Regional Pedal Steel Styles
Posted: 27 Feb 2015 12:38 pm
Hey everyone! I'm new to the Forum, and it looks like an interesting place to spend a little time.
Even though I mainly specialize in guitars and piano, I've played pedal steel on stage and in the studio for more than 30 years, and I've owned everything from a ratty little MSA Red Baron to a solid ShoBud S-12 Universal. My favorite guitar was the simple BMI S-10 (3x4) that I foolishly let go when someone offered me three times the rare bargain price I paid for it. Oh well.
Right now, I have a BMI D-10 (8x4), and my sons, very talented guitar players, are learning to play it. But I'm not sure how much I can teach them that would get them work.
To me, as a working musician for all my adult life, there are three primary pedal steel styles: Nashville, Western Swing and West Coast. From what I hear, the Nashville sound uses big, lush chords with lots of color variations made possible by complex custom lever setups - while the Western Swing sound has some pedal pulls but mainly lives in jazzy lever licks on the C6 neck. The West Coast sound seems based on lots of pedal pulls; mimicking electric guitar string bends. (From what I've studied, even though Tom Brumley was tearing it up in the studios, players like Sneaky Pete and Jerry Garcia pioneered the breezy West Coast country/rock PSG style, and both commented on how their sound came from learning pretty much on their own without anyone formally teaching them.)
That one, the West Coast style, is the way I've always played; and the sound my sons want to learn. I've explained the other styles, with plenty of YouTube examples, and they're pretty set on the Sneaky Pete approach. It was popular in its day, but I'm just not sure how salable it would be for someone who specializes in PSG nowadays.
Yes, every musician - including steel players - has a unique approach to the techniques they develop and the ways they play the notes they choose. But their individual styles can almost always be, generally, categorized on one of these three primary regional styles.
I suspect there are other distinctive regional sounds I'm not aware of.
Thoughts?
Thanks!
Even though I mainly specialize in guitars and piano, I've played pedal steel on stage and in the studio for more than 30 years, and I've owned everything from a ratty little MSA Red Baron to a solid ShoBud S-12 Universal. My favorite guitar was the simple BMI S-10 (3x4) that I foolishly let go when someone offered me three times the rare bargain price I paid for it. Oh well.
Right now, I have a BMI D-10 (8x4), and my sons, very talented guitar players, are learning to play it. But I'm not sure how much I can teach them that would get them work.
To me, as a working musician for all my adult life, there are three primary pedal steel styles: Nashville, Western Swing and West Coast. From what I hear, the Nashville sound uses big, lush chords with lots of color variations made possible by complex custom lever setups - while the Western Swing sound has some pedal pulls but mainly lives in jazzy lever licks on the C6 neck. The West Coast sound seems based on lots of pedal pulls; mimicking electric guitar string bends. (From what I've studied, even though Tom Brumley was tearing it up in the studios, players like Sneaky Pete and Jerry Garcia pioneered the breezy West Coast country/rock PSG style, and both commented on how their sound came from learning pretty much on their own without anyone formally teaching them.)
That one, the West Coast style, is the way I've always played; and the sound my sons want to learn. I've explained the other styles, with plenty of YouTube examples, and they're pretty set on the Sneaky Pete approach. It was popular in its day, but I'm just not sure how salable it would be for someone who specializes in PSG nowadays.
Yes, every musician - including steel players - has a unique approach to the techniques they develop and the ways they play the notes they choose. But their individual styles can almost always be, generally, categorized on one of these three primary regional styles.
I suspect there are other distinctive regional sounds I'm not aware of.
Thoughts?
Thanks!