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Author Topic:  Can you identify different guitars used by your favorite
S.M. Johnson

 

From:
Oregon, USA
Post  Posted 23 Mar 2011 8:06 pm    
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I just noticed something on the JERRYBYRD-FANCLUB.com
that I hadn't noticed during any of my previous visits to the site.

There's one page that has about a dozen videos of Jerry Byrd playing various makes of steel guitars. I find it next to impossible to detect any difference in the guitars' sounds. I've always understood that the guitar/amp combo is the most important factor in an artists sound.

How about you?
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Charles Davidson

 

From:
Phenix City Alabama, USA
Post  Posted 23 Mar 2011 8:48 pm    
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I'm NOT that good. My favorite picker is Mr. Seymour,But would'nt have a clue what he was playing if I could'nt see it. He could take a 2 by 4 strung with haywire and play better than most. YOU BETCHA,DYK?BC.
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Hard headed, opinionated old geezer. BAMA CHARLIE. GOD BLESS AMERICA. ANIMAL RIGHTS ACTIVIST. SUPPORT LIVE MUSIC !
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Johnny Cox


From:
Williamsom WVA, raised in Nashville TN, Lives in Hallettsville Texas
Post  Posted 23 Mar 2011 9:50 pm    
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I can't even tell which guitar I'm playing. I've done a few record sessions in the past 40 years and when I hear the records if I don't remember what guitar I played I can't tell by listening. I have a cd of a bunch of songs that I did at one particular studio always using the same amp but different guitars. Zumsteel, MSA Millennium, MSA Legend, Sho- Bud permanent and no one has been able to tell me correctly which guitar is which. In fact I have had several people tell me I was playing a push pull Emmons. I have not played a push pull on a record since 1978. I had an email a few weeks ago complimenting my sound on a particular record. The person writing me said, "Your tone was great, I'm sure you played your Zum". He wanted to know what pickup I was using. I had to write him back to tell him that it was a True Tone pickup but that the guitar was my MSA Legend. The gentleman had difficulty believing it was not a Zum. I hold to the thought that many people listen with their eyes and not their ears. "Black guitars after all do sound better"!!!
I don't think so. Smile
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Johnny "Dumplin" Cox
"YANKIN' STRINGS & STOMPIN' PEDALS" since 1967.
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Olli Haavisto


From:
Jarvenpaa,Finland
Post  Posted 23 Mar 2011 11:10 pm    
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I played an album session years ago which was done in two sessions, almost a year apart.
First session: Emmons LL,108 pup, Sansamp pre, Korg rev.
Second session: Zumsteel, 910 pup, Evans pre, Rocktron rev.
The record came out a year after the second session. No way I could tell for certain which tunes were on the Zum or the Emmons....

edit. I`m not implying that I`m my favorite player Smile
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Olli Haavisto
Finland


Last edited by Olli Haavisto on 24 Mar 2011 2:55 am; edited 1 time in total
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Norman Boling

 

From:
Paragould Arkansas, Philadelphia TN USA
Post  Posted 24 Mar 2011 2:49 am     The sound
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If you are playing one of the many good guitars available I do believe the rest is in the hands and the mind.

Problem is, mine are not connected yet. But they will be in time.

I don't believe I've ever tried to play an instrument that offers the freedom to develop your own sound that a pedal steel does.

I know what sounds good to me but I'm not sure I could explain it.

There's a sound in my mind I want to achieve and that's what I'll work toward. If others like it? that's good too but I'm the one that has to listen to it. Very Happy
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Brett Day


From:
Pickens, SC
Post  Posted 24 Mar 2011 10:07 am    
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I can tell if Gary Morse is playin' on a Dierks Bentley song if I hear a classic type sound, meaning Sho-Bud. One example is on "Lotta Leavin' Left To Do".

Brett
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Bill Bailey

 

From:
Kingman, AZ
Post  Posted 28 Mar 2011 11:50 pm     Guitars
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Very Happy Bret, I bet Gary is playing the Desert Rose on Dirks song. He has a herd of Desert Rose Guitars. Cool
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Bill Bailey
Kingman Arizona
2014 Mullen G2 D 10 8+5 Black
92 Emmons Lashley LeGrande D-10
Two Nashville 400 Amps and Nashvill 112.
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Bo Borland


From:
South Jersey -
Post  Posted 29 Mar 2011 12:16 am    
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Many times you can identify the player by his style, attack, vibrato, his musical knowledge, etc, but hardly ever by the steel he was playing.
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Brett Day


From:
Pickens, SC
Post  Posted 30 Mar 2011 2:31 pm     Re: Guitars
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Bill Bailey wrote:
Very Happy Bret, I bet Gary is playing the Desert Rose on Dirks song. He has a herd of Desert Rose Guitars. Cool


Hey Bill, I remember on Dierks' second record featuring "Lotta Leavin' Left To Do, he played a Sho-Bud-it was listed in the credits but I'm not sure if he played Sho-Bud on "Sideways".
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Bill Bailey

 

From:
Kingman, AZ
Post  Posted 30 Mar 2011 10:35 pm     Desert Rose
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Very Happy Thanks Bret,
I stand corrected. Take care man.
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Bill Bailey
Kingman Arizona
2014 Mullen G2 D 10 8+5 Black
92 Emmons Lashley LeGrande D-10
Two Nashville 400 Amps and Nashvill 112.
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