One Pedal Two Finger 3 String Lick

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Doug Taylor
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One Pedal Two Finger 3 String Lick

Post by Doug Taylor »

I discovered this on Youtube today. I looked long and hard for it a year or two ago and could not find it. This is not mine, just a video I ran across today.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2sqnTDJoWE&t=304s
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Lee Baucum
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Post by Lee Baucum »

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Doug Taylor
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Post by Doug Taylor »

Thanks Lee, that’s the thread I think that got me interested in this in the first place. I tried to find a copy of the actual recording then but I never could find it. Hearing how it sounds does me a lot of good along with the tab! I find it pretty interesting playing the same thing over different chord progressions!
Jay Coover
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Post by Jay Coover »

So one might look at this and wonder why 3 fingers wouldn't be the way to go. Clearly it's an exercise, but for pick blocking, wouldn't one use three fingers on this one?

I'm gonna cycle this one for a bit.
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Doug Taylor
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Post by Doug Taylor »

I used 3 fingers when I tried to play along with the video!
Jay Coover
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Post by Jay Coover »

Doug Taylor wrote:I used 3 fingers when I tried to play along with the video!
Right, I'm talking about this TAB, which looks to my naive eyes like something a palm blocker would do. This is a good intro into the way that steel players create those weird little chromatic things that other instruments seem to avoid.

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Jordan Stern
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Post by Jordan Stern »

Here is the tab I wrote out for this, which fills in a couple of notes missing from the version above. I also changed the double middles to double thumbs (just a personal preference).


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Duane Becker
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Post by Duane Becker »

I've got the original course put out by Weldon and Hal with the tab, I can post the tab here if anyone wants to see it.
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Doug Taylor
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Post by Doug Taylor »

I would love to see the original tab Duane!
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Doug Beaumier
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Post by Doug Beaumier »

The original Emmons Co. tab is a little unusual. The fingerings are shown in the tablature, next to the fret number(s). And the fingers are labeled t, a, and b... for thumb, index, and middle finger. And down below the tablature are numbers (1 and 2...) indicating which pedals to push. So "a" and "b" in the tablature does not mean pedals A and B. They indicate the fingerings. The pedal changes are down below and they are pedal 1 and pedal 2. If you're used to regular tablature, this tab will slow you down to a crawl. :wink: I ended up re-writing the tab... 45 years ago.
Duane Becker
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Post by Duane Becker »

Here' a go. Years ago, I added the handwritten B on the tab where the second pedal is to be depressed, which we call B now.

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Duane Becker
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Post by Duane Becker »

Good clarification of the tab writing on the original Emmons tab. Thanks Doug!
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Post by Steve Mueller »

Thanks Guys!
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Fred Treece
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Post by Fred Treece »

"Jordan Stern"]Here is the tab I wrote out for this, which fills in a couple of notes missing from the version above. I also changed the double middles to double thumbs (just a personal preference).
Yikes yes thank you. Who in the heck does M-M, especially when going to higher strings? It’s a mistake, and a sure way to flub up your timing.
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