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Author Topic:  Favorite E9 Rides?
Grant Johnson


From:
Nashville TN
Post  Posted 12 Oct 2004 10:07 am    
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There are so many but here is mine right now:
Herby Wallace "Rolling in my Sweet Baby's Arms" live at the convention, from a steel guitar cassette club recording, circa early eighties. Wow, great sustained chickin' pickin'.
What are your favorite E9 rides?


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[This message was edited by Grant Johnson on 29 October 2004 at 05:32 PM.]

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Farris Currie

 

From:
Ona, Florida, USA, R.I.P.
Post  Posted 12 Oct 2004 10:14 am    
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Lloyd Green, COOL STEEL MAN in the 70s,some of the best!!i have loaned the record out and lost it,man i could just cry!!!!!!!!!!!
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Pat Dawson


From:
Chesapeake Beach, Maryland, USA
Post  Posted 12 Oct 2004 10:58 am    
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Grant, the way BE plays that tune truly is amazing. I also love "Farewell Party" on that tape.

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Mike Archer


From:
church hill tn
Post  Posted 12 Oct 2004 11:18 am    
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I love the buddy emmons stuff
but I dont have that tape is it still
available? from where?

mike a
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Gere Mullican


From:
LaVergne, Tennessee, USA (deceased)
Post  Posted 12 Oct 2004 12:10 pm    
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"Touch My Heart - A Tribute To Johnny Paycheck". Lloyd Green is all over that sucker. Lloyd, you have got to be from some other planet. How in the world can you keep coming up with new licks all the time? If yall ain't heard this CD yet you got to get it (if you love pedal steel guitar). Also the Ray Pillow CD with Tommy White. WOW!!!!
Gere
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Walter Stettner


From:
Vienna, Austria
Post  Posted 12 Oct 2004 12:22 pm    
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Lloyd Green on the Little Darlin' and Chart records! There are so many ideas on those records, truly amazing!

Some of Lloyd's LD cuts were re-released on CD ("Master Of The Steel Strings"). This one is in heavy rotation on my player!

Kind Regards, Walter

www.lloydgreentribute.com
www.austriansteelguitar.at.tf

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Bill Ford


From:
Graniteville SC Aiken
Post  Posted 12 Oct 2004 2:50 pm    
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Why do you guys keep asking questions like this,You know dang good and well it makes my brain hurt try'in to figger it out...There are just too many great pickers, and too many great licks/runs. Lloyd Green, Jim Day, Buddy, Paul, etc,etc.

BF
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Grant Johnson


From:
Nashville TN
Post  Posted 12 Oct 2004 3:02 pm    
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"Why do you guys keep asking questions like this,You know dang good and well it makes my brain hurt try'in to figger it out...There are just too many great pickers, and too many great licks/runs. Lloyd Green, Jim Day, Buddy, Paul, etc,etc."

Ha!
Well how about one that you heard recently that really caught your ear?
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Farris Currie

 

From:
Ona, Florida, USA, R.I.P.
Post  Posted 12 Oct 2004 3:10 pm    
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been listening to BOBBE SEYMORE on cds lately,he's got some very pretty stuff!!!
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James Cann


From:
Phoenix, AZ
Post  Posted 12 Oct 2004 4:00 pm    
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Listen to Curly Chalker's ride on Gordon "Alberta Bound," on Curly's "Nashville Sundown," an all-E9 tribute to Gordon Lightfoot and one of my collection's highlights.

Hang on to your hat!

James
Sho-Bud LDG
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Al Udeen

 

From:
maple grove mn usa
Post  Posted 12 Oct 2004 4:20 pm    
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For me, Its Buddys Masterpiece playing on ETs "Half a Mind" considering he had only 8 strings to work with back then in 1958 I agree theres been a lot of killer stuff since then, like Hals creative 2nd string licks on Loretta Lynns hits & of course Hugheys "Look at Us" & Lloyds Paycheck records & Farewell Party, But I say Buddy started it all, If you dont have ETs "The Ernest Tubb Story" also cut in 58, your missing some unbelievable stuff! Al Udeen
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Dave Ristrim


From:
Whites Creek, TN
Post  Posted 13 Oct 2004 3:53 am    
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I know there are tons of great E9 solos out there by the "greats", but one of my all time faves is Randy Beavers on an old Steven Fromholtz album. The song was called Late Night Neon Shadows and Randy used a phase shifter and played and sounded awesome. I think it had a lot to do with me playing steel today. Thanks Randy.
dave
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Farris Currie

 

From:
Ona, Florida, USA, R.I.P.
Post  Posted 13 Oct 2004 6:01 am    
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YES,one happy fellow,i had said earlier,i lost my record on cool steel man Lloyd Green,well i so excited because a wonderful steeler emailed me, said he was sending me a cd,Boys this is what its all about,just don't get no better friends than here on the forum.Money won't buy it!!!!
THANK YOU MY FRIENDS
FARRIS
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Grant Johnson


From:
Nashville TN
Post  Posted 13 Oct 2004 6:46 am    
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Here's more:
I was listening to Dale Watson - The Truckin' Sessions last night and our very own Ricky Davis takes some great E9 rides all over that record...
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randy

