Bobbe’s Road Stories: Japan with Hank Williams III

February 14, 2013

It’s Valentine’s Day. Be nice to the one you love.

Every now and then it’s fun to go back and look at one of Bobbe’s old newsletter just for nostalgia sake. Here’s one I think you might enjoy reading again.

My being a professional musician as many of you are, I would like to relate a recent road trip I took to a far off place. As most of you know, when you are working with a professional country music act, you may be called on at any moment to do something a little out of the ordinary, whether it’s working on a flatbed truck at a rodeo in Phoenix or practicing with a symphony in New York or even playing a big casino in Las Vegas with a 40 piece staff band backing you and the singer up.

I’d like to tell you about a recent trip to the beautiful country of Japan that I made with Hank Williams III. His father was called Bocephus, so I coined the nickname Tricephus.

I had worked with Hank III a little bit around Nashville on the Ralph Emery show and the Opry, but hadn’t worked the road with him. Upon meeting at the airport bound for Tokyo, I was shocked to find one of Nashville’s greater guitar players going on the trip with us, the great Ray Flack, fresh off the Ricky Scaggs show.

I was soon to learn that this citizen of England was a character like I’ve never met. Not only an incredible guitar player, but a guy who’s humor was always working overtime. We flew American Airlines to Atlanta, then transferred to a Japanese airline 747. I was flying coach. The seats were about ¾ the size of seats on our American Airlines aircraft. Since the airplane was full and I was wide awake having had a good nights sleep the night before, I was in perfect shape to enjoy all the pain and misery of this 18 hour flight to Tokyo.

Upon landing and exiting the aircraft, I received my first dose of Japanese culture. The customs officers were firm but very pleasant and let us know that they were going to put up with no nonsense. Our bass player was transporting his upright bass in a custom built, large square 7 by 3 foot bass case. A custom officer looked directly at Ray Flack and in his broken English said, “What is in this box?”

Ray looked directly into his eyes and said, “That’s where we keep the bodies.”

The officer looked at me and my steel guitar case and asked me, “You have little bodies in there?”

I busted out laughing and said, “Yes.”

He laughed to and said, “You’re clear to go.” and put the customs stickers on our cases. I heard him exclaim as we walked out of sight, “Crazy Americans!”

The club that we were working for the first three days was in Fukuoka, the Blue Note Jazz Club. This was at the other end of Japan so we transferred to another 747 and in less than an hour, we were there. They put us in a gorgeous hotel within walking distance of the club in downtown Fukuoka. We had an extra day to kill so I thought I would get out on the street and see what I was getting into.

Since this city was right next to Nagasaki, I didn’t know what to expect from the terrain or the people, but I soon about to be impressed. Walking out of the hotel and mixing with the masses, I was amazed to see that everyone was either wearing a nice business suit or white shirt and tie or a nice uniform from some company or the city government.

Absolutely no trash or dirt on the streets and I was soon to observe a beautiful young girl in a uniform pushing a cart full of cleaning supplies down the street. She stopped at all municipal signs, wiped them off and cleaned all parking meters with what looked like a Windex spray bottle and clean rag.

All delivery vehicles and taxi cabs had drivers wearing uniforms. I was especially impressed with the gorgeous taxi cabs. Not a dent, scratch or speck of dust on any of them. The drivers wore tuxedos and top hats and the interiors were immaculate even down to the hand knitted doilies on the back of the seats in the passenger compartment.

The following day with much assistance, we sat our equipment up in the beautiful jazz club. No tables, it was just set up like a little amphitheater, every seat facing the stage. They furnished the amplifiers which were anything we wanted. I chose a Peavey Nashville 112. Ray chose the proverbial Fender Twin.

Our show consisted of Hank III opening with the pure hard country songs of his grandfather. Then we gradually worked into some Waylon Jennings and Hank Jr. outlaw tunes. Then ending the show with some Georgia Satellite and Allman Brothers tunes.

It wasn’t too long into the second show that we realized what they really wanted to hear by far and loved most was the hard core country of Hank III’s granddaddy.

I had decided before our first show that I could play very commercially and laid back and let the star carry the show. Ray Flack abruptly put an end to these plans with his brutal, blazing speed and gargantuous chords. I couldn’t let him be the only musician in the band to stick out so I put it in high gear and commenced to throw taste to the wind and play everything I knew on every song.

This seemed to work extremely well because Hank III’s end of the stage was getting all of the attention during the first show, but from the second show on, Ray and I had the audience under total control and everytime we took any kind of a solo, we got tremendous rounds of applause. This proves that the audience was into music and not just the charisma of the star they paid to see.

After all our appearances, I was very impressed with the politeness of the audience. They would stand off several feet away from us and only approach us in ones or twos to ask for autographs or ask our permission to take our pictures. No mobbing, pushing or several people yelling at the same time. Just thoughtful consideration.

