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Who Plays Spanish Guitar with a Slide Bar
Posted: 2 Jun 2016 11:46 am
by Alan Brookes
Just a nylon-strung classical guitar with the tuners inverted, a high nut and bridge. It has a sweet tone totally unlike a Dobro or a Weissenborn. You should try it. Any classical guitar can be converted, and the conversion back to its original state takes less time than changing strings. In fact you can change the set-up without even changing the strings. Just disconnect them at the machine head and reconnect them after the tuners have been turned round. The tuners go straight back into their original holes and even the screw holes line up.
Posted: 2 Jun 2016 12:08 pm
by Jim Mckay
Hi Alan.
Like to hear how it sounds. Are you playing a 6th tuning with it? I've always liked the sound of nylon strings.
Jim
Posted: 2 Jun 2016 1:35 pm
by Alan Brookes
I have it tuned to C6 at the moment. I must record a few clips. Actually, I've used it on several of my recordings, so I'll have to go back through my recording logs and pull one out.
Posted: 2 Jun 2016 2:51 pm
by Preston Briggs
Why turn the tuners "upside down"?
At least for experiments, it would seem like you can leave them in place.
Posted: 2 Jun 2016 2:53 pm
by Alan Brookes
Posted: 2 Jun 2016 3:28 pm
by Alan Brookes
Preston Briggs wrote:Why turn the tuners "upside down"?
At least for experiments, it would seem like you can leave them in place.
Yes, you can. There's no absolute need to. It's not like a pedal steel where turning the instrument upside-down is inconvenient. Why bother to turn the tuners upside down? Well, why have the tuners turned upside-down on
any guitar that you play on your lap? It's just convenience. I have several nylon-strung guitars, and since I intend to leave this one strung up to be played with a tone bar, I went to the trouble of moving them round. It only takes a few minutes.
Here's a conundrem to mull over. Since there's nothing made of steel on the guitar, and I'm playing it with a ceramic bar, is it still a "steel guitar"?
Posted: 2 Jun 2016 3:54 pm
by Preston Briggs
Alan Brookes wrote:Preston Briggs wrote:Why turn the tuners "upside down"?
At least for experiments, it would seem like you can leave them in place.
Yes, you can. There's no absolute need to. It's not like a pedal steel where turning the instrument upside-down is inconvenient. Why bother to turn the tuners upside down? Well, why have the tuners turned upside-down on
any guitar that you play on your lap? It's just convenience. I have several nylon-strung guitars, and since I intend to leave this one strung up to be played with a tone bar, I went to the trouble of moving them round. It only takes a few minutes.
Thanks. I was just wondering if there was deeper reason I wasn't seeing.
Posted: 5 Jun 2016 5:11 am
by Andy Henriksen
Alan Brookes wrote:
Here's a conundrem to mull over. Since there's nothing made of steel on the guitar, and I'm playing it with a ceramic bar, is it still a "steel guitar"?
Meh. People still call the center of a pencil "lead" even though it's graphite.
Posted: 6 Jun 2016 11:43 am
by Miles Lang
I played ukulele with a slide bar at the show yesterday, flipped up flat like a dobro. Does that count?
Posted: 6 Jun 2016 11:13 pm
by Jan Viljoen
Blokes,
Here's the news. ordinary six string guitar can be played with a bar.
Strings 1, 2 and 3 give minors, with the root on the first string.
Strings 2, 3 and 4 give majors but three frets lower than normal. Root on the 3rd.
Only problem is that one cant play slide well with the lowered strings, or one cant fret normal with raised strings.
The games are open.
Posted: 7 Jun 2016 11:39 am
by Alan Brookes
The guitar in the photograph has raised nut and bridge, Jan, and it's tuned in C6.
I wasn't advocating playing a regular guitar in standard guitar tuning, without raising the strings. You need a spare guitar which is never going to be played against the frets. It would be too much of a hassle to keep raising and lowering the strings.
Posted: 7 Jun 2016 11:53 am
by Jan Viljoen
Jip Alan, I agree.
Greetings.