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Topic: Learning |
Andrew R King
From: South Carolina, USA
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Posted 30 Sep 2020 8:07 am
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What are the first five things every new lap steel player should learn? |
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Nic Neufeld
From: Kansas City, Missouri
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Posted 30 Sep 2020 8:25 am
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Everyone's answer will be different, but here goes!
1.) To stick with a tuning long enough to develop some familiarity and fluency with it
2.) That the answer is almost (but not entirely) never "a different guitar/amp/bar", it's almost (but not entirely) always, "keep practicing"
3.) To stick with things that feel uncomfortable at first (fingerpicks, slants) knowing time and practice will set a lot of that right
4.) Who Jules Ah See was [ok, insert whichever steel guitar legend you prefer in there]
5.) What kind of music and sound you want to make (as this will inform your choices on how you get there) _________________ Waikīkī, at night when the shadows are falling
I hear the rolling surf calling
Calling and calling to me |
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JB Bobbitt
From: California, USA
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Posted 30 Sep 2020 9:12 am
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I'm new too, so I only have two things:
1. Practice.
2. When you hit a plateau, change something.
I learned this after a stroke (a reason why I'm now playing with a steel bar). Our brains are amazing. In stroke recovery I learned that brains respond to workouts like muscles do. A stroke gives you some insight into "starting from scratch", or at least starting from a reduced level, and you become keenly aware of progress. Practice and repetition are key to that brain workout. I can testify to very positive results from simple repetitive exercises. The process works very well in undamaged brains.
But during stroke recovery you often reach plateaus and progress slows or stops. That's because a part of the brain is broken. But the brain can learn to go around that part ("neuroplasticity"). During my recovery, I swear I could sense the process and incremental progress. But you have to "work out" the brain, exercise it, challenge it, for neuroplasticity to happen, just like you need to work out a muscle. Changing routine, approach, duration, practice material, &tc. had a notable positive effect when I reached plateaus in physical abilities. _________________ "Time is an enemy"
-Bob Dylan |
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Allan Revich
From: Victoria, BC
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Posted 30 Sep 2020 3:51 pm
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I can’t disagree with anything so far!
For item 1) Stick with a tuning
Here are a couple tips you might find helpful in choosing the tuning to stick to:
(all tunings are low to high)
1) C6 is the “Swiss Army Knife†of tunings, if you want one tuning that can do it all, CEGACE is as close as you’re gonna get. Plus tons of learning material.
2) Open G: if you plan on playing acoustic Dobro, you’ll probably want to use open G, GBDGBD. Works fine for electric lap steel too. It’s also easy to switch it up to G6 by changing it to GBEGBD, when you’re comfortable with it.
3) Open D or E: if you are primarily a blues and rock player, DADF#AD or EBEG#BE (151351) are probably the easiest tunings for a guitar player to pick up and go with. Having the root top and bottom helps, and having that heavy bottom string is also nice for adding a bit more meat to your sandwiches.
BONUS ITEM
Bone up on your music theory. All that stuff that used to seem boring and useless when you first started playing, is absolutely essential to becoming competent on lap steel.
BONUS ITEM #2
Historically steel guitar tunings were listed from high to low when written horizontally. With most players now coming from the guitar world, that has mostly changed to listing from low to high. The clearest way to list tunings is to stack them vertically with the highest string on top.
Old School = DAF#DAD
New School = DADF#AD
ALL Schools =
D
A
F#
D
A
D _________________ Current Tunings:
6 String | G – G B D G B D
7 String | G6 – e G B D G B D (re-entrant)
https://papadafoe.com/lap-steel-tuning-database |
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David Matzenik
From: Cairns, on the Coral Sea
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Posted 30 Sep 2020 5:28 pm
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In addition to the good advice so far: if you are going to use tabs, always have the chord progression laid out clearly with the tab, and don't pass over any section by rote. You must know how the tabbed notes relate to the chords by their scale degree. _________________ Don't go in the water after lunch. You'll get a cramp and drown. - Mother. |
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Fred Treece
From: California, USA
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Posted 30 Sep 2020 6:55 pm
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1) How to sit with your guitar
2) Pick hand technique
3) Bar hand technique
4) Patience
5) Watch Doug Beaumier videos |
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David Matzenik
From: Cairns, on the Coral Sea
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Posted 1 Oct 2020 3:53 am
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Here's another observation about learning. Out of a billion great guitar players, almost none of them can explain anything in detail. _________________ Don't go in the water after lunch. You'll get a cramp and drown. - Mother. |
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G Strout
From: Carabelle, Florida
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Posted 1 Oct 2020 5:21 am
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I agree with everything that has been mentioned. Here are what I feel are 5 important things to playing any musical instrument.
