Monday, December 31, 2012

Description of a Pedal Steel Guitar

For this post I decided the best place to start is to describe a pedal steel guitar and explain the two most common configurations. This way you can understand why it can be a difficult instrument to learn to play. I am going to describe a double neck pedal steel guitar with 10 strings and 8 pedals with 5 levers. There are two things to consider when discussing pedals and levers. First is the pedal arrangement and the second is the copedant. First, the copedant describes which strings are pulled and by how much. Not all of the pedals are used by the two common copedant setup, this way you can use the unused pedals for your personal preferences. Secondly, the pedal arrangements come in two common setups. First the Emmons setup which labels the pedals (viewed from sitting at the guitar) left to right A, B, and C. The second setup is called the Day setup and reverses the pedal order to C, B, A. Which you choose is preference. Now the levers are operated by your knee.

Steel Guitar Pedals
Pedals


Pushing the left knee lever left to engage and release the lever and it goes back to its original position. There are 2 or three levers for the left knee. They are called LKL, LKR, and LKV for Left Kick Left, Left Kick Right, and Left Kick Vertical. The left and right knee levers are some times called F for LKL and D for LKR. I am unsure what the vertical lever is called. As a side note, I am now questioning the value of the vertical lever as I can achieve the same thing by half stopping my A pedal. For me to use the vertical lever, I need to lift my feet off the pedals to reach the vertical lever and I am not fond of that. On the Day setup the left and right levers are reversed. Regardless of setup chosen, the A, B, and C pedals are used for the E9 neck. Sometimes a player will add a fourth pedal to use with E9. The furtherest right 2 pedals are used with the C6 neck. The remaining pedals can be customized as the player desires. There are usually two levers for the right knee and RKL is sometimes called G and RKR is sometimes called X. Both levers affect both E9 and C6 necks.

The most common tunings on the pedal steel guitar is E9 and C6. E9 is for the Nashville sound and C6 is for Western Swing.

A common copedant might look like this:

E9
String     Pitch     A     B     C     LKL     LKV     LKR     RKL     RKR
  1             F#                                                              G#
  2             D#                                                              E           D
  3             G#             A
  4             E                       F#     F                   D#
  5             B       C#           C#               A#
  6             G#             A                                               F#
  7             F#
  8             E                                 F                   D#
  9             D                                                                              C#
 10            B       C#                               A#

C6
String     Pitch     P4     P5     P6     P7     P8     LKL     LKR     RKL     RKR
  1             G                 G#
  2             E                            F
  3             C                                    D                                        B          C#
  4             A         B                         B                G#       A#
  5             G                  F#
  6             E                            D#
  7             C                                             C#
  8             A         B
  9             F                   F#                       E
 10            C                   D                         A

At this point, one might wonder why such complexity is necessary. To answer this we must look to the ancestor of the pedal steel guitar. The console guitar was two, three and sometimes four necks, 8 strings on each neck with a different tuning for each neck. There were no pedals or levers. Players of these guitars would slant the tone bar forward or backward to achieve the unique sound of the steel guitar. The pedals and levers do the same thing as slanting the bar. As an example, on the E9 neck a pedal steel player with the tone bar at the 3rd fret pick strings 5 and 6 with the A and B pedals down. Whereas a straight steel player would forward slant the bar so the tone bar and the 5th string intersect at the 5th fret and the 6th string and tone bar intersecting at the 4th fret.

Pedal Steel Guitar
Me and My Steel!


With the advent of the pedal steel guitar you can now use both methods! Using our example, with both pedals and bar slanting you can raise the 5th string two steps instead of just one step. How and when you choose to do this is your art.

The next thing to consider is that the E9 has chromatic strings available that are not available on the C6 neck. Likewise the bass strings on the C6 produce the booming sound heard in Western swing and country. These strings are not available on the E9 tuning. These two necks are related by four frets. The 3rd fret on the E9 neck is a G. On the C6 neck G is at the 7th fret. It is possible to switch between necks during a song. Straight steel players switched between necks. See Buddy Merrill play the song South on the Lawrence Welk show with his four neck Fender guitar.

One final word (for now) on copedants. While there are some basic configurations, most experienced players have custom copedants and may add pedals and levers. In my opinion, these custom configurations are driven by player style and genre of music.

In my next post I will discuss my opinion to learning the pedal steel guitar.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

My Gear

Like I said in an earlier post, I bought a Carter D-10 8/5 steel guitar. This was not my last purchase. After  a couple months of lessons and discussions with my instructor I decided to buy a Mullen Steel Guitar.

Carter D10 8/5
Carter D10 8/5


I think at this point a little background and discussion of my experiences with Tony as an instructor are in order, so you understand my ordering of Mullen guitars. When I began taking lessons from Tony he was playing on a 1982 ZB guitar. Beautiful tone and sustain if he could keep it in tune. He would complain that it would go out of tune on the bandstand at the most inopportune time. When I decided on buying a Mullen guitar, Tony told me, if you can afford it buy two that way you have a backup. He then told me that he wish he could afford to buy a Mullen. I then came up with an idea. I told Tony I would buy him a Mullen and exchange free lessons in exchange for the price of the Mullen. Tony agreed.

