Happy New Year

Welcome to 2014. I hope everybody had a good time playing New Year’s Eve. I hope you made some good money while you were doing it. I can remember when New Year’s Eve was the most important day of the year for playing.

I remember playing New Year’s Eve when I made as much money as I did the rest of the year. There were several New Year’s Eve nights when I was playing in Oklahoma right after my Air Force days.

There were many groups that rented a nice big building just for New Year’s Eve and I would end up making as much as $600 for New Year’s Eve night. So New Year’s Eve was really something to look forward to.

The most we could ever make after becoming professionals was double union scale. As you can see, we could make more money as an amateur than we could as a professional. I sure hope there are many steel players still doing this in rural areas.

We have a new steel guitar product for those of you who like to use the same equipment the pros use to get the sound they get. It’s called the PF Steel Dream. Check out Paul Franklin using his playing with the Time Jumpers.

Here is the link.

Not only is Paul using this unit, but so are several other pros. This is a boutique effects unit that delivers superior performance. We are very impressed with everything about the unit.

These units are hand-wired. There are too many features to list but we’re playing it here in the store and it’s very clean with lush reverb and analog delay. The overdrive section sounds really good with good separation between notes.

If your New Year’s resolution is to sound better than you owe it to yourself to get one of these. Vic is sold on this unit and are going to be adding one to his rig very soon. The Steel Dream is available on our website at the following link:

www.steelguitar.net/benado1.html

We also just received a tremendously big amplifier order from Peavey. We will have more Little Walter amps coming in also. We also have a beautiful Standel ready to go with a 15″ JBL.

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
Second and Third Saturday each Month Open 9AM – 2PM
Closed Sunday

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Great Western Swing Musicians

I want to thank my good friend Gene Jones for that update on Dubert Dobson. Gene is an old western swing player and lives several miles south of Wichita Falls, Texas.

Hi Bobbe,

I am thankful for your return and very appreciative of your newsletters.

In response to your comment above, Dubert Dobson was his full name, and he was affectionately called “Gar” by his friends. As you know, Dubert was known for those high register trumpet rides on Hank Thompson’s records. Dubert also played pretty good steel for his own enjoyment and if he had wanted to pursue it, I have no doubt he could have been a very good professional player. Dubert left Hanks band in 1964 to began a career as a firefighter with the Oklahoma City Fire Department, where we both served until Dubert’s untimely death from cancer. He was a dedicated firefighter with very little time to play off duty, but he did take a couple weeks of vacation annually to visit and sit in with bands and musicians he had known. He had intended to return to music after his retirement from the Fire Department, but unfortunately that was not to be.

Respectfully,

Gene Jones

It sure is nice to see these truly great western swing musicians still have a following. There sure were some great bands in that era that didn’t get anywhere the recognition they deserved.

Another fiddle player I meant to mention that died several years ago that played in many western swing groups was Leon Bollinger. He was a very nice guy. He also played six string electric mandolin. I remember Curly Chalker telling me one time that he hired Leon because he was so commercial sounding and helped make up for all the jazz Curly played.

Jimmy Belkins was another great famous western swinger. He worked in many bands out of Dallas in the 60’s, ended up working with the big Ray Price band. Ray liked him because he could read the arrangements as well as being able to play unarranged things on his own. Belkins also worked with Merle Haggard for a long time.

Johnny Gimble is another incredible fiddle player. I believe he is working out of Austin, Texas with a band. Just remember I’ve been out of circulation for 3 years and haven’t been able to keep up with what’s really going on so if I make a mistake every now and then please forgive me.

Another great western swing steel player that I’ll remember forever was one whose playing I idolized deeply. Maurice Anderson, later to become a partner in building a steel guitar. Maurice was also a Hall of Fame member. I hope our plaques are near each other.

Of course, Tom Morrell was another great western swinger. Tom and I met when we were in our teens in Dallas. Tom’s playing was very good. As a matter of fact, it was very, very good. I remember him and Billy Braddy playing the first Sho-Bud’s I had ever seen in the late 50s with The Western Starlighter Band. Tom would also figure in as a partner of the guitar company in the beginning.

I get to writing these newsletters and I think of so much more to write that I can hardly wait until next week when I come in and write another one.

Terry Bethel just stopped by to say hello. Terry is the steel player that worked on and off with Mel Tillis throughout his career. Terry is best known for his incredible western swing arrangements and playing parts to chords with the fiddle section. Terry also spent several years in Nashville working with country stars. I admire Terry for being so versatile.

