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  What was your first pedal steel? (Page 4)

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Author Topic:   What was your first pedal steel?
Russ Tkac
Member

From: Waterford, Michigan, USA

posted 31 August 2005 03:55 PM     profile     
I too started on a Sho-Bud student. Only it was 30 years ago !

Dick Wood
Member

From: Springtown Texas, USA

posted 31 August 2005 08:19 PM     profile     
MSA Sidekick and a few months later a ZB Custom SD-10 3x4 Beautiful to look at and hard as heck to keep in tune.

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

les green
Member

From: Jefferson City, Mo 65101 USA

posted 31 August 2005 08:58 PM     profile     
Don't know if this counts or not but my first pedal steel was a 3 neck Rickenbacker, 2 eight string necks, 1 ten. I managed somehow to rig up the Bud Isaccs(?) change on one of the eight string necks. Crude but worked rather well. My first real pedal steel was a Fender 1000.
Jody Sanders
Member

From: Magnolia,Texas

posted 31 August 2005 09:01 PM     profile     
A Fender 1000. (Excluding homemade pedals on a Rickenbacker triple 8). Jody.
Jim Sliff
Member

From: Hermosa Beach California, USA

posted 31 August 2005 10:39 PM     profile     
A Fender made by Shobud. It was a Maverick with black tolex covering and an amp nameplate on it.

Hated it. I was too tall for it, instructional materials (there were no teachers around here then) called for the second knee lever almost right away, it didn't stay in tune - kept it for about a year but really only played it a few times. It was far too frustrating. This was at least 15 years ago.

My next was an MSA D10, about which there have been several threads on this forum. It was a disaster. Finally got it playable, but it's just not my style.

Now I'm playing/learning on a Fender 400 in A6 with 6 pedals and loving it.

Pat Burns
Member

From: Branchville, N.J. USA

posted 01 September 2005 11:10 AM     profile     
..first one was a black Fuzzy D-10 with 8 & 4...
James Morehead
Member

From: Durant, Oklahoma, USA

posted 02 September 2005 04:52 AM     profile     
Green Marlen S-10 3X4.
Jim Bates
Member

From: Alvin, Texas, USA

posted 02 September 2005 06:26 PM     profile     
A Sho-Bud D-10 X-over model made in late 1968. Great guitar for the time, providing you knew how to set it up and tune it.

Thanx,
Jim
Al Marcus
Member

From: Cedar Springs,MI USA

posted 02 September 2005 08:48 PM     profile     
My very first PEDAL steel guitar was a 1942 Gibson Electra-Harp with 6 pedals and 8 strings similiar to Alvino Rey's , only his was 9 strings and had a few special things.

Mine had the full birdseye cabinet all the way to the floor and was NOT portable and very heavy, they only made about 12 of them before World War II. I bought it used in 1947. I really enjoyed it for many years.

It was very easy to change tuning setups , right on top of the guitar and had almost no limitations on raises or lowers. So I could try many different tunings on the pedals whenever I wanted.
The changer was very similar to the multi-kord changer that came along later. I owned and played it for about 20 years. I sold it, sorry too. then I build a 14 string with a multi-kord 8 string changer in the middle with 6 pedals. (A picture of it is on my website). then I went to D12's MSA's.
Wow! What a trip!......al

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My Website..... www.cmedic.net/~almarcus/

Chris Bauer
Member

From: Nashville, TN USA

posted 03 September 2005 06:40 AM     profile     
I, too, started out on a blond 3x1 Maverick. For all the grief they get around here, I gotta say that I loved that guitar! It played great, looked cooler than anything I could have imagined at the time, and had a ton of music in it.

Now and then I stumble onto some tapes from back then and I even think it was a terrific sounding guitar, even compared to some pro models I've owned since. (And as a bonus, of course - unlike now - I actually had a solid excuse for playing like a beginner back then...)

