Pedal 4 C6th neck?
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Pedal 4 C6th neck?
I was wondering what you guys use pedal 4 for. as long as I have been playing I've never seen much tab that even addresses this pedal. I know what it does just can't find much use for it. Should I switch it to something else? If so what?
Billy
Billy
- Larry Bell
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If you're short on knee levers you might raise one or both A's to Bb instead of B. That change is usually on a lever and you will have to use both feet to get all the useful combinations, but I like that change better than the straight Ma6 to Ma7 change. It gives you a C7 open, no (other) pedals, Fsus4 with the 6th pedal, Daug7 with P5, and lots of other stuff.
But, with all that said, Buddy Emmons still has that change (both A's to B) on his guitar and has as long as I can remember. There's GOTTA be a reason. I'm sure others will come up with some, but I offer this one alternative that I've found useful.
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<small>Larry Bell - email: larry@larrybell.org - gigs - Home Page
2000 Fessenden S-12 8x8, 1969 Emmons S-12 6x6, 1971 Dobro
But, with all that said, Buddy Emmons still has that change (both A's to B) on his guitar and has as long as I can remember. There's GOTTA be a reason. I'm sure others will come up with some, but I offer this one alternative that I've found useful.
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<small>Larry Bell - email: larry@larrybell.org - gigs - Home Page
2000 Fessenden S-12 8x8, 1969 Emmons S-12 6x6, 1971 Dobro
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You can sit and watch C6 player after player hour after hour, and rarely if EVER see them engage the C6 standard pedal four. This includes Buddy!
BUT they do engage it now and then. And when they do, like BE or Herby Wallace, et al, it gives a sound not possible with any other change.
One top player said in his seminar once, "it is the most useless pedal EVER put on a PSG!"
Maybe so, but the standard D-10 PSG is still shipped with it. I like the change a lot. I use it more than others probably. The reason for this is, I can't stand knowing there is a change I am not using. As a result I have found some changes that sound good to me.
So, if you have this change on your guitar, why don't you try using it more; and who knows what you might find?
May God richly bless you all,
carl
BUT they do engage it now and then. And when they do, like BE or Herby Wallace, et al, it gives a sound not possible with any other change.
One top player said in his seminar once, "it is the most useless pedal EVER put on a PSG!"
Maybe so, but the standard D-10 PSG is still shipped with it. I like the change a lot. I use it more than others probably. The reason for this is, I can't stand knowing there is a change I am not using. As a result I have found some changes that sound good to me.
So, if you have this change on your guitar, why don't you try using it more; and who knows what you might find?
May God richly bless you all,
carl
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No, it is not the most useless pedal on the steel guitar, although for a player who doesn't know how or when, or chooses not to use it in his style, it might be. I use it all the time. But then again, "...I'm old fashioned..."
I use pedal 4 much more than I use pedal 8, for example.
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I use pedal 4 much more than I use pedal 8, for example.
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Jeff, sure, be happy to.
First, there are several Bobby White/Hank Thompson style cliche's that use that pedal, either by itself or with pedal 5. By itself, it's a M7 lick; with pedal 5, it's a chord moving from a 9th to a 13th chord by moving the 5th tone (s. 4) up a whole step.
The whole-step raise also allows a half-step juxtaposition with s. 3, great for melodic passages where a half-step is needed, like between scalar steps 3 and 4, 5 and #5, 6 and 7b, or M7 and root. It's the only pedal/lever that allows us a contiguous half-step on different strings.
One example of how I use it melodically: I want to play a diatonic speed lick from the 6th up to the octave 6th tone and back down, like in Orange Blossom Special. It's analgous to using the mis-named chromatic (actually diatonic) strings on E9.
<font face="monospace" size="3"><pre>Key of Bb
1____________________________3__________
2________________________________3______
3________________________3______________
4_______________3---3##_________________
5______3b---3___________________________
6___3___________________________________
1______3_________________________________
2___3____________________________________
3__________3_____________________________
4______________3##---3___________________
5________________________3---3b__________
6_________________________________3______
</pre></font>
Also, it gives us a unison with s.3 lowered with a lever. When used pentatonically with s.6 as root, in a blues scale, it raises the scalar 4th tone to the 5th.
I use the pedal kinetically when just free improvising as well.
One more thing. This pedal does not replace the 1/2 tone lower on s.3, since that note there affords us a different set of melodic opportunities though it gives us the same note as p.4; neither does it replace the whole tone raise on s.4 with p.7, which has its own uses as well.
I'm sure I can think of other more specific things later, but this is what comes off the top of my head right now.
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<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Herb Steiner on 23 January 2003 at 11:22 AM.]</p></FONT><FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Herb Steiner on 23 January 2003 at 11:23 AM.]</p></FONT><FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Herb Steiner on 23 January 2003 at 11:30 AM.]</p></FONT>
First, there are several Bobby White/Hank Thompson style cliche's that use that pedal, either by itself or with pedal 5. By itself, it's a M7 lick; with pedal 5, it's a chord moving from a 9th to a 13th chord by moving the 5th tone (s. 4) up a whole step.
