How to prepare for important playing jobs

Hi guys and gals,

One of questions I’ve been asked is … how do I prepare for important playing jobs.

When you need to play your very best like for a major audition or a television show or something that can be a pivotal moment in your career …

The most important thing is preparing your body physically for that important moment. At least two days before the job or audition, get at least eight hours of good sleep a night. Stay totally away from caffeine and alcohol during this time. This should help you get the rest you need and also help to mentally put you on the correct thinking and planning track.

Try to have the material you’re going to play well reheased well at least a week ahead but do not rehearse just before the show or audition because if you rehearse just before playing, you’ll still be hung in rehearsal mode instead of performance mode.

This is where the coffee comes in. Just about a half an hour before you play, drink only about a half to three-quarters of a cup. This will increase the heart rate slightly without making you very nervous. It will give you a slight edge and stimulate your memory. Be careful with this one because two cups of coffee can make you nervous, or make your heart rate too fast or even make a bumbling idiot out of some people. Of course, tea or Coca-Cola will do the same thing.

Absolutely no narcotics of any kind, legal or otherwise. Sleeping pills, aspirin and cold medicine can do nothing but hurt you at the moment you need to be your best. Being well rested and alert with absolutely no alcohol or drugs in your system will help you play at your best because when you feel great physically, it’s easy to feel great mentally and you’ve got to feel great mentally to be great.

These tips are well-known among the world’s best performers, pilots, doctors, lawyers preparing for a big court case etc. What you have always suspected is true, being well prepared physically will help you be well prepared mentally.

I want to extend a heart-felt thank you to everyone who sent in suggestions about what they wanted to see on my videos. The first two videos have been shot and the first is already shipping. The second video in the series will be available in about two weeks. It’s full of everything you have been asking me for and I want to remind you that I’m still open for questions and suggestions for upcoming videos. I’m taking my direction from you. The more videos we do, the better we get at it and the money I make selling them is being invested back into better equipment to make better videos so your support is important.

Stay relaxed and play well.

Your friend,

Bobbe

www.steelguitar.net

sales@steelguitar.net

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As we get older, interviews on the web, the value of conformity

Hi guys and gals,

The following is a copy of a post on my forum by KennyB and the answer I gave him …

Do we mellow as we get older?

I have been collecting steel albums since the mid 60’s and I’ve got quite a large number from then to the present day. One thing that is very noticeable is that 3 of my favourite players – Buddy Emmons, Lloyd Green and Tom Brumley – all have one thing in common. Their tone has noticeably mellowed in recent years. Their earlier recordings had a more pronounced treble to their tone in the higher mid range.

All three have a much fuller and richer tone nowadays (not to be confused with muddy or woolly). Tom in particular has acknowledged that his tone on his recordings has mellowed over the years.

Is this to do with different recording techniques, improved steel amps and speakers, or modern pickups that have a wider dynamic range?

Re: mellow

Taste , Tone, Feel and execution get more intelligent (better) as we learn. These guys play better now because they have been playing longer and have much more experience. Ever notice that a player that hasn’t been playing very long cares very little about tone? The longer a player has been playing and the more time invested , the more important tone is. I can tell how long someone has been playing by more than how fast he plays. This has little to do with how well a player plays. His tone will tell me a lot more. Playing slowly with great tone and perfection tells me much about a players past history. You think Lloyd played great 30 years ago? You should hear him now! Think Buddy played good 30 years ago? His taste, and perfection has improved 100% since that funky horrible over rated “Black Album”. He is many times the player today, as well he should be. Tom Brumley? I don’t know, haven’t heard him in 18 years, but he was a lot better then than in the “Together Again” years of the 60’s. These guys, along with most of us, just keep getting better with age, like fine whisky. Jimmy Day never played better that on the last album we did together,”masters Collection” . Better known as the “Seymour-Day” album CD.

Moral: Don’t curse time, give it a chance and it will make you a better everything.

Tip: The interviews I do on my website hopefully give you guys and gals a flavor for what it’s like around the guitar shop. I don’t interview all the greats that come throught the doors because quite often, I’m simply too busy … but I hope you’ll take the time to visit the website and follow the – SGN News – link … the fifth link down from the top. John Hughey, Gail Davies and Ron Elliott have been my most recent page two victims. I’m sitting and talking one on one with these wonderful friends.

Tip: The value of conformity.

As most of you know, until fairly recently it seems as though every steel player had a different tuning, pedal, knee lever setup. Now finally after many years, there is a standard configuration that most of us are using with only minor deviations. The value of this standard configuration is much higher than a lot of people would realize at first. If everybody uses pretty much the same setup, the value of your guitar is higher when you sell it … the initial cost will be lower because there won’t be any custom labor involved … you’ll already be used to the setup on the next steel guitar that you buy … teaching materials are compatible with standard setups and easier to follow. As for the playing part of conformity, about everything you hear on records can be played with only half of what most people have on their steel guitars so anything you’re playing now and probably more can be done with a standard pedal setup or less. The biggest thing you’ll be happy about is when you set in on someone else’s guitar, you’ll have that comfortable, confidence inspiring feeling of knowing how the guitar works.

