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Topic: No more cute names. We need to call it a pedal steel guitar. |
Mike Perlowin
From: Los Angeles CA
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 9:02 am
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Last week I attended a great performance by one of our members who is a fabulous guitarist. Although this was primarily a guitar concert, the man brought his steel and played it on a couple of numbers. He played quite well but called our instrument an "electric cheese slicer."
The problem is that there were people in the audience who had never seen a steel before, and who didn't and presumably still don’t know what it is.
I think we need to tell our audiences that our instrument is called a pedal steel guitar, and not some cute or humorous name.
When my classical music trio performs, I always give a very short (20-30 seconds) lecture, telling the audiences that it's called a pedal steel guitar, that it's a steel guitar because it's traditionally played with a steel bar (at which point I mention that my bar is made from a different material) and that it's a pedal steel guitar because it's played in part be depressing the pedals and moving the knee levers.
Then I play the 5th string and open and them hit the pedal so they can hear the pedal change, followed by hitting the 4th and working the E raise and lower knee levers. I also mention that they won't be able to see my feet move, but they can watch my knees to see how it works.
Since we play for classical music audiences who are unfamiliar with our instrument, these people really appreciate the brief explanation. (The key is keeping it as brief as possible.) _________________ Please visit my web site and Soundcloud page and listen to the music posted there.
http://www.mikeperlowin.com http://soundcloud.com/mike-perlowin |
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Herb Steiner
From: Spicewood TX 78669
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 9:08 am
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Tell a player of an electric guitar that he plays a "canoe paddle." That oughta shut him up.
Actually, an electric guitar could function as a canoe paddle much more effectively than a steel guitar could as a cheese slicer. _________________ My rig: Infinity and Telonics.
Son, we live in a world with walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with steel guitars. Who's gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinberg? |
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Gene Jones
From: Oklahoma City, OK USA, (deceased)
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 9:15 am
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Wouldn't the designation of "steel-guitar" properly identify the instrument in all of it's configurations? _________________ "FROM THEN TIL' NOW" |
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Mike Perlowin
From: Los Angeles CA
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 9:50 am
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Gene Jones wrote: |
Wouldn't the designation of "steel-guitar" properly identify the instrument in all of it's configurations? |
Gene, it probably would, but most of the people my trio plays for have never seen any kind of steel before, and I feel it's incumbent on me to briefly explain what it is and how it works.
So far the reaction has been overwhelmingly positive. At almost all our performances, I have been approached by people from the audience with questions after we finish playing.
When there are classically trained musicians in the audience, as often happens, I invite them sit down at my steel and try it out. Most of them decline but occasionally somebody does, makes some noise and walks away shaking his or hear head in confusion. _________________ Please visit my web site and Soundcloud page and listen to the music posted there.
http://www.mikeperlowin.com http://soundcloud.com/mike-perlowin |
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chris ivey
From: california (deceased)
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 10:00 am
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ok mike...we'll call it a pedal steel guitar...cause it's played with a steel bar , except that it's not! |
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James Mayer
From: back in Portland Oregon, USA (via Arkansas and London, UK)
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 10:07 am
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My instrument is made out of aluminum. When I say "it's a steel guitar", some people assume that it's made out of steel. |
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Gene Jones
From: Oklahoma City, OK USA, (deceased)
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 11:59 am
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Hi Mike, I respectfully acknowledge your experience in presenting the steel guitar to the unknowing.
I regress back to about 1947 when I bought my first Sears (or was it a Wards}. Because it was different from the instruments that my comtemporaries were playing, virtually no one knew what the instrument was or how it was supposed to sound except a few WWII vets who had visited Hawaii, and a few Bob Wills fans.
While I was learning to play this hybrid instrument, I was subjected to much deserved ridicule about "cats tails caught under a rocker", etc, but for awhile I had the pleasure of being the only one in my world who played this unique instrument.
I subsequently played a steel guitar in all of it's evolved configurations for many years, but, the questions about the instrument never seemed to become more informed. I suppose that is the legacy of this strange musical instrument that doesn't really fit in any category. _________________ "FROM THEN TIL' NOW" |
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Dave Mudgett
From: Central Pennsylvania and Gallatin, Tennessee
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 12:21 pm
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According to legend, Maurice Berlin of Gibson called Les Paul's first solid-body electric guitar, "the Log", a "broomstick".
I agree, Mike. One could call it simply a "steel guitar", which would be correct. But I think it's more descriptive to call it a "pedal steel guitar." There are also lap steel guitars and console steel guitars, and they're all steel guitars. I prefer to tell people exactly which variety of steel guitar I'm playing. |
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Mike Baldwin
From: Watsonville, Ca. USA
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 12:28 pm
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Watch out with the names. Les Paul himself called his most famous instrument "The Log" |
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Donny Hinson
From: Glen Burnie, Md. U.S.A.