The whole-step raise also allows a half-step juxtaposition with s. 3, great for melodic passages where a half-step is needed, like between scalar steps 3 and 4, 5 and #5, 6 and 7b, or M7 and root. It's the only pedal/lever that allows us a contiguous half-step on different strings.
One example of how I use it melodically: I want to play a diatonic speed lick from the 6th up to the octave 6th tone and back down, like in Orange Blossom Special. It's analgous to using the mis-named chromatic (actually diatonic) strings on E9.
<font face="monospace" size="3"><pre>Key of Bb
1____________________________3__________
2________________________________3______
3________________________3______________
4_______________3---3##_________________
5______3b---3___________________________
6___3___________________________________
1______3_________________________________
2___3____________________________________
3__________3_____________________________
4______________3##---3___________________
5________________________3---3b__________
6_________________________________3______
</pre></font>
Also, it gives us a unison with s.3 lowered with a lever. When used pentatonically with s.6 as root, in a blues scale, it raises the scalar 4th tone to the 5th.
I use the pedal kinetically when just free improvising as well.
One more thing. This pedal does not replace the 1/2 tone lower on s.3, since that note there affords us a different set of melodic opportunities though it gives us the same note as p.4; neither does it replace the whole tone raise on s.4 with p.7, which has its own uses as well.
I'm sure I can think of other more specific things later, but this is what comes off the top of my head right now.
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<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Herb Steiner on 23 January 2003 at 11:22 AM.]</p></FONT><FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Herb Steiner on 23 January 2003 at 11:23 AM.]</p></FONT><FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Herb Steiner on 23 January 2003 at 11:30 AM.]</p></FONT>
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One more thing I'd forgotten: a chromatic lick useful for something like "Flight Of the Bumblebee."
<font face="monospace" size="3"><pre>
2____________________________________________
3___13______13_______11______9______11_____13
4______13##____11##______9##___11##____13##__
5____________________________________________
</pre></font>
This lick must be played alternating fingers and blazing fast to sound correct. But moving the position up or down a fourth can give you the theme to "Bumblebee."
Carl... Thanks mucho, amigo. Any day that I can be complimented by gentlemen like you and Keith Hilton (on another thread) is a great day for me. Come to Texas for the Jamboree, "Big C"
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<font face="monospace" size="3"><pre>
2____________________________________________
3___13______13_______11______9______11_____13
4______13##____11##______9##___11##____13##__
5____________________________________________
</pre></font>
This lick must be played alternating fingers and blazing fast to sound correct. But moving the position up or down a fourth can give you the theme to "Bumblebee."
Carl... Thanks mucho, amigo. Any day that I can be complimented by gentlemen like you and Keith Hilton (on another thread) is a great day for me. Come to Texas for the Jamboree, "Big C"
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- Jeff Evans
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Jeff,
Here is my take on that. Lowering of the A to Ab is used with just about everything. So it is best I think to have it on LKL as BE has it. It can even split with Pedal 7 for a C9th chord very well.
If you check BE's C6 copedent, it pretty much says it all about placement of the knee levers. I can think of ONE more knee lever that is needed, and I would put in on LKV and raise the 6th string a half a tone.
Buddy does not have this, but to me it completes the standard C6 tuning to my way of thinking. IE:
LKL lowers 4 a half a tone.
LKV raises 6 a half a tone.
LKR raises 4 a half a tone.
RKL lowers 3 a half a tone.
RKR raises 3 and 7 a half a tone.
NOTE: If there is room, I would add a 2nd LKL and lower the 5th string a whole tone. This is a fantastic change and fits in great with jazz; when used probably with the correct grips.
Coupled with the standard pedals 5 thru 8, this C6 copedent would lack little IMO, especially if the first string was a D instead of the standard G note.
This of course is based on the fact that MOST PSG players use C6 for western swing and/or jamming.
God bless you all,
carl
Here is my take on that. Lowering of the A to Ab is used with just about everything. So it is best I think to have it on LKL as BE has it. It can even split with Pedal 7 for a C9th chord very well.
If you check BE's C6 copedent, it pretty much says it all about placement of the knee levers. I can think of ONE more knee lever that is needed, and I would put in on LKV and raise the 6th string a half a tone.
Buddy does not have this, but to me it completes the standard C6 tuning to my way of thinking. IE:
LKL lowers 4 a half a tone.
LKV raises 6 a half a tone.
LKR raises 4 a half a tone.
RKL lowers 3 a half a tone.
RKR raises 3 and 7 a half a tone.
NOTE: If there is room, I would add a 2nd LKL and lower the 5th string a whole tone. This is a fantastic change and fits in great with jazz; when used probably with the correct grips.
