Great Tone ?
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Bill Dobkins
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Great Tone ?
How many can relate to this. Your playing what you think is some awesome steel. You take a break and some one comes up to you and says, you really have GREAT TONE. Makes you wonder if they like your ability or your equipment or both.
Custom Rittenberry SD10
Boss Katana 100 Amp
Positive Grid Spark amp
BJS Bars
Z~Legend Pro,Custom Tele
Honor our Vet's.
Now pass the gravy.
Boss Katana 100 Amp
Positive Grid Spark amp
BJS Bars
Z~Legend Pro,Custom Tele
Honor our Vet's.
Now pass the gravy.
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Brooks Montgomery
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Re: Great Tone ?
...or your tan....Bill Dobkins wrote:How many can relate to this. Your playing what you think is some awesome steel. You take a break and some one comes up to you and says, you really have GREAT TONE. Makes you wonder if they like your ability or your equipment or both.
A banjo, like a pet monkey, seems like a good idea at first.
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Larry Behm
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After 43 years of playing several of my close steel buddies have said that "this" is the best I have ever sounded. I wondered what I sounded like for the last 42 years. .
I think it is the use of the opti compressor in my Zoom MS50G, it gives me longer sustained notes if I want them.
I think it is the use of the opti compressor in my Zoom MS50G, it gives me longer sustained notes if I want them.
'70 D10 Black fatback Emmons PP, Hilton VP, BJS 3 1/2” long bar, Boss GE-7 for Dobro effect, Zoom MS50G, Quilter Toneblock 202 and Quilter TT 15 cab with JBL K130, Joyo Ebow.
Fred Kelly D3-H-8 Delrin speed pick (White), Dunlop finger picks-.0225
Phone: 971-219-8533
Fred Kelly D3-H-8 Delrin speed pick (White), Dunlop finger picks-.0225
Phone: 971-219-8533
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Pete Burak
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Larry Behm
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Even with the 65 I had the MS50 in line. All reports are that you knocked it out of the park at the jam, see what love can do, you are back.
'70 D10 Black fatback Emmons PP, Hilton VP, BJS 3 1/2” long bar, Boss GE-7 for Dobro effect, Zoom MS50G, Quilter Toneblock 202 and Quilter TT 15 cab with JBL K130, Joyo Ebow.
Fred Kelly D3-H-8 Delrin speed pick (White), Dunlop finger picks-.0225
Phone: 971-219-8533
Fred Kelly D3-H-8 Delrin speed pick (White), Dunlop finger picks-.0225
Phone: 971-219-8533
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Donny Hinson
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Herb Steiner
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Chet Atkins was once complimented by a fan saying he had a great sounding guitar. Chet put the guitar on its stand and said "Really? What does it sound like now?"
My rig: Infinity and Telonics.
Son, we live in a world with walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with steel guitars. Who's gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinberg?
Son, we live in a world with walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with steel guitars. Who's gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinberg?
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Jerry Roller
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Bill, (my thoughts), poor technique or poor intonation can not produce great tone even using the finest equipment. Great technique played in tune with decent equipment can and should produce great tone which then becomes subjective to the type of tone the listener or player is seeking. Some prefer a bright tone, some prefer a darker sound, some may like mid range cut more than others but regardless of EQ preference, use or no use of effects, technique and touch is the foundation on which great tone is produced. So, Bill, if someone tells you your tone is great, you can take that as a compliment on your playing. You could move off the seat, leave the settings as they were and let a player with lesser playing skills play the same equipment and the great tone is not there.
Jerry
Jerry
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David Mitchell
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David Mitchell
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As a steel player and recording engineer for ovr 40 years I've learn to decipher the meaning of the word tone by who is using it and in what context.
If I was at a steel guitar meaning and someone says
"Wow! What a great tone he is getting!" I would take that as "Wow! What great playing technique and skill." If I was mixing a multi-track recording in the studio and some musician said "Wow! That's a killer tone on snare drum!" I would take that as "Wow! What a great even frequency response!" Meaning just the right lows, just the right mids, not too many ear splitting highs.
Tone to a steel man = Playing ability
Tone in the studio = Frequency Response
If I was at a steel guitar meaning and someone says
"Wow! What a great tone he is getting!" I would take that as "Wow! What great playing technique and skill." If I was mixing a multi-track recording in the studio and some musician said "Wow! That's a killer tone on snare drum!" I would take that as "Wow! What a great even frequency response!" Meaning just the right lows, just the right mids, not too many ear splitting highs.
Tone to a steel man = Playing ability
Tone in the studio = Frequency Response
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Dale Rottacker
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I always take it to mean... “Well at least your TONE, doesn’t suckâ€

Dale Rottacker, Steelinatune™
https://www.youtube.com/@steelinatune
https://msapedalsteels.com
http://rittenberrysteelguitars.com
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https://msapedalsteels.com
http://rittenberrysteelguitars.com
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Mike Archer
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my fav
my favorite thing is when they come up
and say "you sound purty good tonight"
my reply is " thank you a little"
most of the time folks thing it sounds good they just don't know how to say it that way....
another is they ask how ya gettin that sound outta that thing?
I say I'm pluck the plucking thing...
mike
and say "you sound purty good tonight"
my reply is " thank you a little"
most of the time folks thing it sounds good they just don't know how to say it that way....
another is they ask how ya gettin that sound outta that thing?
I say I'm pluck the plucking thing...
mike
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Quilter 112
Tele/ fender deluxe
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Larry Jamieson
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Brett Day
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I've had a lot of people come up to me to tell me I sound great, and then I say, "thank you", but in my mind there are times I don't think the song or songs sounded so great due to too many mistakes or sometimes forgetting to come in on steel at a certain time, so usually when that happens, I replay the song another time and it sounds good to me!