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 12:48 pm
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Guitar steel pedal.
Pedal guitar steel.
I dunno. I think we'd be shootin' ourselves in the foot tryin' to get people to remember a 3-worded instrument name (our society today wants everything to be quick). Why not just "pedal steel"? After all, a baby grand piano does just fine referred to as a "baby grand". The "piano" thing at the end is sorta superfluous. They finally dropped the word "chord" from "electric chord organ", and "Hawaiian guitar" works pretty well for "Hawaiian steel guitar".
For me, it's always just been a PEDAL STEEL.
Besides, I don't really think the association with a regular guitar is needed or even helpful. I vote we drop it! |
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Steve Broatch
From: Newcastle, England
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 1:06 pm
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What Donny said.
In my experience most folks don't even recognise it as or believe it to be a guitar. Even when you tell them!
Besides "Pedal Steel" sounds a bit more mysterious. |
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David Doggett
From: Bawl'mer, MD (formerly of MS, Nawluns, Gnashville, Knocksville, Lost Angeles, Bahsten. and Philly)
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 2:52 pm
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I don't mind calling it a pedal steel for short, especially around musicians. But the real name is pedal steel guitar. First, it is a type of steel guitar. It is not a type of steel - that's the thing you hold in your hand and play it with. There are lap steel guitars and console steel guitars, and this contraption is a pedal steel guitar. And that's the way it should be introduced to anybody who asks. Like many other things, it has a formal technical name. And that can be shortened to pedal steel, or steel guitar, for informal use. We should respect people's sincere questions about what it is, and give them the straight formal name when they ask, so they will be correctly informed. Then, if you want to make a joke and say some people call it an electric cheese slicer, or an ironing board, or sewing machine, or whatever, well, everybody likes a joke. And a whacked sense of humor seems to be inherent in everybody who plays it. |
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Bent Romnes
From: London,Ontario, Canada
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 3:08 pm
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Here I agree with Mike wholeheartedly. Pedal Steel Guitar is to me the best way to refer to our instrument. Steel Guitar or just pedal steel is fine in the right circles..say among other steel players. But PedalSteel Guitar so adequately describes our unusual instrument. The word Pedal also features the main thing that separates the pedal steel from more regular Steel guitar or the enhancement factor of the Steel guitar.
People just deserve to know the full name because they don't have a clue as to what makes our instrument work the way it does.
I have had many fun moments the last few months while building these 2 latest ones and neighbors, friends, relatives and strangers have stopped by the shop. wondering what I am up to. Yep.. some recognize it as a steel guitar, some think its a Hawaiian guitar, one even insisted on calling it a keyboard. NOBODY called it a Pedal Steel Guitar. That's where I start having fun, first telling them the correct name, then turning the beast upside down, plucking a string, pushing a knee lever and bending that note 3 or 4 times in a row. That's when I see the look of recognition in their eyes..."Aha..oh yeah!! it's just like that "thing" that Bob Lucier played on the Tommy Hunter Show!"
While I have their attention I explain the wonderfully intricate way that the changer works and how you just can't pull a string at random...no you actually have to tune the pull to a note.
Luckily I have had my prototype standing in the shop all thru the latest building project so I can show people at any time.
There is no doubt in my mind that Pedal Steel Guitar is the only name to call our instrument of choice. A VERY adequate description indeed. _________________ BenRom Pedal Steel Guitars
https://www.facebook.com/groups/212050572323614/ |
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Archie Nicol R.I.P.
From: Ayrshire, Scotland
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 3:30 pm
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Mike, we both play a `Millie` and she's getting fed up with the all the transatlantic travel. You can have her. The missus is gettin' pretty close to finding out anyway.
Arch.
p.s.
Don't give her any vodka after 6am. It just gives her jet lag.
Awwrabest,
Arch. _________________ I'm well behaved, so there! |
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Barry Hyman
From: upstate New York, USA
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 4:19 pm the goose stick
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I played gigs for years with a country guy -- a real hill country guy -- who played acoustic guitar and sang. One night we were drinking, after maybe three years and 300 gigs together, and he asked me, in all seriousness, "Why is it called a goose stick?" _________________ I give music lessons on several different instruments in Cambridge, NY (between Bennington, VT and Albany, NY). But my true love is pedal steel. I've been obsessed with steel since 1972; don't know anything I'd rather talk about... www.barryhyman.com |
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Mike Perlowin
From: Los Angeles CA
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 4:24 pm
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Archie Nicol wrote: |
Mike, we both play a `Millie` and she's getting fed up with the all the transatlantic travel. You can have her. |
I'll take her, as long as she has 12 strings. (If I had the bucks I'd get 2 more, as well as a Legend, plus a Carter and a Williams and a Zum and a Mullen and a Jackson and a Franklin and..............) _________________ Please visit my web site and Soundcloud page and listen to the music posted there.
http://www.mikeperlowin.com http://soundcloud.com/mike-perlowin |
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Tommy Shown
From: Denham Springs, La.
