Author |
Topic: With AND without pedals |
Edward Meisse
From: Santa Rosa, California, USA
|
Posted 21 Mar 2009 1:11 pm
|
|
Do those of you who go both ways find that the two guitars compliment each other, are at odds with each other or have no effect on each other? I have found it difficult to go back and forth between electric and acoustic. Will I have a similar problem here? _________________ Amor vincit omnia |
|
|
![](templates/respond/images/spacer.gif) |
Ulric Utsi-Åhlin
From: Sweden
|
Posted 21 Mar 2009 3:12 pm
|
|
I don´t have a problem going from pedal to non-pedal,
or the other way around...for me it´s basically ONE
instrument,with the option of added flexibility,and
the more I play,the more I tend to rely on non-pedal
techniques,even on the PSG,my copedant is stripped-
down to essentials and,mostly,for the better.McUtsi |
|
|
![](templates/respond/images/spacer.gif) |
Ray Montee
From: Portland, Oregon (deceased)
|
Posted 23 Mar 2009 9:47 am One of my many problems seems to be.....................
|
|
String spacing seems to be my biggest bugaboo!
I've played both for years but seem to be having a serious problem making the transition when going back and forth........ I have to use a seperate pair of finger picks in order to make the reach on the wider spaced strings.......
and, when I get the wrong picks, I make a real spectacle out of myself. (TSGA SHOW)
One other point I've experienced. When you attend a steel jam....and all the other guys have pedal steels and you're sitting there with your little lap steel.........and after you've heard steel guitar rag some 30-40 different times by different players,
my mind tends to go to the PEDAL THINKING MODE and I have a difficult time trying to play the sounds I've just listened to with a non-pedal guitar. |
|
|
![](templates/respond/images/spacer.gif) |