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John De Maille
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I've had times, when, my sound (tone) sounds great to me. The sustain, overtone, the highs and lows, everything is just right to me and it makes me play more comfortably or better. Then, there are other times, when, I can't buy a sound I like. I'll fight it all gig and am never happy. However, I've had more people say nothing about my sound, than, compliment it. It doesn't mean a whole lot, I guess, I just have to satisfy myself.
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Bill C. Buntin
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Some great comments here.
Tone is so very elusive and somewhat subjective.
Non-musicians, typically, hear music differently than how a musician hears. That said, I believe we shouldn't be too sensitive about comments otherwise. In fact, I think when non musicians give us what is perceived as "good feedback" what they mean is "they like the sounds they hear".
When our peers are in the audience, I'm much more attentive to what they say.
Regarding live music; There are so many factors involved in creating the perfect sonic texture relative to where you are sitting on the bandstand. What used to blow me away was when working a 4 or 5 night per week gig at the same place, how you could leave your rig tuesday night then return to the same gig on thursday night and have to tweak and tweak to get that same tone back. Then Friday and Saturday it is yet different again.
Its kind of like how a house sounds when there is no furniture vs. when the house is full of furniture and people, the acoustics change for obvious reasons.
I believe it is the same phenomena at each live venue.
Tone is so very elusive and somewhat subjective.
Non-musicians, typically, hear music differently than how a musician hears. That said, I believe we shouldn't be too sensitive about comments otherwise. In fact, I think when non musicians give us what is perceived as "good feedback" what they mean is "they like the sounds they hear".
When our peers are in the audience, I'm much more attentive to what they say.
Regarding live music; There are so many factors involved in creating the perfect sonic texture relative to where you are sitting on the bandstand. What used to blow me away was when working a 4 or 5 night per week gig at the same place, how you could leave your rig tuesday night then return to the same gig on thursday night and have to tweak and tweak to get that same tone back. Then Friday and Saturday it is yet different again.
Its kind of like how a house sounds when there is no furniture vs. when the house is full of furniture and people, the acoustics change for obvious reasons.
I believe it is the same phenomena at each live venue.
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David Mitchell
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Dale Rottacker
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The change in the amount of ringing in my ears does that DavidDavid Mitchell wrote:That's right Bill. The human body is 60% water so as people come and go from a nightclub it's gonna change the acoustics. Drastically.
I will say this about Tone, weather other’s are hearing it or just us playing it... the better our Tone sounds to US as we’re playing, the better we’re going to play... IMHO
Dale Rottacker, Steelinatune™
https://www.youtube.com/@steelinatune
https://msapedalsteels.com
http://rittenberrysteelguitars.com
https://www.youtube.com/@steelinatune
https://msapedalsteels.com
http://rittenberrysteelguitars.com
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David Mitchell
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That's true Dale. I know all to well the better a musician can hear and feel comfortable in a studio the better they play. When at all possible I always brought them in the control room without headphones and let them play their part listening to the big JBL's in the wall. It was like they were in a band situation. That brings up another point. I studied Strad violins for a while. While they do sound good and have plenty of volume the one thing that actual owners said was most important was response. How the instrument responds to the players input and likewise they play better. I think that holds true with pedal steels too.
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Dale Rottacker
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In total agreement... except about the Strad... never been fortunate enough to see one, but everything you say rings true.David Mitchell wrote:That's true Dale. I know all to well the better a musician can hear and feel comfortable in a studio the better they play. When at all possible I always brought them in the control room without headphones and let them play their part listening to the big JBL's in the wall. It was like they were in a band situation. That brings up another point. I studied Strad violins for a while. While they do sound good and have plenty of volume the one thing that actual owners said was most important was response. How the instrument responds to the players input and likewise they play better. I think that holds true with pedal steels too.
Dale Rottacker, Steelinatune™
https://www.youtube.com/@steelinatune
https://msapedalsteels.com
http://rittenberrysteelguitars.com
https://www.youtube.com/@steelinatune
https://msapedalsteels.com
http://rittenberrysteelguitars.com
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Bobby Hearn
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Bill C. Buntin
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Great Comments David and Dale
I agree 100%. Tone equals confidence equals playing your best.
If you have another player, sometimes the drummer, who isn't really "tone sensitive" this can aggravate and sometimes destroy "tone".
I've had debates with countless players who would just typically destroy good tone and not be the least bit aware as to how their bad habits, poor hearing, tone deafness, or whatever their afflictions might be effect the overall tone quality on the stage. That quality of sound is hard to describe to someone who has never "heard" it or "felt" it. Its as much feel as it is hearing, at least ways in my personal experiences.
Sometimes the sound person is the culprit. Often, house sound system control operators are the very LAST person who should be adjusting the room and the stage for tone. I do not understand why. But have come across this issue at some fairly high end venues.
I agree 100%. Tone equals confidence equals playing your best.
If you have another player, sometimes the drummer, who isn't really "tone sensitive" this can aggravate and sometimes destroy "tone".
I've had debates with countless players who would just typically destroy good tone and not be the least bit aware as to how their bad habits, poor hearing, tone deafness, or whatever their afflictions might be effect the overall tone quality on the stage. That quality of sound is hard to describe to someone who has never "heard" it or "felt" it. Its as much feel as it is hearing, at least ways in my personal experiences.
Sometimes the sound person is the culprit. Often, house sound system control operators are the very LAST person who should be adjusting the room and the stage for tone. I do not understand why. But have come across this issue at some fairly high end venues.
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Bud Angelotti
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