Ray Price, Gene O’Neal, Curly Chalker

December 12, 2013

Our aging friend that has meant so much to steel guitar over the past 60 years is in the hospital and not doing well. Mr. Ray Price has always managed to carry a fine commercial steel guitarist on the road with him. He deserves to be acknowledged for what he has done for steel guitar.

In the early days in the 50s he used Jimmy Day and Buddy Emmons, then a rash of other fine players from Nashville and Dallas. I worked for Ray on a steady basis four different times. Although it wasn’t the most pleasurable experience in my life, there was something big and magical about that gorgeous band.

The first couple times I worked with Ray he was carrying a big violin section and horn section. I really have to admit that I loved the sound of the overall group. I had previously studied all the parts on the records and duplicated Buddy and Jimmys sound and style. I later recorded an album with this band and thoroughly enjoyed the end product called “Priceless” because it’s the whole unit without Ray.

I got a ton of responses to the last newsletter where I mentioned Gene O’Neal. Gene was a very good player and had recorded with Charlie Pride and Ray Charles among others. If any of you have ever seen him do a live steel guitar show, you will understand what I mean. Gene died several years ago because of a hospital screw-up after he went in to have his tonsils taken out. Everybody that knew him misses him, especially me.

Here’s an email I got from Arkansas Red.

I was fortunate enough to see the late Gene O’Neal one time live with Charlie Pride. Gene took a steel ride on Charlie’s “Crystal Chandeliers” with some of the most beautiful harmonics I’ve ever heard. The audience went ballistic. Charlie walked up to the mic and said, “Gene O’Neal ladies and gentlemen”. Gene looked up like, “Whaaaaat?” He had no idea he had just knocked the audience on it’s rear. He was just into the music so deep. It’s hard to find people like that anymore. That’s why I wanted to play pedal steel. To make the singer sound good. I always wanted to be a good sideman. No stars in my eyes. Just support the singer. Sometimes it’s rough though when you’re playing in one key and they are singing in another and don’t know the difference. Then after the gig you hear, “Boy, that band was the pits wasn’t it?” Because one person was the main screw up, the whole band had to pay for it. Like the late banjo player Bobby Thompson used to say, “A band is only as good as it’s weakest musician.”

Arkansas Red

Next, here’s another email I got. This one is from Jason.

Dear Bobbe,
Well, season’s greetings to you sir. It’s been a mighty entertaining series of newsletters of late, and while no disrespect to the other contributors, your stories take some beating. I’m 44 years old, and have been playing the steel guitar since the age of 18. Like a lot of steel players my age, I’m still ‘obsessed’ with what I consider the golden era of country music, when steel players were unlocking different tunings and experimenting with different instruments and amplifiers. As a kid growing up in the 70s, a lot of what I heard on the radio was not always ‘country’ necessarily, but the steel guitar was a big feature of popular music. The Carpenters, Neil Young, Bob Dylan, America had that sound, just like Charley Pride, Glen Campbell, Lynn Anderson, Barbara Mandrell, George Jones and Merle Haggard.

Thanks to my dad, who’s the same age as Buddy Emmons, I developed a great love for country music and I suppose for the same reasons that my dad also loved it – because it’s funky when it’s called for, it can be blues and jazz too, and it’s music that ‘feels’ and communicates truths.

What I love about the steel guitar is that it speaks to all kinds of music. I work and live near Sydney, Australia – a long way from the epicentre of American musical achievements. But in my career, I have played pedal steel in alternative bands, rock bands, Texas Country bands, alt.country and Americana acts, as well as with pop groups and even hard rock bands. No kidding.

All of these musicians ‘feel’ the steel. They all love that sound, and they all come and stand around me asking questions while I drop the Carter D-10 back in its case.

In March this year, I was without a pedal steel at all – I’d sold my Sho-Bud because it was getting old and unreliable, and parts are hard to find. I loved that 1974 Professional, but I couldn’t keep her working all the time. I sold it back to the guy I bought it from and told my wife, “If something doesn’t happen soon, I’m not going to buy another one.” Well, I thought about it some more and figured if I could lay my hands on another, newer pedal steel, I would not only do it, I would do it properly. So I went and found a Carter D-10 and bought a 70s Peavey amp and a Hilton VP and two DVDs from Bobbe Seymour, and I haven’t looked back. My playing is coming along – I practice every day for a minimum of two hours, and I’m concentrating on the C6 neck at the minute to get my chops going. I love it.

Thank you Bobbe! You are an inspiration.
Jason

Mike Brown from Peavey sent me this note concerning Curly Chalker.

Here’s a story for you if you wish to reprint.