 

From:
shelbyville, illinois, usa
Post  Posted 13 Oct 2004 7:20 am    
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There are dozens of really great rides. My absolute favorites are "Our YesterDays", "King of Broken Hearts", and everything he does including those amazing runs and fills in "Houston". There will never be another Buddy.
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John Poston

 

From:
Albuquerque, NM, USA
Post  Posted 13 Oct 2004 7:48 am    
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I will never forget the time I heard my favorite steel break. I had been playing E9 steel for a year or so and my band was on the road in North Dakota. One of the band members picked up a cheap truckstop Conway Twitty cassette - the Warner Bros. hits. Most of you know the type of music most of it is.

It was the coldest night I've ever experienced. 10 to 20 below before the windchill. Our water froze in the van, even with the heater on full blast. The music was on LOUD to help us keep alert and we were bundled up against the chill.

It's the middle of the night. Suddenly, on comes Lost in the Feeling. Now I have heard Emmons' Steel Guitar & Nightlife other performances, Day's Golden steel/steel and strings and Price albums, Chalker's Big Hits, Lloyd Green on Panther Hall and countless others, and lots of steel in the music of Waylon, Thompson, Wills, Cooley, Tubb, Pierce, Hank, Tillman, Maddox Bros., Bill Anderson ('wild weekend' is a great one), the list is endless.

NOTHING compared to that steel break I heard on Lost in the Feeling and the effect it had on me. It tore the top of my head off in sound, feeling and invention. A neat chord progression and a chance for Hughey to really do something out of the ordinary. And it was nice and upfront in the mix - almost like a big middle finger for those who thought Twitty had gone pop for good.

In my opinion - it is the greatest pedal steel solo of all time.

Thanks for reading my mini-novel and for posting a fun topic.

[This message was edited by John Poston on 13 October 2004 at 08:50 AM.]

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Dave Van Allen


From:
Doylestown, PA , US , Earth
Post  Posted 13 Oct 2004 9:05 am    
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A link to my topic on the solos byTom Brumley with RICK NELSON- "LAST TIME AROUND"

Another very fave is Lloyd Green's "So Sad" from his Revisited album-simply ELEGANT solo

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Daniel Vorp

 

From:
Burlington, NC USA
Post  Posted 13 Oct 2004 9:34 am    
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OK I'll jump in. My favorite up tempo E9th ride is Weldon Myrick playing on Connie Smith's "I'll Come Running". Favorite slow ride is Lloyd Green playing the slow part of a song from one of his instrumental albums, can't remember which, but the title of the song is "Robin".
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Johnny Jones

 

From:
Benton, Kentucky USA
Post  Posted 13 Oct 2004 12:58 pm    
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Jeff Peterson's beautiful playing on Clint Black's "Nothing's News".
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David Higginbotham

 

From:
Lake Charles, Louisiana, USA
Post  Posted 13 Oct 2004 5:32 pm    
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Tom Brumley-Together again, Garden party.

Lloyd Green-Farewell party, Some broken hearts never mend.

Paul Franklin Jr.-When I call your name.

Dan Dugmore-Blue Bayou

Way too many to list!

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Alex McCollough

 

From:
Nashville, Tennessee, USA
Post  Posted 13 Oct 2004 8:36 pm    
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Bridge Washed Out - Warner Mack
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Garth Highsmith

 

Post  Posted 13 Oct 2004 11:58 pm    
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Well Grant, since you brought up Dale Watson...

I recently gave my father a copy of 'Dreamland' with Don Pawlak on steel (and Ricky Davis on backup vocals) and he mentioned Don's solo on the title track. The solo is just a perfect series of ascending thirds that makes you want to cry it's so nice. My dad told me that if he owned a pedal steel, he'd just sit at home all day and play that run over and over again.

So I told him that that's pretty much what I do.

Other than that, I keep listening to Jon Rauhouse's solo on 'I Wish I was the Moon' on Neko Case's Blacklisted as a reminder that one can say so much more with fewer notes.
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Tracy Sheehan

 

From:
Fort Worth, Texas, USA
Post  Posted 14 Oct 2004 7:28 am    
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John Poston.You played in N.D.when it was 10 to 20 below zero.I played up there many times Better be glad you were not there when it gets cold.Tracy
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Grant Johnson


From:
Nashville TN
Post  Posted 14 Oct 2004 8:01 am    
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Garth-
I know what you mean!
I miss Don Pawlack, he was my favorite steeler in th PNW. I am glad that he is doing so well in Texas...
I think that I'll go out and buy Dreamland today.

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[This message was edited by Grant Johnson on 14 October 2004 at 09:01 AM.]

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Greg Simmons


From:
where the buffalo (used to) roam AND the Mojave
Post  Posted 14 Oct 2004 11:32 am    
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Yeah, these are all great - just add to the list Lloyd Maines on Joe Ely's "Because of the Wind"

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Greg Simmons
Custodian of the Official Sho~Bud Pedal Steel Guitar Website


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