On the third night, a Japanese businessman came up to me, bowed his head and handed me the equivalent of $500, straightened back up and said, “I’m a fan of yours. This money is for you to have a good time while you are in our country.”

I tried to refuse but it was obvious that this would have hurt his feelings, so I proceeded to talk to him for an hour or so and realized what a wonderful, sincere gentleman he was. He introduced me to his family before I went back up to do the show. His last name was Takashita.

I last three days I was there, we flew back to Osaka. If you are a steel guitar player and about to go to Japan, you will not be disappointed. I found the food much more palatable than I expected it to be. All the food is displayed in the large picture window of all restaurants, complete with number. You make up your mind what you want by looking through the window and remember the number and go inside and tell them the number.

There were about 80 different kinds of spaghetti from spinach to sushi spaghetti. Everything thing except tomato based Italian spaghetti. Even though Ray Flack had nothing other than sushi the whole time he was there, I couldn’t bring myself to eat anything but spaghetti.

The traffic in the cities was more fun to watch than a NASCAR race in Charlotte. It was like watching a series of drag races from traffic light to traffic light. Tremendous mix in the type of traffic. Little trucks, motorcycles, little motor scooters, little hotrod cars, even a few Corvettes and Cadillacs. At a red light, the scooters would filter up through all the rest of the traffic and line up, revving their engines, ready to go as soon as the light turned green. The fast vehicles would take off as fast as they could with the scooters and little trucks being left in the dust. At the next red light, the scooters again would run up into the middle of the cars and line up at the cross walk waiting for the green light again. Pretty funny!

If any of this happened in New York city, you’d probably spend a month in jail. On the freeways, everyone drove 80 miles per hour and up. I never saw an accident, came close two or three times with drivers honking their horns, but no one displayed any anger, regardless of how close they came to having an accident. Every is polite to everyone all the time.

In walking down the street, no one ever made eye contact with me unless I got right in front of them and asked them a direct question. I always got a smile and a courteous answer that I could almost understand.

All I can say to any of you steel players, musicians, stars or just travelers, if you ever have a chance to go to Japan, it may be the time of your life. I left with a great respect for the way they do many things, their culture and their consideration and politeness. Be sure to go if you have a chance.

The trip back was easier as I made sure I was extremely tired so I could sleep the 16 hours back.

www.steelguitar.net
sales@steelguitar.net
www.youtube.com/bobbeseymour

Listen To Steel Guitar Music Streaming 24 Hours A Day!

Steel Guitar Nashville
123 Mid Town Court
Hendersonville, TN. 37075
(615) 822-5555
Open 9AM – 4PM Monday – Friday
Closed Saturday and Sunday

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New Peterson Tuners; Prepping a Pedal Steel for Sale

February 11, 2013

This is Vic Lawson. The news this week is that the new Peterson tuners will finally be here just in time for Valentine’s Day. So guys, tell your wives and girlfriends to call us for a gift card or to place an order. They will be priced at $156.99 which includes the leg clamp. The tuner by itself will be $119.

We have been told we are the first dealer getting these tuners. We were emailed the following description from Peterson.

The Peterson StroboPlus HD™ is an ultra high-resolution strobe tuner with our largest illuminated display ever featured in a traditional strobe format. Chromatically tune any instrument confidently to the exacting standards that experienced musicians demand or use any of the over 90 exclusive Sweetened Tunings™ that are developed and optimized for your specific instrument. Use the built-in mic, plug in or use a clip-on pickup to tune your instruments quickly with its smooth, real-time display or program your custom tunings using our *PetersonConnect™ online utility.

Via a simple firmware update, the StroboPlus can be upgraded to include our popular metronome, the BodyBeat Sync®. The same metronome engine can be available in the StroboPlus HD complete with the vibe ouput! (Vibe Clip™ optional.)

PetersonConnect is a new way to configure your Peterson products and program your own tunings. Simply download the free PetersonConnect program and register your tuner. Each time you connect your tuner to your computer, it will check to see if there are any firmware updates that are needed for your product and also find any configuration changes, new tunings, or sweeteners that you have added to the profile for your product.

The PetersonConnect tool allows you to easily alter the settings you want to appear on your tuner. You can create your own tunings and sweeteners as well as synchronize the settings between multiple Peterson tuning equipment that supports PetersonConnect. (PetersonConnect is not currently available but will be online soon.)

On another note, let me tell you about what we do to every guitar here at Steel Guitar Nashville before a guitar is put on the floor and internet for sale.

