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Topic: Mooney style players? |
Darrell Criswell
From: Maryland, USA
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Posted 27 Jul 2024 6:41 am
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Has anyone seen a steel guitar player who tries to play pretty much exclusively mooney style steel. I know many people try to copy Mooney's style when playing the songs he played on. I have read previous threads about this and it seems many people, despite liking Mooney's playing, feel it is the opposite of what they have been taught and try to achieve. I know Al Briscoe has a video of Mooney style but he doesn't sound quite the same to me. Mike Headrick is another great admirer to Moon's and he does sound similar. Thanks! |
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Dave Zirbel
From: Sebastopol, CA USA
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J Fletcher
From: London,Ont,Canada
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Posted 27 Jul 2024 8:46 am
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Love that Frank Arnett ! Reminds me a lot of mid 60's Lloyd Green more so than Mooney , at least on the first 2 cuts . Thanks for posting that link . |
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Mike R Johnson
From: Portland , Oregon
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Posted 27 Jul 2024 12:27 pm Re: Mooney style players?
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Darrell Criswell wrote: |
Has anyone seen a steel guitar player who tries to play pretty much exclusively mooney style steel. I know many people try to copy Mooney's style when playing the songs he played on. I have read previous threads about this and it seems many people, despite liking Mooney's playing, feel it is the opposite of what they have been taught and try to achieve. I know Al Briscoe has a video of Mooney style but he doesn't sound quite the same to me. Mike Headrick is another great admirer to Moon's and he does sound similar. Thanks! |
Hi from Maryland!
Yeah, Mooney's style is definitely unique and can be challenging to replicate. I've seen a few players who try to emulate his style, but it's not easy to capture that distinctive tone and phrasing. Al Briscoe's video is a great resource, but like you said, it's not quite the same as the real deal. Mike Headrick is indeed a great admirer of Mooney's playing, and he does a fantastic job of capturing the essence of his style. Have you checked out Robert Randolph's playing? He's also heavily influenced by Mooney and has a similar tone and attack. |
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Rick Campbell
From: Sneedville, TN, USA
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Posted 27 Jul 2024 9:43 pm
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Frank was a super player. I met him through working on antique radios. He was also a producer and had a record label. He was a super nice guy.
RC |
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Bob Carlucci
From: Candor, New York, USA
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Posted 28 Jul 2024 10:16 am
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yeeikes!!..Wow that guy was great!... Like Moon on steroids, with a good dose of early Lloyd mixed in... That "late model" 1000 sounded great as well. Just shows how there were no limitations using those old Fenders with 8 strings and cables,if you were a good player.. that guy was playing some really great stuff.. bob _________________ I'm over the hill and hittin'rocks on the way down!
no gear list for me.. you don't have the time...... |
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Ethan Shaw
From: Texas, USA
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Posted 28 Jul 2024 10:21 am
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Mooney is my biggest influence as far as country pedal steel goes. As far as I know, I'm the only one out there that uses his copedant. I made a video explaining it: https://youtu.be/m2U1Wb7fR-A . These days, most of my gigs are western Swing, but in my old band, the Moonhangers, it was Mooney-style all day. And I've been getting to do more E9 stuff recently with some of the bands around central Texas. |
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George Duncan Sypert
From: Colo Spgs, Co, USA
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Posted 28 Jul 2024 5:32 pm Mooney
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RALPH MOONEY - The Sound of Country Music ("Cocaine & Rhinestones" Podcast Season 1 / Episode 14)
Very good info about the Great Ralph Mooney, time lines on where,when and with who. When he wrote Crazy Arms and who recorded it first, how Price got ahold of it, and when he recorded it,etc.
Ralph Mooney was a genius with what he played and how he played it.
I was young when all of this happened but I remember most of it. Take a listen, and you will be informed. |
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Kenny Davis
From: Great State of Oklahoma
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Posted 28 Jul 2024 9:16 pm
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As much as I love Ralph Mooney and appreciate his playing, I think Frank was on another level. I was just starting to learn to play when he was in Oklahoma City and I got to be around him some. Now that several years have passed and had a chance to listen to both of them, Frank just seemed to take the "Bakersfield" style in different directions. Take time to listen to the album Dave posted!
Dave also mentions that Frank might have had an influence on Ralph, and I wouldn't doubt it. I've got some great recordings of Frank playing with Bob Woods band in 1971 in a club in Okarche Oklahoma that would knock you off your feet.