It was in the wintertime during the late ’90’s that Hartley Peavey called me into his office to ask that I drive one of the company vans up to our Nashville facility, pick up Curly at his home and take him to our Nashville office and let him pick out a couple of amplifiers. So, I drove to his house, picked him up and took him to the Soundcheck facilities where he picked out two Peavey Classic 50/212 amplifiers. He simply liked the tone of these amplifiers. But, I had been told by other people that he was a bit hard to “deal with”, as when we were enroute to Soundcheck, Curly lit cigarettes and smoked continuously. I had mentioned that there was no smoking in company vehicles and there was even a noticed taped to the engine cover in the van that read, “NO SMOKING IN COMPANY VEHICLES”, but that didn’t faze Curly in the least as he kept “lighting them up”, one right after the other.

Just a tidbit of info to reminisce about.

Mike Brown
Peavey Customer Service

Steve Smith sent me this link. It’s wonderful.

Check out this Curly Chalker piece . Jimmy Capps is as smooth as silk, as well.
Steve Smith

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BUNjISx0aFM

Thank you for the link to that video Steve. I know there are many new players that are not familiar with Curly Chalkers playing. Curly was a legend starting in 1948. His first international recording session was with Lefty Frizzell and then moved to record with several western swing bands including Merle Travis’ big bands.

Curly rubbed a few players the wrong way with his personality at times, but he was honestly a very nice human being with a good heart and tremendous dedication to his playing. When he moved to Nashville to play I was afraid that it might be a mistake for him and I still think it was because he was such a gargantuous player.

His style of doing things just didn’t really fit all the time in the Nashville way of doing things. But he seemed to fit very well on HeeHaw. He ended up moving back to Vegas near the end. He was looking for a playing job that he could reach out and play what he wanted to. He never did find it and actually ended up coming back to Nashville again. Nashville is where he finally died and broke every serious steel players heart.

He sure could be obstinate. I remember talking to Buddy Emmons one time back 30 or more years ago. I asked him if he’d ever heard Curly play in a club setting. He said he went into a club one time to hear Curly play and Curly was on break. However, Buddy was introduced to him off stage. When Curly went back onstage to play the set, he picked up his trumpet and played it the rest of the night.

When I was band leader on Printers Alley in the late 70s, I used to hire Curly to play lead guitar when our regular player was off. He did an incredible job. I wish we would’ve had room to play twin steels. Another great player that I miss.

Merry Christmas from all of us at Steel Guitar Nashville.

Bobbe Seymour

www.steelguitar.net
info@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
Open 9AM – 2Pm every Saturday until Christmas
Closed Sunday

Posted in Bobbe's Tips | 2 Comments

He said, “I’m Curly Chalker.”

In my last newsletter I explained how I met Jimmy and Buddy at Tootsie’s on the main drag in Nashville. Tootsie’s just celebrated its 60th anniversary and I feel I should add that I was driving from Ardmore, Oklahoma to Norfolk, Virginia with only $30 in my pocket.

This had to include all my gasoline, oil and food. When Buddy found this out, he bought me a big hamburger and a something to drink in a brown bottle. I never forgot him for that because all I had been eating was pinto cheese sandwiches and drinking water.

Buddy Emmons? A very nice guy. Buddy Emmons has been known for years to be one of the world’s greatest steel players as most of you know. Curly Chalker was a steel player that was loved and appreciated by a large portion of the populous also.

I had met Curly on an airbase when I was in the service. He was working for The Billy Gray Western Swing Band. I’ll never forget walking in that front gate at the base, looking over to the right at the NCO club and seeing that big 29 passenger Flxible bus.

I naturally walked over to the club, in the front door and there was a whole band setup but not playing on the stage. I walked right up to the stage and there was a steel player tuning his Fender 1000.

I asked him what his name was and stuck out my hand and introduced myself. He said, “I’m Curly Chalker.”

I said, “I’ve sure heard a lot about you. If you’re half as good as what I’ve heard, you’re probably the best there is.”

He said, “I’m probably better than you’ve heard.”

I said, “Do you play a lot of Joaquin Murphey stuff?”

He said, “Where Joaquin note plays one note at a time, I can play two to four.”

I said, “Show me.”

He proceeded to do so. I went back to the club that night to see the band play but couldn’t get in because I wasn’t an NCO. Curly had to pull me into the dressing room window in the back of the club and put me on the stage so I could hear the band that evening.

I asked him how long he was going to be there. He said that they were only going to be there one night and they were going back to Kansas City to play the Riverside Rancho. I looked him straight in the eye and said, “Well, I’ve got the weekend off. I’m going to hitchhike up there and watch you play.”

He said, “Well don’t miss it because Saturday is my last night.”

The bus would be parked outside the club in Kansas City and Curly told me I could sleep on it to save a motel bill. This was the beginning of another long friendship.