Charlie McDonald
Member

From: Lubbock, Texas, USA

posted 03 September 2005 07:11 AM     profile     
Red Baron (laughter dies down).
Your Mavericks were at least made of wood.
No so the Baron. I sold it the next day,
determined that I would never play pedal steel. I have since learned better with my Carter Starter.
I don't think a Red Baron would even start a fire.
Buck Dilly
Member

From: Branchville, NJ, USA

posted 04 September 2005 05:41 AM     profile     
S-8 Push Pull, with a D'Armond pickup. Very nice sound.
Larry Weaver
Member

From: Asheville, North Carolina, USA

posted 04 September 2005 07:09 AM     profile     
Having a chuckle about the Red Baron Charlie. That was my first steel too. Funny thing is, I still have the darned thing! I took it out of storage a some months ago to relearn PSG after a 20+ year layoff. 'Bought a D10 Derby a month later! Back to the storage bin for the Red Baron.

regards,
Larry W


Ricky Littleton
Member

From: Steely-Eyed Missile Man from Orlando, Florida USA

posted 04 September 2005 07:22 PM     profile     
1st real one was a Birdseye Maverick with the raised neck I bought in Huntsville Alabama.

Now the "first-first" one was a 8 string monster I bought from Dee-s Music in Dothan Alabama in 1978. Home-made with threaded pipe for the legs and 2 pedals. The owner said Julian Tharpe built it, but there's no way to verify that. Paid $100 for it and a Montgomery Ward Airline Tube amp.

Wish I had kept it, but ran on tough times and sold the guitar to my uncle for 50 bucks. Can't remember what happened to the amp, but sure wish I had kept them both. The guitar was pretty much unplayable but would've been a helluva a conversation piece.

Ricky...

------------------
Emmons LeGrande - 8x4
Session 400 Ltd, Nashville 112,Hilton Volume pedal, Peterson VS-II Tuner
Dan-Echo, E-Bow, Ibanez Distortion, Bo-Bro, Ibanez Auto-Wah, PX4 Pandoras Box

Ricky Littleton
Member

From: Steely-Eyed Missile Man from Orlando, Florida USA

posted 04 September 2005 07:25 PM     profile     
1st real one was a Birdseye Maverick with the raised neck I bought in Huntsville Alabama.

Now the "first-first" one was a 8 string monster I bought from Dee-s Music in Dothan Alabama in 1978. Home-made with threaded pipe for the legs and 2 pedals. The owner said Julian Tharpe built it, but there's no way to verify that. Paid $100 for it and a Montgomery Ward Airline Tube amp.

Wish I had kept it, but ran on tough times and sold the guitar to my uncle for 50 bucks. Can't remember what happened to the amp, but sure wish I had kept them both. The guitar was pretty much unplayable but would've been a helluva a conversation piece.

Ricky...

------------------
Emmons LeGrande - 8x4
Session 400 Ltd, Nashville 112,Hilton Volume pedal, Peterson VS-II Tuner
Dan-Echo, E-Bow, Ibanez Distortion, Bo-Bro, Ibanez Auto-Wah, PX4 Pandoras Box

Tim Lane
Member

From: Garfield, Arkansas, USA

posted 04 September 2005 08:42 PM     profile     
MSA Sidekick - which was would go out of tune everytime it even thought about touching a pedal. THen a Sierra Artist(great guitar. Now I just got a Rains sd10.
Ken Williams
Member

From: Arkansas

posted 04 September 2005 11:59 PM     profile     
My first pedal steel was a Hughey D10. I don't think John made many of them. It was a nice looking guitar. I wish I still had it.

Ken

Bud Harger
Member

From: Temple / Belton, Texas

posted 06 September 2005 05:05 AM     profile     
This is mine. A T-8, built by Harold Romero in New Iberia, Louisiana in 1955. Only one floor pedal, raised two strings, E to A6.

I have posted this before, but some of you may not have seen it. It still plays great.

[This message was edited by Bud Harger on 06 September 2005 at 05:06 AM.]

[This message was edited by Bud Harger on 06 September 2005 at 05:14 AM.]

Barbara Hennerman
Member

From: Rangely, CO, USA

posted 06 September 2005 07:20 PM     profile     
I came back to Denver in 1960 and got a Fender 1000 from Happy Logan, the musician's friend. I didn't have a clue so Happy put me in touch with Bobby Chatfield. He gave me a few lessons and I was off. Boy, was I off. I was always changing my #11 strings. Seemed like about 10 a night. It was pretty though.
Jerry Gleason
Member

From: Eugene, Oregon

posted 06 September 2005 10:15 PM     profile     
My first real pedal steel was an early Sierra. I'm sure it was very advanced for it's time, but it's time had long passed by the time I got it in 1975. It weighed about 900 pounds, and came in two cases, one for the guitar and one for the legs and rods. Ten pedals and one knee lever.

