Jimmie was the first "big name" steel guitarist I met when Tommy Cass took myself and another player (whose name escapes me) down to a DJ Convention in Nashville in 1973. We spent a lot of time that week in the hallowed Crawford basement, and for a guy who had been playing for about a year, it was a very heady experience.
I looked Jimmie up whenever I was there and we kept in touch. When I moved to Colorado in 1976, there were virtually no Emmons players out there, so I ended up talking to Ron and became a dealer, selling a fair number of them in the latter '70s in the Rocky Mountain area. I started bringing Jimmie out to do seminars and that really became where I got to know him and the concrete was set for a lifelong friendship.
We did some of the seminars in my recording studio, and Jimmie said he had always wanted to to a gospel record, so we ended up tracking one before/after one of the seminars and had a wonderful time doing it. John Hughey added parts on later and it is still available. It is still one of my favorite studio memories.
About this time ('79) I switched to Jimmie's copedent, and had him build one of his legendary PP 10x10 guitars for me, which I still own... Though I play Fessenden's these days, the are still setup with the clusters and the second string tuned to D...
It goes without saying that he was a dominant force in my steel world

. The hours spent around his world will treasured, and the friends I made there like Buck Reid will carry on his spirit to be shared with others. Everytime I sit down at one of my guitars and feel and hear his setup, I am pretty sure I can feel him chuckling behind me:)...
Miss ya, babe...