1.Listen. Develop your sense of pitch and intonation.
2.Listen . Learn to listen to yourself play.
3.Listen. To the others in the band you are playing with/for. Strive to add to a song. Play tastefully and be accurate when you play.
4.Listen. Learn to fit in, play with musicality, tone and above taste.
5.Listen. Music is made up of many elements pitch, timbre, texture, volume, duration and form.
Play and enjoy the experience of it.
Gary _________________ Melbert 8, Remington S8, Silk 6 string, Rick B6, Tremblay 6 lap steel, Marlen S-10 4&4, Prestige Guild M75 and Artist Award, Benedetto Bravo, Epiphone Century Electar (the real one) and a bunch of old lap steels.... mostly Ricks and Magnatones' |
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Dustin Rhodes
From: Owasso OK
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Posted 1 Oct 2020 5:41 am
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David Matzenik wrote: |
Here's another observation about learning. Out of a billion great guitar players, almost none of them can explain anything in detail. |
This is very true. |
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Jean-Sebastien Gauthier
From: Quebec, Canada
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Posted 1 Oct 2020 6:44 am
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Buy the Jerry Byrd Instruction and learn it all! |
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Francisco Castillo
From: Easter Island, Chile
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Posted 1 Oct 2020 3:27 pm
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Jean-Sebastien Gauthier wrote: |
Buy the Jerry Byrd Instruction and learn it all! |
I was wandering without destiny, wasting my time, till JBs s course set my path straight. |
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David Matzenik
From: Cairns, on the Coral Sea
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Posted 1 Oct 2020 5:26 pm
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I find if I don't put in a solid hour a day, I'm not even treading water. _________________ Don't go in the water after lunch. You'll get a cramp and drown. - Mother. |
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Lee D Kaiser
From: California, USA
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Posted 2 Oct 2020 6:26 pm
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Lots of good advice above.
I think it’s rewarding to learn to play a song by ear, rather than from tabs or a YouTube video. Fortunately, it’s a lot easier to do that these days.
Get a program that will let you slow the tempo of a song (without changing pitch) and loop through sections. I like Audacity, which is available free for PC, Mac, and Linux. Of the ‘audio workstations’ I’ve tried, Audacity is by far the easiest to learn.
Once you learn the notes, don’t worry about playing the songs up to the speed of the original. Work on playing them well at -20% speed or whatever speed allows you to play cleanly.
I’m currently learning Don Helm’s work on Hank Williams songs. _________________ If I'd stop buying old guitars to fix, I might actually learn to play.
I haven't met a guitar I didn't like. |
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Jean-Sebastien Gauthier
From: Quebec, Canada
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Posted 3 Oct 2020 5:57 am
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Lee D Kaiser wrote: |
Lots of good advice above.
I think it’s rewarding to learn to play a song by ear, rather than from tabs or a YouTube video. Fortunately, it’s a lot easier to do that these days.
Get a program that will let you slow the tempo of a song (without changing pitch) and loop through sections. I like Audacity, which is available free for PC, Mac, and Linux. Of the ‘audio workstations’ I’ve tried, Audacity is by far the easiest to learn.
Once you learn the notes, don’t worry about playing the songs up to the speed of the original. Work on playing them well at -20% speed or whatever speed allows you to play cleanly.
I’m currently learning Don Helm’s work on Hank Williams songs. |
Very true, I use Amazing Slowdowner every day and I learn a lot just by figuring out what the legends played. You not just learn the notes but also every others details (timing, attack, vibrato ect...).
A slowdowner and a metronome are still the best 2 tools for practice . |
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Mike Schway
From: Washington, USA
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Posted 3 Oct 2020 7:25 am
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I'm new at this too. Don't underestimate single-note work. Lush internal harmonies with moving voices are nice and all that, but too much of a good thing will just sound muddy when there's a full band (hah! ) or even a backing track.
I definitely need lots of work on clean string changes without it sounding like a muddy smear nor abrupt staccato. Practicing playing painfully slowly helps. |
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Mike Neer
From: NJ
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Posted 3 Oct 2020 7:34 am
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Learn from the masters, regardless of style. Listen carefully.
Find more than one way to play everything and never stop looking for new ways.
Use vibrato consciously.
Try to make every note sound good. Every note counts.
Listen to yourself. Make recordings and be honest about your problem areas and work hard to improve them. _________________ Links to streaming music, websites, YouTube: Links |
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