I called Mike at Mullen and told him I was interested in having a Mullen guitar. He asked me what I was looking for and I told him a D-10 made out of Zebrawood. There was a pause and a sigh and Mike said that he did not want to make another zebra wood guitar. The reason being that when you cut zebra wood it smells like a backed up sewer. I asked Mike would it make a difference if I bought 3 out of zebra wood. Mike told me he would. So, Tony designed the copedant for our guitars and we added the chrome and chose alumitone pickups. Now, wood choice is not just for aesthetics but the density of the wood chosen will impact tone. The denser the wood, the better the tone. Most modern steels are made out of maple which has a density range of 0.6 - 0.75. Zebra wood has a density of 0.79. These guitars weigh 78 pounds in the case. The other point to notice is that most steel guitars built today have aluminum necks. We chose wood necks. How much if any this impacts tone I do not know. I do know it is prettier. We also chose 9 pedals and 8 levers. We added chrome every where it was not wood. It took 11 months to get the guitars and Mike and crew did a wonderful job and produced what I think is one of the best sounding steel guitars around. Of course I have no bias here. All three guitars were made from the same piece of lumber. Even so when you play each one, each has a distinctive unique tone. By the way, I had the entire crew at Mullen sign each of the guitars.

Mullen D10 9/8 zebrawood pedal steel guitar
The Three Amigos!


My next piece of gear I have is my Fender twin reverb reissue amplifier. This one has the single 15 inch speakers instead of the double 12". I like the warm sound of the Fender amp over the Peavy, however, the Peavy is more durable. Tubes need replacement, biasing, warm up and cool down periods and are heavy. Mine I believe is around 60 pounds.

Fender Twin Reverb Reissue with Single 15" Speaker
Fender Twin Reverb Reissue with Single 15" Speaker


My next amplifier is the Digital Stereo Steel amplifier. This amplifier, in my opinion, does not sound as good as a tube amp (nothing will) but it has XLR outputs on the back which allows me to hookup to my Presonus 16.4.2 Mixer/recorder board. I use this amplifier for recording.

Presonus 16.4.2 Mounted in a Gator Box
Presonus 16.4.2


I also have a Presonus Mixer/recording board. You don't need anything this fancy but you should have a way to record yourself play for later review. It comes in handy when you get discouraged, you can play back what you did in the past and hear how much progress you have made.

Well thats it in a nutshell of my set up. In my next post I will describe the steel guitar itself and the basic copedant concepts. If you are looking to possibly learn this guitar, please, please do not be intimidated or discouraged by the information presented. This instrument will be a life long learning journey and can be very rewarding.

Personal History

I was first introduced to the lap steel guitar when I was 12 years old. My parents enrolled my brother and I in the Honolulu Conservatory of Music. We had Oahu 6 string lap steel with a white mother of pearl finish and a white Oahu amplifier, volume pedal, and needed accessories. We played for two years and we got good enough that we played at school talent shows, church functions and we even played at the Wester Washington State Fair in Puyallup WA. At the end of the two year contract my brother and I had a decision to make. Continue on, and our parents would buy us double or triple neck console guitars or opt out. This would commit us to another two or three year contract. To 11 and 14 year old boys this was a lifetime, especially since we wanted to play baseball, hike and camp. We both decided to abandon the steel guitar.

After a 41 year hiatus I decided to renter the steel guitar world. At first, my motivations were mixed. I had been playing hockey and enjoyed the game very much. Even though it was shinny league, it still could get rough. After receiving two concussions in the same season, it was time to find a new hobby with my health intact. I have always enjoyed country music, everything from Bob Wills to George Straight. I also enjoy swing, blues, jazz and oldies rock and roll. Many people do not realize that the pedal steel guitar was used by bands like the Doobie Brothers in Tell Me What You Want And I Will Give You What You Need, and South City Midnight Lady. Or the Eagles in Ol' '55 written by Tom Waits who also played the steel. Other rock bands that had a steel guitar from time to time in the band included Poco, Bob Dylan, Steely Dan, Byrds and Judy Collins. In all of this music from country to rock it was the steel guitar my ear was always drawn to. I needed a hobby and this seemed like the one for me. Little did I realize, I would become infected with a passion for this beautiful sounding guitar.

I started doing research on pedal steel guitars and which one would be best for me. I finally settled on a Carter D10 8/5. This guitar has two necks with 10 strings on each neck, 8 pedals and five levers. I had the standard Emmons setup. I also purchased a Peavy Nashville 110 amplifier, Goodrich volume pedal, cables, picks, and instructional material from Jeffran College of Music. After an agonizing 6 month wait, my guitar was shipped. When I received my guitar, I set up my guitar and began using the instructional materials I had purchased. I soon realized, this was not going to be sufficient. I was going to need an instructor. I then began searching for an instructor and found 4 in the local area and one was within 15 minutes of my house. I called him and set up an appointment.




In my next post I will describe my gear.

Welcome

Welcome to my Steel Guitar Passion blog. I am a pedal steel guitar player and student of the instrument.  I have been playing for about 3 years, starting in November of 2009. I decided to blog about my journey learning the pedal steel guitar at the urging of my girlfriend. Andrea is a scrapbooker and photographer. She has her own blog as well as Instagram and Facebook accounts. One day she started taking pics of my guitar and mixer board and posted them. She started getting a lot of questions about what kind of guitar it is? What does it sound like? and so on. From this, I decided it was time to set up a blog and introduce people to this wonderful instrument and how beautiful it sounds. I will make posts describing the details of this instrument, my experience buying a pedal steel guitar and considerations, thoughts on learning this guitar,my learning experiences, and eventually I will post Youtube videos of songs I describe that I have learned. It is my desire to infect as many of you as possible with the love and passion I have for this guitar. I will be developing posts that bring me up to date before I go live with this blog. Check out my archive for articles that interest you. If you have questions shoot me an email or better yet share a comment. PLease let me know if information presented is not accurate and I will make corrections. If you need more information ask and I will research it. I am not presenting myself as an expert, rather just a student of the pedal steel guitar with a passion for it. Thanks for taking the time to read.



For my next blog I will provide a personal history.
Note: I changed my settings to allow any and all to post comments on my blog.