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Author Topic:  Before you knew...
Rick Collins

 

From:
Claremont , CA USA
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 8:39 am    
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Before you knew anything about a steel guitar, who's sound was most impressive to your unprejudicial taste?

To the vast majority of your audience, your delivery as a player (live) is all the information they have, to make a judgement about you as a steel guitarist.

By the time I was nine years old, I had heard quite a few steel guitarist play live. I must say Johnny Sibert with his 26" Fender Stringmaster had the best delivery.

As we mature as an artist our taste change as we work at polishing our own playing.

But remember, all the majority of your audience knows is what they hear at the moment you are playing.

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Hook Moore


From:
South Charleston,West Virginia
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 9:55 am    
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Buddy Emmons
Hook

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www.HookMoore.com
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Jerry Horner

 

From:
Tahlequah, OK, USA
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 10:12 am    
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Hoot Rains.

Jerry
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Gene Jones

 

From:
Oklahoma City, OK USA, (deceased)
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 10:25 am    
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Whoever it was that played those steel guitar "slides" on those old Gene Autry & Roy Rogers movies!

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www.genejones.com

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Ron Page

 

From:
Penn Yan, NY USA
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 10:28 am    
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In my case this was in the 70's and Lloyd Green was known as "Mr. Nashville Sound". I didn't know or care at the time, but I would later discover that a majority of the albums I bought in the 70's -- excluding Merle Haggard albums-- had Lloyd Green on the steel.

So I guess that really means that Lloyd was on 3 of the 5 non-Hag albums I bought in the 70's.

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HagFan

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Pete Burak

 

From:
Portland, OR USA
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 10:37 am    
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Buddy Cage!
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Sonny Priddy

 

From:
Elizabethtown, Kentucky, USA, R.I.P.
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 10:49 am    
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Who Ever It Was That Played Steel guitar Rag Back In the Early 40's I Heard It In 1945 That Sound Stuck with Me.Thats Why I Play Steel Today I Guess Or Part Of It. SONNY.

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Greg Cutshaw


From:
Corry, PA, USA
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 11:03 am    
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Lloyd Green, Pete Drake. I was totally convinced that each lick they played had a special pedal. I took me years to realize that two people could play the same tuning and still sound so different.

Greg
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Tony Rankin


From:
Land O’ Lakes, FL
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 11:11 am    
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I was torn between John Hughey and Lloyd Green. Still am!

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Terry Edwards


From:
Florida... livin' on spongecake...
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 11:19 am    
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Before I knew anything about steel guitar, I hated the sound of steel guitar.

It was an aquired taste that took me forty years to finally get it!

Until then the only tone that mattered was Jimi Hendrix's electic guitar and Tony Rice's accoustic guitar.

Terry
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Frederic Mabrut


From:
Olloix, France
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 11:22 am    
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Buddy Cage and Speedy West!
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Ken Newman

 

From:
maitland, Florida, /desmoines,ia
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 11:39 am    
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gene jones, try autry's steel player as 'frankie marvin' of the marvin brothers. they also had a little piece of history in the les paul, chester burton saga as well if memory serves. those autry slides were great ! the audio by the time they got to us rarely sustained the final breath of the octave,,remember? after visiting your web page , it does cause many to tip all hats to the performers as well as the true musicians over those years. precious memories on ya,

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stay tuned, kenny
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Les Green


From:
Jefferson City, MO, R.I.P.
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 12:05 pm    
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Has to be Jerry Byrd.
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Fred Justice


From:
Mesa, Arizona
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 12:17 pm    
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Hal Rugg

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Fred Justice,
Justice Custom Cases & Cabinets,
Fred's Music, www.fredjusticemusic.com

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Jim Peters


From:
St. Louis, Missouri, USA, R.I.P.
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 12:47 pm    
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Buddy Cage, Rusty Young. JP
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Bobby Bowman

 

From:
Cypress, Texas, USA, R.I.P.
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 1:02 pm    
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Bob Dunn and Leon McAluff and J. D. Stanley.

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If you play 'em, play 'em good!
If you build 'em, build 'em good!
http://www.bobbybowman.com

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Dick Wood


From:
Springtown Texas, USA
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 1:02 pm    
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Around 1982 Buddy Emmons(who I had never heard of) played a small club near Fort Worth and I sat in absolute disbelief at his ability.

After the show I was soo depressed I almost threw my guitar in the dumpster after leaving the club because I knew I would never play that good.

He is and always will be my favorite.

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Cops aren't paid much so I steel at night.
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Dennis Coelho

 

From:
Wyoming, USA
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 1:11 pm    
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For me it was Buddy Emmons' recording of the Pachelbel "Canon" from that album (lost long ago) that has a picture of him with a rainbow over his steel. (Wish I knew what happened to that record. Must have been '68-'69.) Four voices on one instrument, I couldn't believe it. Dennis
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Robert Jones


From:
Branson, Missouri
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 1:18 pm    
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Larry Sassor and John Hughey. They were both right up there on the top of things for me.

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Mullen Royal Percision D-10 Red Laquar Pearl inlay 8&8
"Life is too short for bad tone".

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Dick Sexton


From:
Greenville, Ohio
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 2:00 pm    
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His name was Marshall Dozer, managed a Dairy Queen in Port Isabel, TX. He had played steel as a "Pro" in Vagas but couldn't feed his family. He played a few gigs with our band fronted by Skipper Copeland of Brownsville, TX @ the Carosel early 70s. I was trying to learn 6 string back then. I didn't get a steel until 79, but I blame him for it and all the pain it has caused ever since. Couldn't get that sound out of my head. Last I heard, he was a big Dairy Queen guy in Larado. Played a ZB Custom, real pretty. DS

[This message was edited by Dick Sexton on 06 November 2006 at 03:02 PM.]

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Don LaCourse

 

From:
Spring Hill, FL, USA
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 2:11 pm    
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little Roy Wiggins
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Jack Stoner


From:
Kansas City, MO
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 2:54 pm    
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Little Roy Wiggins. I would buy Eddy Arnold records to hear Roy. And this will date me as the first ones I bought were 78RPM records.

Later, early 70's, I got to work for Roy at his music store in Nashville.
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Jim Harper

 

From:
Comanche, Oklahoma, USA * R.I.P.
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 5:12 pm    
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I hate to agree with Jerry Horner but Hoot Rain,s==Jim Harper
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Anne Giroux

 

From:
Pincourt, Quebec, Canada
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 8:36 pm    
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Neil Flanz the first steel player I ever heard. He played great stuff i.e. 4 Wheel Drive, Danny Boy, Greensleeves and everything else. What a talent and I totally fell in love with the instrument. Then he introduced me to Buddy Emmons and Jimmy Day. Haven't been the same since.

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Jody Sanders

 

From:
Magnolia,Texas, R.I.P.
Post  Posted 6 Nov 2006 8:48 pm    
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Little Roy Wiggins. Jody.
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