I talked to him over the phone shortly before he passed away. Seems to have mellowed quite a bit in his old age. He sent me a CD he had recorded in his studio. _________________ Best lyric in a country song: "...One more, Moon..." |
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Darrell Criswell
From: Maryland, USA
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Posted 29 Jul 2024 3:25 am Re: Mooney
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George Duncan Sypert wrote: |
RALPH MOONEY - The Sound of Country Music ("Cocaine & Rhinestones" Podcast Season 1 / Episode 14)
Very good info about the Great Ralph Mooney, time lines on where,when and with who. When he wrote Crazy Arms and who recorded it first, how Price got ahold of it, and when he recorded it,etc.
Ralph Mooney was a genius with what he played and how he played it.
I was young when all of this happened but I remember most of it. Take a listen, and you will be informed. |
Coe also writes a great story about a fishing incident with Mooney and Wynn Stewart that is just hilarious! Reading previous threads Mooney just played exactly the opposite of the way most people try to play, exaggerated everything which according to Coe is the whole secret of the Bakerfield sound. He made it work.
I am really impressed with Coe, it is sad how much his father deteriorated. I heard his father in the 70's and he was maybe the greatest performer I ever heard. He would sing for 3 hours and you never got tired of it, I saw him years later and he was pathetic, didn't even play any of the songs he wrote. |
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Dave Zirbel
From: Sebastopol, CA USA
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Posted 29 Jul 2024 5:22 am
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An acquaintance of mine, who spent a lot of time with Fuzzy Owen, said that Fuzzy claims to have had an influence Ralph Mooney as well. I think Fuzzy pre dates Ralph in the Bakersfield scene...not sure though. I wasn't there! LOL!
Here's Fuzzy copying Ralph Mooney licks when he was filling in after Mooney left and before they found Norm...not as smooth as Ralph but seems to have a handle on the style.
https://youtu.be/5u0DDz2NGY0?si=rGwfzf3smS2amxr5
DZ _________________ Dave Zirbel-
Sierra S-10 (Built by Ross Shafer),ZB, Fender 400 guitars, various tube and SS amps |
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J Fletcher
From: London,Ont,Canada
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Darrell Criswell
From: Maryland, USA
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Posted 30 Jul 2024 7:33 am
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Thanks, I believe he does a good job of Mooney style, but not as gritty and exaggerated as Moon, which for Moon was not bad!
Someone in an earlier thread said Moon did exactly the opposite of what other players try for in terms of technique and tone, but it works perfectly for him. People said however that if you heard him live it was way too loud. Johnny Bush told me the same thing about Dick Overby, he sounded great on a record but he was way too loud on stage. |
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scott murray
From: Asheville, NC
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Posted 30 Jul 2024 11:49 am
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too loud... what's that?
as for Norm on the back neck, it's tuned E9. Curly Chalker had his on the back neck too and I believe Moon kept both his necks tuned E9 for many years _________________ 1965 Emmons S-10, 3x5 • Emmons LLIII D-10, 10x12 • JCH D-10, 10x12 • Beard MA-8 • Oahu Tonemaster |
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Gary Hoetker
From: California, USA
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Posted 31 Jul 2024 9:28 am
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Fuzzy Owen was a fine player. No offense meant but after watching the video posted I have a hard time believing he had much of an influence on Mooney. |
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J Fletcher
From: London,Ont,Canada
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Posted 31 Jul 2024 10:00 am
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I figured Norm Hamlett was playing E9 on the back neck , wondered if that was a Bakersfield thing as Mooney's guitar was also set up like that |
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Brendan Mitchell
From: Melbourne Australia
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Posted 4 Aug 2024 9:28 pm
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Great stuff! I'm hearing Tom Brumley as well. This guy was obviously as good as any around at that time, this is the first I have heard of him. |
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Bob Carlucci
From: Candor, New York, USA
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Posted 5 Aug 2024 2:10 am
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Just gave this a second time around,, absolute Monster player.
I agree 100% with what Brendan said..As good as anyone around at the time. I'll add to that.
And better than most.
