Check out the Jeff Newmann chart and get back to me.
Or after the gig tonight I'll go copy it again for the tenth time.

EJL
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Moderator: Dave Mudgett

Well, to be totally frank, I've heard some too, but only when bar slants were used. I expect it there because, it's so difficult to be "angularly perfect", and let's face it, guitars were rather crude back then compared to today's crop of precision instruments. But, I've got a <u>ton</u> of early stuff by the likes of Buddy E., Buddy C., Weldon, Pete, Hal, Curly, Lloyd, Day, Crawford, Walter, as well as others of the non-pedal world like Siebert, McCauliffe, Helms, Boggs, Joaquin, Stubbs, Wiggens, and Byrd.<SMALL>As great a Jerry Byrd may have been, I hear lots of intonation problems in his playing. I hear LOTS of questionable intonation on many old recordings; is it just me?</SMALL>
. I couldn't explain it cause I have always done what works for me. I was already headed for an engineering career in the studio before I started playing steel, and actually played in the studio (and wrestled with the tuning issue) before I ever played on a stage.Thanks John. It bothers me also when I think how beginners might be mislead by some of these threads. Just remember guys, this is an internet chat room. Take it for what it is worth.<SMALL>I would truly hate to be a beginner reading all this stuff and trying to decide what to do. All I can say is try and record yourself with some in tune musicians and figure it out yourself. While "idol worship" won't get you anywhere, it doesn't hurt to know that the studio pros you hear daily playing in tune on the radio are all tuning JI, and they seemed to get called back...</SMALL>
Most people tune the F# strings harmonically to the B strings, and lower them a smidge with a compensator pull on the the first or second pedal.<SMALL>It seems, HYPOTHETICALLY, that if you use the Eb lever major chord inversion that the F# strings (now being the 6ths) would be impossibly flat; and that the Gb strings if tuned flat would also be VERY flat in that same inversion.</SMALL>
Yes, and I've been tuning straight up forever and I THINK I sound in tune! I just don't get it...<SMALL>Learning how to trust your ears and make the steel sound good are the true secret to making a living playing.</SMALL>