In the repair business that I have, because I add and subtract many pedals and knee levers from guitars owned by the most famous professionals in the world, I feel I’m in a unique position for receiving knowledge from these great players and I’m passing on to you the benefit of this knowlegde and experience by stating that all players raise and lower their “E”s and lower two and nine with the three basic knee levers. These are knee levers that are needed for all basic basics. Any added knee levers to this basic trio are primarily added only for short-lived licks that seem to come and go. Just remember, keep your three basics and any additional knee levers can be used for the lick of the day fads. Examples are raising the first string a whole tone … lowered five and six a whole tone … lowering five and ten a half tone. I am seeing many professionals now drift away from these fad levers as other fads come in.

When I met Weldon Myrick in 1969, he was the busiest studio steel player in Nashville. His guitar was a push-pull Emmons double ten with ten knees and ten pedals. Fifteen years later, Weldon was even busier but was only using three pedals and three knee levers on his E9th neck and almost nothing on the C6th neck … and he seemed to be playing interesting licks than he did when I met him.

I am not advocating that less is better, but it’s better to have less and know how to use it than it is to have more and try to figure out how to use it.

The moral is: If you want to put on the Franklin pedal or an up knee lever to lower five and ten, I’d say forget it. Spend your time learning how to play the licks without the mechanical hardware. You’ll have gained new knowledge and it’ll be less you have to remove from your guitar in the future. More is not always better!

Bobbe

www.steelguitar.net
sales@steelguitar.net

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Goodrich LD2 pedal, how many picks, get expert advice

Hi guys and gals,

John Hughey, Al Vescovo, John Bechtel and Terry Wendt were in the store today so I decided to hand them a microphone and let them have fun. The interview is on the website. On the menu, pick SGN News which is the fifth link down … go to “Page Two” and it’s the last interview.

I let them try out the new Goodrich LD2 digital potless pedal because you all know that besides my own opinions, I like to get the opinions of the best players that come through the door. I probably get to play more guitars and try more goodies than any other player in the world because of the unique position I’m in … but that’s what it takes to bring you the best equipment at the best prices. I don’t like to play something that “almost” works and I figure you probably don’t like to either.

This new pedal has no pot to wear, does not color the sound whatsoever and operates extremely smoothly. Retail price on this unit is $239. which is a big savings over it’s competition. When you are ready to purchase a new volume pedal, give me a call for the best possible price.

People are always asking me how many picks they should use. Everybody always uses a thumb pick. When I first started to play, I immediately started wearing 3 fingerpicks. About 5 years ago I started experimenting using just my fingers. As time went on, I started using fingerpicks less and less and finally got to the point where I only used fingerpicks on major recording sessions but now I feel like I have possible progressed to a step even beyond this because while doing a session for Razzy Bailey yesterday, I used picks on the first song and fingers on the second and now I feel that unless I have a badly broken fingernail, I will probably never use picks again. Remember that it’s taken me many years to get to this point. I am also hearing from many players and from personal observation that several players are experiencing the same phemononom such as the great Randy Beavers, Buddy Emmons and Steve Hinson also seem to play better without them than with them. Am I really suggesting you throw your picks away? The answer is no, however don’t become a prisoner to your fingerpicks. Learn to play and get a good tone without them. Not only will this open up the prison cell door but you may actually enjoy what you find on the outside.

Now if we could only figure out how to escape being a prisoner of the tuning wrench!

Now on to a topic that’s been disturbing me … and I want your feedback on this. I’ve seen this happen over and over again … a beginner player asks a question on one of the forums and they get a lot of answers back and they’re ALL wrong. It breaks my heart to see anybody get bad advice on the forum. I could give many, many examples of what I see on the forum everyday. They get answers from well meaning part-time players or other beginners who got an answer from someone they think knows what’s going on or whatever. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying people are intentionally giving bad advice. On the contrary, I’m sure they have the best of intentions and are trying to help in every sense of the term … it’s just that the information is incorrect.

When you want expert advise, go to an expert. When I need my car worked on, I go to my mechanic. When I’m sick and need medical help, I want excellent experienced medical help. I don’t turn my computer on and go to a medical forum and ask for advice on how to take my appendix out. I go to someone who’s a specialist in their trade. When steel players from beginner to advanced, need experienced help, I invite them to come to me.

Steel guitar has been my job and my world for the last fifty years and I know and have played with and have compared notes with the greatest players of all time … I’m not trying to brag, I’m trying to emphasize that I’ve got the knowledge and experience to give you the correct answers to your questions.

What I want you to do is to send me your questions and I will use this newsletter to answer them and by extenstion, to share them with everybody else. Ask me anything and I will give you my honest opinion about it. Don’t feel like you are imposing on me or asking a question that is not worthy of being answered. All questions are valid and deserve a correct answer not only for the good of the person asking the question but for the good of the steel guitar community as well.

Your buddy,

Bobbe

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