The sound of the later, short scale 1000 is all Fender. Not as unique a sound as the earlier long scale string breakers, but still very unique and lovely in its own right.. I always hear guys saying the Fenders were "limited", and "lacked sustain", to which I say, bullcrap. They are limited because guys abandoned them for the latest and greatest tech. I heard ZERO limitations on the instrument used in Frank Arnetts work!... He is now one of my favorite players, and until a week or so ago, I am ashamed to admit I never even knew he existed... How a guy like this was never one of the best known steel guitarists of his era I just don't understand.. He should be right up there with the best of the best when it comes to name recognition. Just goes to show that extreme talent does not always bring extreme fame. There is some luck involved... bob _________________ I'm over the hill and hittin'rocks on the way down!
no gear list for me.. you don't have the time...... |
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Michael Sawyer
From: North Carolina, USA
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Posted 5 Aug 2024 3:23 pm
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Ralph Mooney was not the first steel player i ever heard,but he was the first one that made wish i could play one.It was 75 or 76,Lonesome,Ornry,and Mean.
I have 3 pedal steels ,a Mullen and 2 old Fenders that I just can't bring myself to let go of.... |
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Terry Wood
From: Lebanon, MO
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Posted 8 Aug 2024 4:36 am
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Years ago I met a young Steel Guitarist in Santa Fe New Mexico, that played or sounded more like Ralph Mooney than anyone else that I ever heard play in my almost 50 years of playing Steel Guitar. Also, I knew Ralph Mooney and I always dug his style. He was unique and different and original. He was a heck of a Great Guy too. I sure liked him and his music. That young man in Santa Fe New Mexico was named John. I can't remember his last name. He actually played a Sho-Bud that looked identical to Ralph's at that time. It was an older Sho-Bud model, not the later ones that Ralph Mooney played. I tried to find that young Steel Guitarist but never could locate him. I think he was originally from the state of Idaho. He was just playing in a Happy Hour Band in the Ramada Inn. He was working with a husband and wife team on that job. |
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Larry Dering
From: Missouri, USA
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Posted 8 Aug 2024 7:15 am
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I seen Mooney live with Waylon and the sound was fine. Dicky Overby at the ISGC St Louis and again sound was great. While I'm ok with Ralph and his contribution to music I never understood why some steel players are hooked on his tone and style. I far prefer Overby, Chalker, Emmons, Hughey and Lloyd Green. I was a Waylon fan from the beginning but my steel tastes go to the others. My music collection reflects the same. Different strokes I guess. |
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Bob Carlucci
From: Candor, New York, USA
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Posted 8 Aug 2024 9:05 am
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Larry Dering wrote: |
I seen Mooney live with Waylon and the sound was fine. Dicky Overby at the ISGC St Louis and again sound was great. While I'm ok with Ralph and his contribution to music I never understood why some steel players are hooked on his tone and style. I far prefer Overby, Chalker, Emmons, Hughey and Lloyd Green. I was a Waylon fan from the beginning but my steel tastes go to the others. My music collection reflects the same. Different strokes I guess. |
Ralph wasn't as polished, or near as technically proficient as the guys you mentioned.. However, Moon popularized the "west coast" style many of us are still using to this day... What you wrote like comparing say BB King to Van Halen,,, Both guitarists using electric guitars as a major part of their overall sound.. One is WAY more technically proficient than the other,, Some will say Eddie was a piker compared to BB,, Others the opposite,, they were both great at waht they did, some will like one more than the other.. Technical proficiency is far down the list on what is required to make great music and always has been. _________________ I'm over the hill and hittin'rocks on the way down!
no gear list for me.. you don't have the time...... |
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Gary Hoetker
From: California, USA
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Posted 13 Aug 2024 12:47 pm
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Terry Christofferson certainly comes close to playing and sounding like Mooney. Jay McDonald is right there too. So is Jerry Brightman. Buck knew. After all, they were Buckaroos and deserve immense respect. |
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Dan Behringer
From: Jerseyville, Illinois
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Posted 17 Aug 2024 7:08 pm
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When I think of Ralph Mooney, I’ve often wondered what it would have been like to be a aspiring young steel player in 1959 and hearing that new Buck Owens record on the radio for the first time. Never mind the fact that it was the first time someone used the high G# or pulled their E string. That sound, the style, and his whole approach to music was out of this world new. I’m sure I would have needed CPR to survive that. |
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Dave Magram
From: San Jose, California, USA
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Posted 18 Aug 2024 11:09 am
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Here's a new young guy on the scene, Jesse Personeni, here doing a pretty good job playing the Ralph Mooney style with The Malpass Brothers on:
"I Wish I Could Fall In Love Today"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aEIk47lVE1I
- Dave |
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