Coupled with the standard pedals 5 thru 8, this C6 copedent would lack little IMO, especially if the first string was a D instead of the standard G note.
This of course is based on the fact that MOST PSG players use C6 for western swing and/or jamming.
God bless you all,
carl
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....(quote).. I use it all the time. But then again, "...I'm old fashioned..."
Herb, that makes at least two of us that use the #4 regularly! www.genejones.com
Herb, that makes at least two of us that use the #4 regularly! www.genejones.com
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Carl,
Where did you see BE's C6 pedal set-up? Last time I seen it the RKR was lowering the 3rd string on the back neck. I thought everybody had that change on there, it's one that comes standard with only five knees. I just took that pedal 4 change off mine this week. I have a double raise guitar and was out of holes because of the half tone and full tone raises on the 4th string so I use it to raise the 6th string a half tone. I probably won't use it any more there either.<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Frank Parish on 24 January 2003 at 10:58 AM.]</p></FONT>
Where did you see BE's C6 pedal set-up? Last time I seen it the RKR was lowering the 3rd string on the back neck. I thought everybody had that change on there, it's one that comes standard with only five knees. I just took that pedal 4 change off mine this week. I have a double raise guitar and was out of holes because of the half tone and full tone raises on the 4th string so I use it to raise the 6th string a half tone. I probably won't use it any more there either.<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Frank Parish on 24 January 2003 at 10:58 AM.]</p></FONT>
Frank, Carl's description is correct. Buddy has always had his C-B on LKR in every chart I've ever seen. Here's a link to his current setup:
http://www.buddyemmons.com/info.htm
http://www.buddyemmons.com/info.htm
- Larry Bell
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Frank,
It's listed here
As Mike Cass told me, RIGHT to RAISE, LEFT to LOWER -- 3rd string on rt knee -- 4th on left
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<small>Larry Bell - email: larry@larrybell.org - gigs - Home Page
2000 Fessenden S-12 8x8, 1969 Emmons S-12 6x6, 1971 Dobro<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Larry Bell on 24 January 2003 at 06:29 AM.]</p></FONT>
It's listed here
As Mike Cass told me, RIGHT to RAISE, LEFT to LOWER -- 3rd string on rt knee -- 4th on left
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<small>Larry Bell - email: larry@larrybell.org - gigs - Home Page
2000 Fessenden S-12 8x8, 1969 Emmons S-12 6x6, 1971 Dobro<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Larry Bell on 24 January 2003 at 06:29 AM.]</p></FONT>
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I understand its use on the 4th string, and I do use it a fair amount there, but 8th string raise always feels awkward to me. When I want that note, I usually want it on the 7th string (C), and switching to the 8th string is a nuisance.
Does anyone lower their 7th string to B on that pedal instead of raising the 8th string?
Herb, what are your uses for the low A to B change?
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Does anyone lower their 7th string to B on that pedal instead of raising the 8th string?
Herb, what are your uses for the low A to B change?
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b0b
I use the 8th string raise in combination with p.5 for a blues/Chuck Berry rhythm vamp, such as
<font face="monospace" size="3"><pre>key of E
6____________________________________________
7____________________________2_____2_________
8_____2____2_____2##___2##___________________
9____________________________________________
10____2##__2##___2##___2##___2##___2##_______
6____________________________________________
7____________________________________________
8_____2##__2##____2____2_____2##___2##_______
9____________________________________________
10____2##__2##___2##___2##___2##___2##_______
</pre></font>
or this...
<font face="monospace" size="3"><pre>
6____________________________________________
7_______________________2____________________
8_________2_____2##____________2##_______2___
9____________________________________________
10____2##____2##____2##___2##______2##_______
</pre></font>
... played ad nauseum.
There are many variations of this rhythm pattern in blues and R&B music.
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<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER</p></FONT><FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Herb Steiner on 24 January 2003 at 11:48 AM.]</p></FONT>
I use the 8th string raise in combination with p.5 for a blues/Chuck Berry rhythm vamp, such as
<font face="monospace" size="3"><pre>key of E
6____________________________________________
7____________________________2_____2_________
8_____2____2_____2##___2##___________________
9____________________________________________
10____2##__2##___2##___2##___2##___2##_______
6____________________________________________
7____________________________________________
8_____2##__2##____2____2_____2##___2##_______
9____________________________________________
10____2##__2##___2##___2##___2##___2##_______
</pre></font>
or this...
<font face="monospace" size="3"><pre>
6____________________________________________
7_______________________2____________________
8_________2_____2##____________2##_______2___
9____________________________________________
10____2##____2##____2##___2##______2##_______
</pre></font>
... played ad nauseum.
There are many variations of this rhythm pattern in blues and R&B music.
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<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER</p></FONT><FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Herb Steiner on 24 January 2003 at 11:48 AM.]</p></FONT>
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