Naturally getting to hear Curly play for the two days I was there was pure Heaven. He even talked me into sitting in one set. I met other musicians in the band which I would end up knowing forever. Most of these players including Curly ended up in Nashville. Of course, Curly got a job playing HeeHaw and some clubs around town. He always had steel players three deep around the stage when he was playing.

I talked to Curly about a week before he died here in Nashville. He said that he was feeling great and would be playing a lot from then on, so it was a shock to hear that he had died. When going over to visit him, I noticed a For Rent sign on a building. I stopped in and checked, rented it and it was the beginning of steel guitar Nashville.

Christmas is getting closer every day. Does Mrs. Santa know what you want?

Merry Christmas from all of us at Steel Guitar Nashville.

Bobbe Seymour

www.steelguitar.net
info@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
Open 9AM – 2Pm every Saturday until Christmas
Closed Sunday

Posted in Bobbe's Tips | Leave a comment

Dickie Overby, Billy Braddy, Jimmy Bryant, Jimmy Day and many more

December 5, 2013

Nice to see John Mayer on the David Letterman show with a wood body Emmons steel guitar beside him onstage. John draws a younger crowd and we can credit him for showing steel guitar to the younger masses.

I have had several requests to write about other players and a couple of vocalists. Your interest is greatly appreciated. One player I’ve been asked about is one that I haven’t seen in many years, but I remember him well from our early meetings. Dickie Overby, a fine steel guitarist from Texas, I met in 1959.

We were doing a show in Colorado Springs. I was backing up Jan Howard and her husband, songwriter Harlan Howard on a very large show at the downtown civic center. Archie Campbell was also on the show. My favorite artist on the show that day was Wynn Stewart with his big hit “It’s Such A Pretty World Today”. He was very nice to all us musicians.

Dickie Overby was backing up another artist on the show but I can’t remember who. I remember Dickie had a ten pedal Fender 1000 with no knee levers. Every pedal worked on both necks. We were talking about other musicians and I remember how he responded when I mentioned Billy Braddy.

Braddy was the steel guitarist with Gary Van and the Western Starlighters. I knew back in 1959 that Dickie was going to be a very good well known steel player. Now here he is in the Hall of Fame.

Great guitar players I’ve worked with in Nashville are wonderful players like Jimmy Bryant who I worked with in Las Vegas upon obtaining an extra job with Billy James at a club just off the main strip. I was booked in the Golden Nugget with Claude Gray and Bud Isaacs and Jerry Isaacs opened the show for us.

Jimmy Bryant was a real hoot to work with. Every song we played turned into a jam session between us. We turned out to be good friends on the side. I hated going back to Nashville when the job was over. As a matter of fact, I stayed an extra month in Vegas and thought seriously about moving there permanently but the call of sessions in Nashville was too great.

A couple of years later, Jimmy Bryant moved to Nashville. He told me one night in a club that he wasn’t feeling very well and he was going to the hospital the next day to get looked at. Jimmy died within a week of this. I was very sorry about this and still miss him.

I’ve talked to Speedy West about him many times as they were a famous duo in the 50s and 60s. Speedy said that he was just a character that was continually putting the world on and he trouble at times getting along with him. It was after this that I got to know Speedy very well. A nicer, warmer, more tender human being I’ve never known.

I met Jimmy Day on a trip through Nashville in January 1960. Jimmy had a good career going at this time and had worked and recorded with many artists including Jim Reeves and Ray Price. I was driving through Nashville down Broadway and saw the Ernest Tubb Record Shop sign on the right.

I luckily found a parking place right in front of the record shop (try that today). Got out of my ’50 Mercury, walked inside and there was only a female clerk and no customers. I asked if they had Buddy Emmons records since I knew he had recorded a couple for Columbia. Silver Bells was one of them.

The clerk said that Buddy had just been in and walked across the street to Tootsie’s to play the pinball machine. I immediately shot out the door and went over to Tootsie’s. I walked into Tootsie’s and it was empty also except for two guys playing the pinball machine, one of which was Buddy who remembered me from my letter to him and meeting him in Norfolk in 1956.

He asked me if I knew the guy playing the game with him. I said “No”. The guy stuck out his hand and said, “Hi. I’m Jimmy Day.” This was the beginning of a long friendship and ended up with Jimmy and I doing a wonderful album together which we still have in the store. I think Jimmy played as well as he ever had on that album.

I also worked with Billy Sanford, Grady Martin, Chet Atkins, Leo Jackson, Dale Sellers, Dave Kirby (Dale was the left handed guitar player on HeeHaw), Hank Garland, Jimmy Capps and Spider Wilson. I found these all to be very helpful for my playing and my career. All of these players played with great taste and knew when to get out of the way of the steel guitar.