It had a cable operated changer that could raise or lower, but I don't remember much else about the changer mechanism. It didn't sound bad, but it was really frustrating to play because it broke strings constantly. and the pedal stops consisted of rubber bumpers under the pedals (!), so I had to carry around a plywood board to set it on.

I finally gave up on it after about six months, and didn't play steel again for seventeen years.

Glenn Dawson
Member

From: Stephens City ,Virginia, USA

posted 18 November 2005 02:52 PM     profile     
My first steel was a 1971 ZB D10 that I purchased from the original owner in 1984. I had the owner ship it from Virginia to Orlando Fla. where I was living at the time, by way of US Air. After several days of the guitar not arriving, I contacted U.S. Air, they could only trace it as far as Pittsburg Pa. They settled the claim. I would had rather had the guitar, beautiful two tone ZB like new. In 1996 I was looking through the local free ad paper here in the valley of Va. and came across an ad that read, ZB pedal steel guitar. I didn't reconize the area code. I had to call. Talked with the guy a few minutes. He didnt know much about pedal steel, he was a guitar picker and had loaned it to his buddy for about 10 years and just got it back.Said it was in pretty bad shape. I talked w/ him about the color etc. Then I asked him if the bottom neck had an odd key on the 10th string. He said hold on and let me check. When he got back on the phone, he asked '' how did you know'' I told him that that guitar had been stolen from Pittsburg air port. Then the phone went click. I later learned that the number I had called was in Pa. Guess I should have pursued that one.

[This message was edited by Glenn Dawson on 18 November 2005 at 02:57 PM.]

[This message was edited by Glenn Dawson on 18 November 2005 at 05:34 PM.]

[This message was edited by Glenn Dawson on 18 November 2005 at 05:36 PM.]

richard burton
Member

From: Britain

posted 19 November 2005 12:10 AM     profile     
I made my first steel (and the second and third, until I'd just about got it right with number 7)





[This message was edited by richard burton on 19 November 2005 at 12:14 AM.]

Richard Cooper
Member

From: Eads,TN,USA

posted 19 November 2005 06:10 AM     profile     
Sho-Bud Mavrick, all wood, from a Pawn Shop in Nashville in the mid 70's.
Nick Reed
Member

From: Springfield, TN

posted 19 November 2005 10:42 AM     profile     
Here was my first one, a Sho-Bud Maverick in 1985.
John Ummel
Member

From: Arlington, WA.

posted 02 December 2005 06:38 AM     profile     
Hey Nick,
That's one of the good Mavericks. Looks just like the one I started on in 1973. I've got an old photo of it. I'll get it scanned so I can post.
Johnny
Brad Sarno
Member

From: St. Louis, MO USA

posted 02 December 2005 07:07 AM     profile     
Mine was a super clean Sho-Bud LDG model. Sure wish I still had it.

Brad

Will Holtz
Member

From: San Francisco, California, USA

posted 02 December 2005 11:00 AM     profile     
I got a used Carter Starter in March of 2003. About a year later I was confident that I was going to stick with pedal steel and I upgraded to an almost new Carter S-10. It's been fun!
David Wren
Member

From: Placerville, California, USA

posted 02 December 2005 01:12 PM     profile     
My first "pedal" steel was an old Kent electric 6 six guitar. I made a lever mounted behind the bridge to lower the 3rd string 1 fret (major to minor), motorcycle cable connected this to a huge barn hinge, which served as the "Pedal". Luckily I had my mother's D8 Blonde Sho-Bud to play on, so real soon I bought a real used (and wobbily)D10 8 & 2 Sho-Bud (walnut) thanks to our family's friend in Nashville, Jack (Hos) Linneman.

I also made a one lever, one string "Electric Ice Cube Tray", with a hole in it to hang a mic on... but that's another story. Hey I was a creative kid!