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 6:06 pm
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I am in total agreement with you on this Mike, also. There's this one guy at work that calls it a "slide guitar". And that gets my blood boiling. why because people that call a particular instrument other than the proper name are ignorat. In my humble opine. The rich,mellow and the warm tones that this beautiful instrument produces is far more than a "slide guitar". I was playing one night at a place, when this "gentleman", and I use the term loosely called my steel a "slide guitar". I had to politely set his ignorance straght.
Tommy Shown |
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Mike Schwartzman
From: Maryland, USA
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 7:45 pm
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Actually,if it's described as "an electric cheese slicer"...I think you could correct their knowledge of culinary terms.
There is a device (not commercially used much anymore) called a mandolin, which is used to manually cut vegetables in larger quantities quickly. So an old kitchen dog like me would use the more accurate "Electric Mandolin" At least that gets closer to the correct number of strings as vs. the cheese slicer, and makes it even more confusing .
Nah really...If people ask, I generally use "Pedal Steel Guitar". _________________ Emmons Push Pull, BMI, Session 400, Home of the Slimcaster Tele. |
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Gary Richardi
From: SoCal, USA
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 8:52 pm
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Mike Schwartzman wrote: |
There is a device (not commercially used much anymore) called a mandolin, which is used to manually cut vegetables in larger quantities quickly.
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My wife once asked me to get the mandolin out of the kitchen cabinet and I wondered:
1) what was my mando doing in the kitchen and
2) what the heck she intended to do with it!? |
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Brint Hannay
From: Maryland, USA
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Posted 15 Aug 2009 10:28 pm
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I get the question "What is this?" or "What is that instrument you're playing?" a lot (like everyone else). I always begin by carefully enunciating "It's a pedal steel guitar". If, as happens more often than not, I get the blank "Whaaa...?" reaction or the quizzical "Guitar???", I say, even more firmly, "pedal steel". They usually still nod vaguely and turn away, wondering "What did he say??" but I hope that at some point they'll see "pedal steel" in some concert review or some album's liner notes and make the connection.
If they don't turn away I really enjoy explaining "It's called that because you use these pedals--like this"...play triad and press A pedal...then the ace in the hole: "and you also have these levers that you push with your knees"...they bend down and look...and now they're in awe of my ability to play this weird contraption, while unaware that I'm a total hack! I'm king for a moment! |
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Jack Dougherty
From: Spring Hill, Florida, USA
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Posted 16 Aug 2009 6:59 am
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WOW!!!!
In that case, is an electric guitar really electric |
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John Allison
From: Austin, Texas, USA
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Posted 16 Aug 2009 7:19 am
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It's always going to be confusing to describe this instrument (alomg with the non-pedal console steel) as a guitar. People know what guitars are - they have a body - solid or hollow -that sits upright in front of your belly and a neck sticking out to the side with frets that you put your fingers on. Ask any stranger on the street what a guitar is and he'll do a quick air-guitar solo for you.
The original designs for electric "Hawaiian" steel guitars kept the frets and the curvy guitar shape, but the pedal steel has evolved away from it's guitar roots entirely. There are no frets to stop the strings which run essentially the full length of the cabinet-like body and the way that the pitch is manipulated bears no resemblence to it's lute-family ancestors.
Technically speaking, the pedal steel is a zither...And the way the pitch is controled is a cross between a concert pedal-harp and a classical Indian veena. I don't advocate calling it a zither - it just doesn't sound cool at all and it would be way more confusing. I just don't usually call it a guitar(I don't think I've ever heard a dobro player refer to his instrument as a guitar, even though it really looks like one).
Fortunately, here in Texas pretty much everybody knows what a pedal steel is. Now a bassoon or a Renaissance arch-lute...those'll require some explainin'. _________________ John Allison
Allison Stringed Instruments
Austin, Texas
www.allisonguitars.com |
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Paul Norman
From: Washington, North Carolina, USA
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Posted 16 Aug 2009 7:42 am
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Mine will only slice cheese about a half inch deep.
Then the fretboard stops the cheese. |
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Don McGregor
From: Memphis, Tennessee
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Posted 16 Aug 2009 7:45 am
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I call mine Sybil. |
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John Phinney
From: Long Beach California, USA
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Posted 16 Aug 2009 8:23 am
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I tell people its an Electric Table Harp, but Pedaled Console Zither has suddenly struck my fancy!
Seriously when people ask, and they always do when I play out, I tell them its a Pedal Steel Guitar. To which they often reply "How'd you learn to play the pedal slide?" _________________ GFI Ultra D-10 8x5/Sarno Freeloader/Telonics volume pedal/Fender Super Six Split Cab with a 1x15 BW |
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