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Post new topic Is this a pedal steel playing?
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Author Topic:  Is this a pedal steel playing?
Joachim Kettner


From:
Germany
Post  Posted 26 Oct 2014 1:42 am    
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tco__BoMRiw
I mean the chicken picking in the chorus. The track may have been recorded in Nashville.
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Don McGregor

 

From:
Memphis, Tennessee
Post  Posted 26 Oct 2014 5:08 am    
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I hear what you are talking about right at the end, but I think it's just the electric guitar I'm hearing throughout most of the song. It sounds like a Telecaster on the bridge pickup to me. Though that short, bent note in the lick could be done on a steel, it could as just as easily be done with a guitar. I'm listening through the cheap speakers in my laptop, so I could be missing something, but that is what I think.
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Joachim Kettner


From:
Germany
Post  Posted 26 Oct 2014 7:02 am    
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But it sounds more "sustainy" than a guitar to me Don.
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Dylan Schorer

 

From:
Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Post  Posted 26 Oct 2014 7:46 am    
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Her compilation album "Best of the Vanguard Years" with songs from that era lists Hal Rugg and Lloyd Green in the credits. Red Rhodes also recorded with her.
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Richard Sinkler


From:
aka: Rusty Strings -- Missoula, Montana
Post  Posted 26 Oct 2014 8:44 am    
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The album that the song is off of, lists no steel guitar player among the credits. Could very well just be a guitar. I don't hear much sustain in the playing.
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Steven Husting

 

From:
Germany
Post  Posted 26 Oct 2014 9:54 am    
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Sounds like a B-Bender to me.

steven
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chris ivey


From:
california (deceased)
Post  Posted 26 Oct 2014 10:08 am    
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maybe it's a creative banjo player.
buffy is weird. she should do a duet with yoko!
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Richard Sinkler


From:
aka: Rusty Strings -- Missoula, Montana
Post  Posted 26 Oct 2014 11:15 am    
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chris ivey wrote:
maybe it's a creative banjo player.
buffy is weird. she should do a duet with yoko!


It would be hard to tell who was better.
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Ian Worley


From:
Sacramento, CA
Post  Posted 26 Oct 2014 11:38 am    
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allmusic.com wrote:
For starters, all of the sounds with the exception of a lead guitar on one track and a rhythm section employed on three of the last four selections are completely synthesized from the voice and guitar of Sainte-Marie herself. There are tracks whose vocals are completely electronically altered and seem to come from the ether -- check out "Mary" and "Better to Find Out for Yourself" as a sample.
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Lane Gray


From:
Topeka, KS
Post  Posted 26 Oct 2014 12:06 pm    
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There's something about the tonality that says pedal steel. But a crafty Teleslinger could probably do it.
I don't mean the bends, any guitar picker could play the notes, but the tones sound like pedal steel. Or a guitar trying to sound like one.
I, for one, dig it. Thanks for sharing.
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Storm Rosson

 

From:
Silver City, NM. USA
Post  Posted 26 Oct 2014 1:00 pm    
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Me too Lane. When I was playing lead way back when, I spent all my practicing trying to sound like Tom Brumley. Once the steel sound gets in your head ,seems like u want every lick to sound like psg, or maybe that's just me, meh.....Stormy Smile
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Billy Easton

 

From:
Nashville, TN USA
Post  Posted 26 Oct 2014 2:41 pm    
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My ear tells me it is pedal steel, and I can certainly imagine Hal doing it.

Billy
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Joachim Kettner


From:
Germany
Post  Posted 27 Oct 2014 12:12 am    
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Maybe the song was a leftover from "I'm Gonna Be A Country Girl Again" album which was recorded before. At least it explains the banjo, that got no credits on the album.
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Jamie Mitchell

 

From:
Nashville, TN
Post  Posted 29 Oct 2014 8:07 am    
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Whatever it is, it does sound awefully thumb-picky to me...
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