The first time I got to hear Terry play was when I was substituting for Stu Basore on the Ralph Emery TV show in Nashville. Terry and the lead player Leo played Mrs. Robinson in a jazzed up version. Mrs. Robinson was a big Simon and Garfunkel hit from the movie The Graduate.

Here we go, ready to start another year. I hate to tell you how old I am but y’all have probably guessed it. I just turned 74 on the 21st. I didn’t know I was going to last this longer. I have so many friends that I’ve lost that were good steel players that were younger than me. It makes me appreciate still being here. I feel we have some very good doctors and hospitals here in Nashville and they’re doing their best to keep me kicking.

I would also like to say that I have lost many dear friends on my mailing list over the years since most of the people on the mailing list I know personally. If not, I feel like I do. So you can imagine how it feels when I get a reply from a wife telling me that her husband is no longer with her.

These things stay with me for years. In the last couple of newsletters I have mentioned that I would like to see any of you if you make it through Nashville in the next few years so please come by and see me. Perhaps now you can understand how I mean this.

Several people have come by to see me and missed me because I am only coming in on Tuesday afternoons at the moment. I expect to be here on a more regular basis come springtime and I’ll keep updated about when I’m likely to be here.

We have a New Year’s Sale on Peavey Nashville 112 amps. Check it out on the website.

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
Second and Third Saturday each Month Open 9AM – 2PM
Closed Sunday

Posted in Bobbe's Tips | Leave a comment

George L’s Correction; a New White Leather Standel

I need to make a correction to the last newsletter. I mistakenly said that the George L company was out of business. They are not. We still carry the George L products at the same players discount we have always had.

Twas the day after Christmas and not a creature was stirring except for the steel guitar player. I sure hope he wasn’t disappointed and got everything he needs to have made Christmas a wonderful time.New Year’s Day is going to hit us and I’m sure 90% of you are going to be playing somewhere New Year’s Eve. If you can put up with the audience haha!

New Year’s Day is going to hit us and I’m sure 90% of you are going to be playing somewhere New Year’s Eve. If you can put up with the audience haha!

I was playing in Norfolk, Virginia one New Year’s Eve. I had a new white leather Standel amp and used it to drive a Fender Bassman quartet of speakers in addition to the JBL that was in the Standel. No, I wasn’t playing steel guitar, I was playing bass. I believe this was a VFW in Norfolk.

About three quarters of the way through the night, just after midnight, a fight broke out. So all of us in the band just stopped and watched. It sort of moved around the room and came closer and closer to my side of the stage. The two main combatants were getting after it very well when one of them fell into my amp setup and pretty well covered my new leather Standel with blood.

All I said was, oh no and waited for them to clear the stage. This was a hard thing to forget since my amp was marked up for the next six years. I loved the amp but hated working New Year’s Eve. As a matter of fact, I haven’t worked New Year’s Eve since that I can remember.

It’s been nice to see such great players come by. Mike Johnson is in here now and several wonderful players have been here since I’ve been back part time. A new player from Raleigh, North Carolina named Cyrus Gill came by to say hello last week. That’s a name that’s kind of hard to forget in the country field. He said he was not related to Vince Gill or Billy Ray Cyrus. It sure is nice to meet new players.

After New Year’s and the hubbub dies down, it’s a wonderful time to get equipment ready along with your practicing to make you sharper for the spring and summer seasons. When I was young, I used the off time to woodshed and try to be a better player.

I would go through my equipment and make sure everything was ready to go. Check the effects in your pack-a-seat. Do they have fresh batteries? Do you have a Dobro simulator? Spare strings, picks, bars, tuner, even spare right and left tuning keys is a good idea. A little screwdriver, tuning wrenches and such small items can save the day when the need arises. How about an extra volume pedal pot? Anything you can think of that might go wrong is something that you need to be prepared for.

In addition to your equipment being ready to go, you need to make sure that you are ready to go. I just my flu and pneumonia shots. I also got a tetanus shot. Keeping your health is very important.

Practicing with a metronome is a good idea because it’s a good discipline for your timing. If you find a metronome boring, I have plenty of tracks CDs to play to and again my tracks CDs were done in Nashville’s finest studios with Nashville’s “A Team” musicians. That makes a major difference between my tracks and other tracks.

If you’re using computer generated tracks, they don’t have the feel and soul that real Nashville tracks have. You don’t want to sound like a computer when you’re playing, you want to sound like a soulful person. Remember, you’re playing a very soulful instrument.

I can’t encourage you strongly enough to woodshed. Practice makes perfect.

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
Second and Third Saturday each Month Open 9AM – 2PM
Closed Sunday

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