Photos of Canadian Steeler Jimmy Roy at Britt Festival
Posted: 21 Jul 2001 3:46 pm
Hi group:
Here's a link to photos I took at the Everly Brothers concert last night (7/20/01) where the opening act was Big Sandy and the Fly Rite Boys.
http://www.rvi.net/~aldg/Aldg's%20Photos/With%20JVC%20GC-S1U/Britt%20Everly%20Brothers%20Concert/Big%20Sandy%20&%20Fly%20Right%20Boys/
The pedal steel player with the group was Canadian Jimmy Roy, playing a very old Sho-Bud pedal steel guitar with 4 pedals (I couldn't tell if there were any knee levers).
I talked to Roy after the concert and he told me he has the guitar tuned to a C-6th and E-13th tuning. He really a non-pedal player (who came to the instrument from the lead guitar) who is now exploring the use of pedals in his playing.
When I first saw his guitar on the stage (from around a distance of 300 to 400 feet), I didn't recognize it at all. I couldn't read the manufacturer's name on the front of it and at first I thought it was a non-pedal steel guitar.
It has one pedal at the far left, than a space or two, and finally three more pedals. I had to ask Roy what kind of pedal steel guitar he was playing to get the real answer. He said that his guitar was made by Buddy Emmons when he was with Sho-Bud. This puts the instrument around 1957+.
Roy replaced </b>Lee Jeffriess</b>, who according to my brief discussion with Big Sandy, left the band a few months ago to spend more time with his family.
Roy's playing was very exciting. He used a lot of open string/bar moving riffs and he also used various volume levels to play with the dynamic range of his instrument.
I heard a little Speedy West in his playing but much of his sound appears related to the way the instrument sounded in the 1940s and 1950s, before pedals. He is playing thru a Fender Twin-Reverb amp with a JBL speaker(s?).
He used his pedals sparingly in his playing and when you heard them, they sounded like the E-9th AB pedals going from a I to IV chord.
I believe that Jimmy Roy is a bright spot amoung the new breed of steel guitarists and I expect we'll be hearing much from him in the future.
I hope that you enjoy the photos.
------------------
Regards,
Al Gershen
Grants Pass, Oregon. USA
Fender 1000 (1957),
Fender PS 210 (1972) &
Gibson Electraharp EH-820
(1962)
Pictures of PS 210 &
EH-820 at http://www.rvi.net/~aldg
Here's a link to photos I took at the Everly Brothers concert last night (7/20/01) where the opening act was Big Sandy and the Fly Rite Boys.
http://www.rvi.net/~aldg/Aldg's%20Photos/With%20JVC%20GC-S1U/Britt%20Everly%20Brothers%20Concert/Big%20Sandy%20&%20Fly%20Right%20Boys/
The pedal steel player with the group was Canadian Jimmy Roy, playing a very old Sho-Bud pedal steel guitar with 4 pedals (I couldn't tell if there were any knee levers).
I talked to Roy after the concert and he told me he has the guitar tuned to a C-6th and E-13th tuning. He really a non-pedal player (who came to the instrument from the lead guitar) who is now exploring the use of pedals in his playing.
When I first saw his guitar on the stage (from around a distance of 300 to 400 feet), I didn't recognize it at all. I couldn't read the manufacturer's name on the front of it and at first I thought it was a non-pedal steel guitar.
It has one pedal at the far left, than a space or two, and finally three more pedals. I had to ask Roy what kind of pedal steel guitar he was playing to get the real answer. He said that his guitar was made by Buddy Emmons when he was with Sho-Bud. This puts the instrument around 1957+.
Roy replaced </b>Lee Jeffriess</b>, who according to my brief discussion with Big Sandy, left the band a few months ago to spend more time with his family.
Roy's playing was very exciting. He used a lot of open string/bar moving riffs and he also used various volume levels to play with the dynamic range of his instrument.
I heard a little Speedy West in his playing but much of his sound appears related to the way the instrument sounded in the 1940s and 1950s, before pedals. He is playing thru a Fender Twin-Reverb amp with a JBL speaker(s?).
He used his pedals sparingly in his playing and when you heard them, they sounded like the E-9th AB pedals going from a I to IV chord.
I believe that Jimmy Roy is a bright spot amoung the new breed of steel guitarists and I expect we'll be hearing much from him in the future.
I hope that you enjoy the photos.
------------------
Regards,
Al Gershen
Grants Pass, Oregon. USA
Fender 1000 (1957),
Fender PS 210 (1972) &
Gibson Electraharp EH-820
(1962)
Pictures of PS 210 &
EH-820 at http://www.rvi.net/~aldg