 Apr 2005 6:39 am
by James Kent
Thanks to one and all on this post, just what new steelers crave- stuff that works.
My hat is off!

Posted: 21 Apr 2005 1:12 pm
by Jack Latimer
Wow! Thank you to everyone who has taken the time to post the licks over the years. When this post started I didn't own a guitar, but thanks to the posting popping up again I can sure benefit from it today. It's funny just the other day I thought if only I knew a couple of licks that could get me through. It's comforting to know that's how many of you got going as well. From a new player (or someone trying to play), thanks again!

Posted: 2 Sep 2016 5:09 pm
by Dave Dube
Bump.

Posted: 2 Sep 2016 11:51 pm
by Josephus Vroomans
Great thread!

Posted: 6 Sep 2016 7:32 pm
by Jim Fogarty
These are all killer.....thanks, guys!

In addition to Dick Sexton's "Beginner Notes", does anyone else know a good source of these bite-sized, standard licks? Happy to buy a book or DVD, too....doesn't have o be free.

As a guy who's a pro player on other axes, just learning PSG, I get a lot out of these.

Greg Cutshaw site

Posted: 14 Sep 2016 8:40 am
by steve takacs
Jim, try Greg Cutshaw's site. Some gems there. There are some "bite-sized" licks as well as "full meals".

Thanks to guys like Greg, Dick Sexton, Frank Freniere, Jeff Garden, etc. who give us their time and steel guitar knowledge and at no cost, I might add. Steve

Posted: 21 Dec 2020 6:14 am
by Andrew Goulet
I've been working on my fundamentals and picking apart moves to see why they work, and found this thread. Lots of well-worn licks here, and it's very helpful for someone like me with holes in their knowledge. There was some discussion on here about compiling a "lick library", and I like that idea. Not necessarily to encourage thinking in licks or thoughtless imitation, but as a practical way to demonstrate why these licks sound consonant and using that knowledge of pedal and bar moves to write one's own parts.

For example, a beginner might know that you can work the B and C pedals on the open position to play a fill, but might not know why that works. A tab of a classic lick along with a short explanation could begin to connect those dots for someone.

Posted: 10 Jan 2021 11:50 am
by Dirk Edwards
Thanks from The guitarded here in Idaho!

Sound Files???

Posted: 13 Jan 2021 3:46 pm
by Mike Marsh
This is a great thread, but imagine if everybody added a sample clip of the licks so Newbies to get it with the right phrasing????
Thanks Gents!!!
Mike

Posted: 7 Mar 2021 8:29 am
by Harold Bullard
The first 2 licks I ever learned immediately after learning how to put my guitar together, were taught to me by Jeff Newman, circa 1979. During the "bunkhouse" days. One pedals up and one pedals down over any key, 1, 4 & 5 chords and a 4/4 rhythm track. I played these til my fingers hurt. I know there is a lot of guys out there that remember these.

[tab]
2|___________________________________
3|__3B~~3____________________________
4|_________3_______________3~~~~~~3__
5|____________3_________3~~~~~~~~3___
6|_______________3~~3B~~~~~~~~~~3____
7|___________________________________

3|_______________________________________
4|__10~~10___10~~10___10~~~10____________
5|__10~~10A__10~~10A__10A~~10__10A__10A__
6|_____________________________10B__10B__
7|_______________________________________
[/tab]

Posted: 1 Jun 2022 8:25 am
by Eric Ibarra
3 months into the steel and wanted to see what I could add to the toolbox.

Thank y'all for posting all these years. Can't wait to try these out.


Eric