Although we can’t take the time to de-rod every guitar, we start with a thorough cleaning. We cut the strings off and use a mild cleaner to get the majority of the dirt off. Then we use a special cleaner for the changer and get all the built up grime out of it. Next we lubricate the changer with the proper lubricant.

Continuing, we oil the rollers with a light oil and free any sticky ones. We polish the end plates, necks, pedal bar etc. and polish the mica or lacquer with the proper product for the finish. We string up the guitars with new strings and after the guitar is clean, our main focus is the mechanics.

We make sure everything is adjusted correctly, i.e. stops, ratios, half stops, splits and so on. Any problems found are fixed. Any parts that need replacing are replaced. We want you to be able to buy a guitar from us and be confident that it works and performs the way it should.

We get quite a few guitars for repair that players have purchased elsewhere and we end up fixing other people’s messes. We hope you’ll keep this in mind when looking for a good used guitar. You may find a better price on Ebay, but may end up spending more overall if you have to send it to us to be brought up to standard.

For everyone curious about Bobbe’s health, he is doing well. He does have minor surgery scheduled this week which is expected to help a lot. Bobbe is focusing on his health and determined to come back as strong as ever.

I’m glad to say we are now a Telonics dealer so we will be able to serve your needs with their products. We have had many inquiries about their pickups and volume pedals and it’s our desire to be able to provide what the steel guitar community wants. Telonics is known for high-end pro-audio gear. www.tpa-az/page2.html

www.steelguitar.net
sales@steelguitar.net
www.youtube.com/bobbeseymour

Listen To Steel Guitar Music Streaming 24 Hours A Day!

Steel Guitar Nashville
123 Mid Town Court
Hendersonville, TN. 37075
(615) 822-5555
Open 9AM – 4PM Monday – Friday
Closed Saturday and Sunday

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Letters from Our Readers

This is Vic Lawson. As Bob noted in the last newsletter, if you ask 100 people about sight-reading versus playing by ear, you’ll get 200 opinions. That’s certainly what we got. Some people get extremely excited about the subject. We wanted to share some of the replies we received. After all, it’s important to get different points of view.

EXCELLENT!!!! As a music major (sax and voice) in college, I learned to sight read like a bandit. When I played Tenor Sax in a touring funk band that skill served me well. When disco hit I quit the band and have played Pedal Steel ever since. While the things I learned in school remain the basis for all things musical, steel guitar (for me at least) is more of a “feel” thing. It’s also (once again imho) an instrument that “ya either got the feel and touch required, or ya ain’t”. Brecker and Vaccari and all them cool Tenor giants can still bring me to my knees with their hot and cool licks. Give me Lloyd Green or Buddy Emmons any day of the week for pure musical bliss! Keep up the great work.

Dan Chambers

Hi Bob, it’s Ron again.

I started learning guitar at the age of 5. I couldn’t read English, hardly knew the alphabet, but would not quit asking my parents about guitar lessons. So, they found a teacher that agreed to give it a try. The method he taught was “notes on staff” or music in the classic sense. Since I couldn’t read English yet, he devise a method of fractional numbers. 0/1 was the open 1st string, 3/1 was the 3rd fret on the first string, and so on. I eventually learned to read both English and music.

Fast forward to the steel guitar. I believe I could learn to read on a lap steel. The moving notes on a pedal guitar really complicate reading music. The sheet calls for an E, but is it the one forth string or is it at the first fret with the E lowered? Sheet music doesn’t convey that.

What I concluded is for pedal steel guitar a musician needs a deeper reading of the music. If you notice the chord at the moment is a C, then the E in the melody can tell you which bar position to most likely find a pocket to work. Might be 3rd fret, might be 8th, depends on what you want to do and where the song is going next.

The same works for C6.

Example: I mentioned before that I had used fake books to figure out some jazz tunes. The first tune I broke the code on was “Night and Day”, the old Sinatra hit. The chart called for a D-7b5 chord (D minor seventh with a flatted 5th) with a G for the first note of the melody. Hmm? Where to start? I went to my D-7 position at the 5th fret and started counting notes up from the root on the minor scale (starting on the 8th string). When I got to the 5th note of the minor scale on the 6th string, I realized I could flat that note with my 6th pedal. Wait a minute! That’s what I would normally call a Bb7 chord. (for those of you working on the C6, that’s why strings 10,9, & 8 are tuned the way they are. By changing the low note (root) you change the color and name of the chord). Having convinced myself that this was indeed a D-7b5, now where do I find the melody note?

I had started using the D as a first string because a lot of people were doing that and it gave me some E9 riffs on the C6 tuning. Now I discover it gives a different opportunity when playing those altered chords used so much in jazz. The first note of “Night and Day” was right under the bar on the 1st string, and that’s pretty handy for steel guitar player.

