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Author Topic:  who's on steel here?
Cody Campbell

 

From:
Nashville, Tennessee
Post  Posted 24 Jun 2016 7:09 am    
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who's steeling on this track? sounds a bit like Lloyd green, does it not?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vpgmlbbe4c0&spfreload=1
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Rick Campbell


From:
Sneedville, TN, USA
Post  Posted 24 Jun 2016 10:13 am     Re: who's on steel here?
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Cody Campbell wrote:
who's steeling on this track? sounds a bit like Lloyd green, does it not?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vpgmlbbe4c0&spfreload=1



Cody,

I might have mentioned this before. Love your name. My mother was a Cody and my father Campbell.

RC
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John Swain


From:
Winchester, Va
Post  Posted 24 Jun 2016 12:39 pm    
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I'd vote it's Lloyd !
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Tony Smart

 

From:
Harlow. Essex. England
Post  Posted 24 Jun 2016 1:07 pm    
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My guess is Hal.
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Ricky Davis


From:
Bertram, Texas USA
Post  Posted 24 Jun 2016 2:24 pm    
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This just in from Lloyd.
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You guys want to hear a little story you’ve never heard about those wild west days of Nashville in the mid 1960s?

The style on this song is my almost exact Warner Mack sound from the previous year, 1965, “The Bridge Washed Out” and my early Lynn Anderson style.

After that Warner record you heard a lot of that style….with many singers for the next 2 or 3 years by Weldon, Hal and me… until

everybody was sick of it and we had burned it out.

Anyway, Warner called me one day, visibly upset, and asked why I was using “our” style on everybody’s record. I assured him I wasn’t, that I had a lot of other ideas besides that one. He mentioned a couple of songs by singers currently playing on the radio and I told him one was Hal, the other Weldon. He was then even angrier asking, “Can they do that”? I told him they could play my new style as well as me and since they were both also playing Sho-Buds and using Fender amps during that era it was often hard to tell the difference. But I can tell the fingerprint of each. Yet when they wanted to, they could be eerily close, especially Hal.

Now, I’m not suggesting they didn’t have their own styles and sounds too. Obviously they did, both being world class players and session musicians, too.

Now, for the answer to this record of Hank Mills (which wasn’t his real name), who was coincidentally the writer of my first #1 record in early 1965, “The Girl On The Billboard”; I think it’s Hal Rugg, just by the way he alters a tiny bit of the phrasing I was using.

Otherwise, it’s me. But there’s a 90% certainty it’s Hal.



Lloyd Green

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Ricky Davis
Email Ricky: sshawaiian2362@gmail.com
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Walter Stettner


From:
Vienna, Austria
Post  Posted 24 Jun 2016 9:46 pm    
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Smile
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www.lloydgreentribute.com
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