------------------
Dave Wren
'95Carter S12-E9/B6,7X7; Session500; Hilton Pedal
www.ameechapman.com

Fred Plant
Member

From: Winter Haven, Florida, USA

posted 02 December 2005 04:13 PM     profile     
Back in the 1950s I played a double neck Danelectro Guitar/Bass. I really wanted a steel guitar, but couldn't afford one. Since I had another electric guitar, I removed the guitar neck from the double-neck, built a stand from 2x4s, 2 pedals from 1x2s, eyebolts to pull the strings down with 1/8" stranded cable and turnbuckles. I don't remember what guage strings I used, but I guess it didn't make any difference on this Rube Goldberg. I tuned it to a dobro G tuning. It was difficult to play, to say the least, but I loved it.
Then came the day in 1960 when I bought a Multi-Kord 6 string, 4 pedal. Hey man; I was now on the way. I used that until I moved out of state in 1969 for a short time. I sold it along with a talking steel system I built, with the help of an old friend Les Paul. Then, in 1978, I bought a grown-up steel; the real-deal; a 1972 ShoBud Pro 2. I won't part with this one. Now, I really love playing steel, even though I'm not in the upper class of players. At my age now, I'm completely satisfied with the ability to play at all. I thank God for what talent He did give me, and I've been using it for His glory.
I played on a CD in 2000 along with two other men from New York State, and have just completed an instrumental CD of Gospel songs. If I died today, I'd die a happy picker.
Fuzzy Plant
Bob Snelgrove
Member

From: san jose, ca

posted 02 December 2005 06:09 PM     profile     
1975, pete Grant reccommended a Marlen S12 and I ordered a new natural laquer one. What a beauty. Wish I still had it!

bob

Ronnie Green
Member

From: Des Moines, New Mexico, USA

posted 02 December 2005 07:29 PM     profile     
Graduation present. A brand new MSA Classic D10 8X4.
Tyler Hall
Member

From: Alabama, USA

posted 06 December 2005 08:50 AM     profile     
My first TWO steels were home-made. Mr Lucky Carter here in Birmingham has been building them for years and I would put mine against anything. He built me 2 SD-10, 3&4's. One is black (because everyone knows black sounds better), and a beautiful teal green. These guitars are great, and anybody with one of Lucky's will tell you the same.

I play my Fessy most of the time now, and just polish on the other two.

D-10 Fessenden, Nashville 112, Session 500, Goodrich LDR

Whip Lashaway
Member

From: Sherwood, Ohio, USA

posted 06 December 2005 01:30 PM     profile     
In 1983 my wife found a beginners model ShoBud with 3 pedals and 1 knee. It was one of those cable jobs. I played that thing about 4 hours a day for a year. Decided I could do this and traded it in on a teal colored Pro-I at Packs Music in San Antonio. Don had given me a few pointers during that year and I had bought my volume pedal, amp, tone bar, picks and some instructional material there. He knew I only paid $85.00 for that guitar and still gave me $200.00 trade-in after dropping the price of the Pro-I from $1600.00 to $1000.00. What a guy!!! I left town and moved back to Ohio. Stopped in to see Don about 15 years later. He didn't remember my name but remembered that I had made a deal on a teal colored ShoBud!!! Thanks Don, if you're out there somewhere.

------------------
Whip Lashaway
Sierra E9/B6 12 string
Sierra E9/B6 14 string
78' Emmons D10 P/P

Paddy Long
Member

From: Christchurch, New Zealand

posted 06 December 2005 02:14 PM     profile     
disregard - double post

[This message was edited by Paddy Long on 06 December 2005 at 02:15 PM.]

Michael McCorry
Member

From: Plattsburgh New York, USA

posted 07 December 2005 05:13 AM     profile     
First time was a beautyful, shapely, and well put-together Sierra Flourescent Orange single w/3&2 circa 1976. Bought from a magician, not a musician in 1993 for the large sum of $350.00 w/case, the guitar was bought new and never played, he got it as a christmas gift and apparently followed a career in tricks instead of licks....Orange Guitar, black tolex case with blue fur...she was a looker thats for sure!
To this day, I still miss her. Course, thats how relationships go, guess she found someone who could give her what I could not, so we parted ways when I abandoned her for curvy blonde 6 string. "Don;t it always seem to go, You don;t know what you got till its gone"..{Big Yellow Taxi}..truer words were never spoken..and life goes on

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"He who sacrifices personal liberties for a real or imagined sense of security, deserves neither liberty nor security"
Thomas Jefferson
----------------

[This message was edited by Michael McCorry on 07 December 2005 at 05:14 AM.]

[This message was edited by Michael McCorry on 07 December 2005 at 05:18 AM.]


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