Naturally there are several more lead players I’ve worked with but these turned out to be good friends.

Here’s a steel guitar Christmas wish list you can print out and give to your family.

6 sets CC E9 Premium Strings, free Secrets DVD … $44.99
6 sets CC E9 Custom Strings, free Secrets DVD … $44.99
6 sets CC C6 Premium Strings, free Secrets DVD … $62.99
Goodrich 120 Volume Pedal   …   $149.99
Goodrich Low Profile Volume Pedal   …   $169.99
500K Volume Pedal Pot   …   $21.99
Steel Guitar Leg   …   $44.99
Non-Pedal Leg Socket   …   $23.99
Emmons Backing Plate   …   $26.99
S-10 Guitar Cover   …   $19.99
D-10 Guitar Cover   …   $19.99
Large Guitar Cover   …   $19.99
Leg & Rod Bag, Denim   …   $12.99
Leg & Rod Bag, Vinyl   …   $22.99
Pocket Shirt, Large   …   $12.99
Pocket Shirt, XL   …   $12.99
Pocket Shirt, XXL   …   $12.99
Sho-Bud Shirt, Medium   …   $12.99
Sho-Bud Shirt, Large   …   $12.99
Sho-Bud Shirt, XL   …   $12.99
Sho-Bud Shirt, XXL   …   $12.99
Sho-Bud Shirt, XXXL   …   $12.99
SG Nashville Shirt, Medium   …   $8.99
SG Nashville Shirt, Large   …   $8.99
SG Nashville Shirt, XL   …   $8.99
SG Nashville Shirt, XXL   …   $8.99
SG Nashville Shirt, XXXL   …   $8.99
Super Pro Shirt, Small   …   $12.99
Super Pro Shirt, Medium   …   $12.99
Super Pro Shirt, XL   …   $12.99
Super Pro Shirt, XXXL   …   $12.99
Logo Shirt, Small   …   $12.99
Logo Shirt, Medium   …   $12.99
Logo Shirt, Large   …   $12.99
Logo Shirt, XL   …   $12.99
Logo Shirt, XXXL   …   $12.99
Emmons Shirt, Small   …   $12.99
Emmons Shirt, Medium   …   $12.99
Emmons Shirt, XL   …   $12.99
Emmons Shirt, XXL   …   $12.99
Emmons Shirt, XXXL   …   $12.99
Emmons Shirt, XXXXL   …   $12.99
Cobra Coil Shirt, Small   …   $12.99
Cobra Coil Shirt, Large   …   $12.99
Cobra Coil Shirt, XXL   …   $12.99
Cobra Coil Shirt, XXXL   …   $12.99
Long Sleeve Shirt, Large   …   $17.99
Long Sleeve Shirt, XL   …   $17.99
Long Sleeve Shirt, XXL   …   $17.99
Long Sleeve Shirt, XXXL   …   $17.99
Vintage Shirt, Large   …   $12.99
Vintage Shirt, XL   …   $12.99
Vintage Shirt, XXL   …   $12.99
Vintage Shirt, XXXL   …   $12.99
Steel Guitar Nashville Hat   …   $8.99
Bobro Reso Simulator   …   $224.99
Cobra Coil Bar, Std.   …   $44.99
Cobra Coil Bar, Large   …   $44.99
Cobra Coil 12 String Bar   …   $44.99
Cobra Coil Sitar Bar   …   $44.99
Nylon Resophonic Bar   …   $35.99
Strings, E9 Premium   …   $9.99
Strings, E9 Custom   …   $9.99
Strings, C6 Premium   …   $12.99
Strings, Universal 12   …   $13.99
Strings, Cobra Coil Dobro   …   $8.99
Strings, Cobra Coil Lapsteel   …   $9.99
Soulful Steel CD   …   $8.99
Masters Collection CD   …   $8.99
At The Feet Of God CD   …   $8.99
As Time Goes By CD   …   $8.99
Rhythmatic CD   …   $8.99
Steel Guitar Classics CD   …   $8.99
Steel Guitar Favorites CD   …   $8.99
No Pedalers Allowed CD   …   $8.99
Tennessee Country CD   …   $8.99
Priceless II CD   …   $8.99
Cure For The Blues CD   …   $8.99
Pure Country Steel CD   …   $8.99
Treasured Friends CD   …   $8.99
Bobbe Seymour Live CD   …   $8.99
Bobbe’s Christmas CD free with every order.
Gift Certificates available in any amount. Please call the store.

Merry Christmas from all of us at Steel Guitar Nashville.

Bobbe Seymour

www.steelguitar.net
info@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
Open 9AM – 2Pm every Saturday until Christmas
Closed Sunday

Posted in Bobbe's Tips | 3 Comments