What was your first lap steel?
Moderator: Brad Bechtel
- Brad Bechtel
- Moderator
- Posts: 8146
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
What was your first lap steel?
I saw this thread start up on another discussion and thought it would be interesting to find out - what was your first lap steel?
Mine was a Magnatone Varsity, bowling ball blue with matching amplifier. It cost me all of $25.00 at a garage sale in Norco, California. I played that thing to death - the amplifier was just loud enough to hold my own with every other kid with an amp.
I still have it, too!
------------------
Brad's Page of Steel
A web site devoted to acoustic & electric lap steel guitars
Mine was a Magnatone Varsity, bowling ball blue with matching amplifier. It cost me all of $25.00 at a garage sale in Norco, California. I played that thing to death - the amplifier was just loud enough to hold my own with every other kid with an amp.
I still have it, too!
------------------
Brad's Page of Steel
A web site devoted to acoustic & electric lap steel guitars
-
- Posts: 592
- Joined: 21 Feb 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Auburn, CA, USA
- Contact:
My first one that my parents bought me when I was 10 was a "Gay Chord". It had a formica top and a real cheap pickup. And a Magnatone amp with sparkles. The Gay Chord logo was 8 decals of the letters. It had a Fender case. My friend Dave Nelson had one too. He recently saw one in a music store in Petaluma. I still have mine.
-
- Posts: 2107
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Nashville, TN USA
My brother bought my first lap steel in 1955. It was a Gibson, BR 6...one of the black ones with numbered frets, and a soft imitation alligator case. I think he paid $35 for it, and I used his amp. Don't know whatever happened to it, but a couple of years ago, I bought one just like it off EBay for $280. Is that inflation?
------------------
Billy Easton
Casa Grande, AZ
Where the Sun Always Shines
------------------
Billy Easton
Casa Grande, AZ
Where the Sun Always Shines
- Rick Aiello
- Posts: 4701
- Joined: 11 Sep 2000 12:01 am
- Location: Berryville, VA USA
- Contact:
- Doug Beaumier
- Posts: 15642
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Northampton, MA
- Contact:
Fender Champ. Got it for nothing, sold it for $30
Billy... according to this inflation chart that $35 spent in 1955 is equal to $229.98 in todays dollars, so you didn't do all that bad with your Ebay purchase.
------------------
<font size=-1>My Site | Doug's Free Tab</font>
Billy... according to this inflation chart that $35 spent in 1955 is equal to $229.98 in todays dollars, so you didn't do all that bad with your Ebay purchase.
------------------
<font size=-1>My Site | Doug's Free Tab</font>
- chas smith
- Posts: 5043
- Joined: 28 Feb 2001 1:01 am
- Location: Encino, CA, USA
-
- Posts: 957
- Joined: 23 Dec 1999 1:01 am
- Location: Pinconning, MI, USA
- CrowBear Schmitt
- Posts: 11624
- Joined: 8 Apr 2000 12:01 am
- Location: Ariege, - PairO'knees, - France
- Contact:
I feel pretty lucky. My first lap steel
was my first guitar. It was a 6-string Bakelite Ric. My dad owned a few nightclubs here in Portland, and since the clubs were close to home, the musicians would usually store their equipment at the house rather than the club. I was an only-child (6-10 years old) and I had a blast.
That was 1961-65 and today no one knows what happened to that guitar. Then a few years ago I found one just like it hanging on the wall at Days Music and bought it even though it didn't have a case. I never could get in touch with the guy who sold it to them but did learn that it came out of a attic in NE Portland. The guy who found it say that it was dirty and submerged it in a tub of water to clean it. Since NE Portland was where I grew up, I'm thinking there's a fair chance I have my first guitar back. The bath didn't seem to bother it a bit, and it sounds just like it's supposed to.
Jeff Jacks
Portland, Ore
was my first guitar. It was a 6-string Bakelite Ric. My dad owned a few nightclubs here in Portland, and since the clubs were close to home, the musicians would usually store their equipment at the house rather than the club. I was an only-child (6-10 years old) and I had a blast.
That was 1961-65 and today no one knows what happened to that guitar. Then a few years ago I found one just like it hanging on the wall at Days Music and bought it even though it didn't have a case. I never could get in touch with the guy who sold it to them but did learn that it came out of a attic in NE Portland. The guy who found it say that it was dirty and submerged it in a tub of water to clean it. Since NE Portland was where I grew up, I'm thinking there's a fair chance I have my first guitar back. The bath didn't seem to bother it a bit, and it sounds just like it's supposed to.
Jeff Jacks
Portland, Ore
-
- Posts: 1902
- Joined: 29 Jan 1999 1:01 am
- Location: killeen,tx usa * R.I.P.
-
- Posts: 1805
- Joined: 13 May 2001 12:01 am
- Location: Tyler, Texas
- Contact:
-
- Posts: 1053
- Joined: 27 Jul 2000 12:01 am
- Location: Columbia, MO, USA
- Erv Niehaus
- Posts: 26797
- Joined: 10 Aug 2001 12:01 am
- Location: Litchfield, MN, USA
A cheap no-name spanish guitar with a raised nut. It was part of a 72 week Hawaiian guitar course that "Waldrop Studios" in Tampa, Fla was selling in 1946. They had an excellent steel guitarist and musician who taught the course.
I loved every minute of that course. Sadly, I did not get to complete it. He used only tab. After about 20 weeks, my mother took my little brother and I and ran off to Chicago and married another man. As a bribe to me to keep me from staying with my dad, she promised that my "hawaiian" guitar training would continue.
It did, but not in a good way. The teacher was a Juliard School graduate. "E tunings" were "hillbilly" and tab was NOT to be done. She taught strictly musical theory AND site reading. Oh! did I ever learn musical theory. In time, I could spell ANY chord there was and sight read instantly anything she put in front of me. Only one problem, I did not learn to play well. That was NOT part of the course. Musical theory WAS.
So, if you play well and do not know a note of music you are a thousand times better off than the reverse way. Although playing well AND knowing music is best, of course.
And that is the rest of the....
carl
I loved every minute of that course. Sadly, I did not get to complete it. He used only tab. After about 20 weeks, my mother took my little brother and I and ran off to Chicago and married another man. As a bribe to me to keep me from staying with my dad, she promised that my "hawaiian" guitar training would continue.
It did, but not in a good way. The teacher was a Juliard School graduate. "E tunings" were "hillbilly" and tab was NOT to be done. She taught strictly musical theory AND site reading. Oh! did I ever learn musical theory. In time, I could spell ANY chord there was and sight read instantly anything she put in front of me. Only one problem, I did not learn to play well. That was NOT part of the course. Musical theory WAS.
So, if you play well and do not know a note of music you are a thousand times better off than the reverse way. Although playing well AND knowing music is best, of course.
And that is the rest of the....
carl
-
- Posts: 422
- Joined: 6 Jan 2000 1:01 am
- Location: Oakland, Ca.
-
- Posts: 116
- Joined: 26 Aug 1999 12:01 am
- Location: Oak Forest, Illinois, USA
- Contact:
- Kenny Dail
- Posts: 2638
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Kinston, N.C. R.I.P.
- Jeff Strouse
- Posts: 1628
- Joined: 20 Apr 2002 12:01 am
- Location: Jacksonville, Florida, USA