Warning: Discovering a Bb7 has the same spelling as D-7b5 leads to a whole new study of substituting a chord you know for the one on the sheet. I have found it to be one of the most important elements of C6, and what your learn there is fun to use on the Kroger neck too.

I can still read music like flypaper on guitar, it was my first language. My experience on steel is this. I can’t sight read. I can find the notes, but it takes more time. But, and it’s a big but, there is a lot more information on the sheet than just the melody and reading that can add to the steel player’s knowledge of what the whole band is supposed to be doing. That one chord, D-7b5 tells you where the bass, piano, horns if you have them, or fiddles are supposed to be. And the melody says where the soloist is in all the mix. It’s interesting and quite a challenge.

I had always heard that Hal Rugg could read. That and many other reasons I assumed was why we always would see him on awards night playing with the Orchestra. I asked him about that. He never verified his reading ability, but stated modestly he had been gifted with a good ear.

My take on that is if you can tell where your supposed to be from the sheet music and you have a good ear, there may be a place for you occasionally with the big band.

Written music is the original language music was written in. It’s handy, but not the only way. The numbers system (scale degree), both for chords and melody work as well. Numbers don’t communicate timing very well, but music doesn’t transpose (change keys) as easily as numbers. Neither are perfect. Still, I will run across a guy that just started playing a few months ago, doesn’t read either music or numbers, and that guy has found something I haven’t been able to figure out. Like John Hughey’s solo on “Look at Us”. Music is the kind of thing where all are welcomed and able to make a contribution.

Take care,
Ron Carpenter

From: David Mason

Hi! I’ve never answered one of these, but I felt it necessary. There’s a huge range of music-reading ability, all the way from the sight-reading you describe to the act of picking out one single note at a time, one after another, counting up bar lines, remembering Every Good Boy Does Favors (treble clef line) and F-A-C-E – treble clef spaces). What I have to quibble with is the idea that you can either sight-read – or not. And there’s nothing in-between that can be of any use to you. This is off-target, because very, very few musicians overall use sheet music with total sight-reading proficiency. I’m sure that living in Nashville you’ve got an extremely weird & biased bump in the bell curve, where you really can dial up a sight-reading keyboard, bass or guitarist player in an instant – but out here in the sticks you’d better get your sheet music to the musicians a few weeks ahead of the gig!

When you put the “ideal” sight-reading model up on a marble column and worship it, you mostly tell steel guitarists to not even bother, it’ll never help them to even start. Which is ridiculous, and becoming ever-more-wrong with the publication of more and more transcriptions and music all the time. One of the most common questions – “Where do I start?” is so easily answered – you start by reading the music for nursery rhymes and Christmas carols, because it’s already in your head and you right away start to associate the contour map of the little dots with correct-sounding notes. Some of the time… It’s just a code, or another language. Once a bit of it starts to make sense, you can try tackling more complicated material – I always tell my guitar students to find something hard that they LIKE to play, not abstract non-music “exercises.” And the world is so full of beautiful music that is encoded in a basically simple other language, you just have to START. I would be lost (or at least, much less fun) without my 12-Real-Book CD-ROM and “The Classical Fake Book.” It’s actually fun for me to approach each problem-solving task – I do like practicing.

One thing’s for certain with the all-or-nothing approach – if you ever visit a foreign country, you’re going to end up piddling your pants for quite some time before you starve to death, simply because you “can’t” speak perfect Portuguese or Mandarin or Russian. And you refuse to grab your crotch jumping from foot-to-foot and making randomized distress noises, because anything less than fluent, idealized multi-lingual perfection isn’t worth the bother..

From: Thomas Keel

Mr. Hempker, this is some of the best advice I’ve heard on the “reading” subject. When I’m asked I say “yes, I know how to read, and yes, I recommend every serious student of music learn how to read, and how to play by ear. There are some things about music which can’t be learned without reading, and some things which can’t be learned by reading”.

I love to use steel on my stuff. And you’re right that I wouldn’t have the foggiest idea how to write music for it. I simply depend on my player to get me something that fits. A lot of the time I like to put steel on first before strings, horns, etc because I get good ideas from the player and incorporate “communication” like you say.

I met Bobbe in 1969 and he is one of my all-time favorites. He and I have lots of friends in common, too. I don’t get back home too often but I’d like to pop in and meet you if I do in the next decade or so 🙂

Thanks for carrying this on.

That’s it. We thank everyone for their input and hope this stimulates and inspires you.

www.steelguitar.net
sales@steelguitar.net
www.youtube.com/bobbeseymour

Listen To Steel Guitar Music Streaming 24 Hours A Day!

Steel Guitar Nashville
123 Mid Town Court
Hendersonville, TN. 37075
(615) 822-5555
Open 9AM – 4PM Monday – Friday
Closed Saturday and Sunday

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