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Old February 5th, 2005
Frankenstrat2 Frankenstrat2 is offline
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Member Introductions

Some of us started to get to know each other on another thread. I realized that most of the other Forums I belong to have a section for introductions. Usually the moderators and senior members will chime in and say hello and welcome the Newbies.
Over here, it seems we are all newbies.
So I'll take a shot at putting up a post where the few of us who hang out here can get better acquainted.
********************
My name is Barry.
I'm a slide-aholic. I can't ever seem to get enough. I used to be happy just with regular guitars, acoustics, electrics, 12-strings. I always liked to listen to slide players, and marveled at their singing. vocal quality compared to regular fretted playing.
I'm 53 years old and have played guitar most of my life. In my teens and twenties I always played in local bands.
Growing up and living on Long Island in the shadow of New York City I have had the great advantage of being able to attend many shows and to have seen almost every guitar hero and great band live at some point in their carreers.
I quit playing music as a business in my twenties, and 'retired' for more than ten years. Later on my wife insisted that I start to play again, for fun as a hobby.
Of course hobbies become obsessions.
I always loved Ry Cooder and traditional acoustic/electric blues/rock guitar. The Allman Bros and Southern Rock always appealed to me, as did the California sound of the Eagles, and of course all of the British Invasion groups- Beatles and Stones. Each of those genres featured a fair amount of slide guitar.
Somebody remind me to go back to the 50 Greatest thread and post George Harrison and Joe Walsh.
In my rebirth as a hobbyist guitar enthusiast I began to teach myself some slide. Warren Haynes emerged as a modern slide hero and I tought myself to slide on the electric guitar in natural tuning as Warren often does. I had played a fair amount of acoustic guitar during my 'sensitive singer-songwriter days' so I was also familiar with open G and drop D tunings and the various fingering possibilities.
Over time my slide abilities progressed (slowly) and at the same time I began to network with other players such as myself with careers and families. I began to accumulate guitars and amps and a small PA- all gear I bought second-hand, over time.
At this point I have a home studio in basement. I am fortunate to have built up a rotating group of musicians who come over regularly to play music.
We have a great time, there is no pressure, no equipment to move, no cigarette smoke, no 3rd set to play, no bar owners telling us to turn down or drunks making requests.
I am always trying to improve, reading practicing and playing. I have made friends all over the world thanks to Internet Forums such as this and others.
While I am far from a virtuoso slide player, I'm proud of what I have accomplished so far. I really enjoy the music, and as you guys probably realize, we slide guitar players have our own niche, which few regular players fully understand, but is universally admired.
Oh- my screen name refers to my two main guitars- both made from parts of various vintage stratocasters, but customized for my needs as a slide guy.
Thus Frankenstrat2.
But enough about me.....
Next?

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Old March 17th, 2005
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allthumbs allthumbs is offline
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Hi Barry. Glad you found us. When you get your reso,be careful. There are a lot of dogs out there. The only one I have heard absolutely nothing good about is the fender reso's so stay away from them. When you find one you like just ask the guys here for an opinion, they have a lot of experience. Diamond glass slides are in your backyard, you should check them out. The link is in here somewhere.
allthumbs

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  #32  
Old March 17th, 2005
Frankenstrat2 Frankenstrat2 is offline
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AT-
You mean Ben, not Barry- I'm Barry
I know- its confusing.
I get spam addressed to Frankie. Pretty funny, eh?
b.

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  #33  
Old March 17th, 2005
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allthumbs allthumbs is offline
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sorry barry yet another joy of being dyslexic
allthumbs

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  #34  
Old March 18th, 2005
benjamino benjamino is offline
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  ben

haha hey allthumbs, yeah i've been on the diamond website yesterday, theres some nice looking slides. i have a dunlop perspex one at the moment that is comfortable, and a brass one too but thats a bit long and i haven't got used to it yet.
the only reso's i can find in the shops near here are the fender ones but i wasn't too impressed. looks like i'm gonna have to go on a longer search, not that i'm ready for it yet anyway. when i find one i'll be sure to let you all know i'll want loadsa input.

ben


what do you call cheese that isnt yours? nacho cheese hahahahaha
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  #35  
Old March 18th, 2005
Frankenstrat2 Frankenstrat2 is offline
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I'm happy with my Martin AL II

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  #36  
Old March 18th, 2005
benjamino benjamino is offline
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yeah i looked at the link, thats really nice man. i'm jealous.


what do you call cheese that isnt yours? nacho cheese hahahahaha
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  #37  
Old March 18th, 2005
LightninBoy LightninBoy is offline
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Hi Ben,
Welcome.

The Arlen Roth book on bottleneck slide is terrific.
I've been using it as an instructional manual for students for years.
There is also a video, the same as the book.

Funny you should mention the brand name "Stagg". My very first electric guitar was a "Stagg" Les Paul goldtop. (About 30 years ago).


I'd rather a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy.
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  #38  
Old March 19th, 2005
benjamino benjamino is offline
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hey lightningboy. i'd never heard of stagg before i found mine but i've seen them around quite a lot since then. its actually really nice, feels nice to play as well, i was quite surprised at how little it cost.
yeah the arlen roth book is going well, i'm really getting into it, i've not been outta the house other than to go to work since i got it


what do you call cheese that isnt yours? nacho cheese hahahahaha
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  #39  
Old April 16th, 2005
pcmancini pcmancini is offline
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  Hello from pcmancini

Hi all, new member here. I have been playing acoustic slide blues for a little over a year now and my first performance is coming up in May. I found this site serahing for online slide lessons.

I have a great many questions for you all on a variety of things "slide" so here is my first.

I ma looking for a new guitar to add to my very small collection. It will be dedicated to, and set up for slide. I have my eye on a couple of different models, all small-bodies, long scale. Any thoughts on the relative merits of these would be greatly appreciated.

Martin OM-18V
Larivee OMV-03 and OMV-05
Breedlove Revival OMM

The Martin is probably at the very top end of my budget so, even though there are other fine guitars in this category, I will have to limit it to these few.

I have not yet been able to try any of these specific models but have played a Larivee that was not a cutaway and liked it.

Let 'em fly and thanks.
Paul
_________________
Paul


Paul
Larrivee OMV-03
G&L ASAT
various slides
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  #40  
Old April 16th, 2005
Frankenstrat2 Frankenstrat2 is offline
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Hi Paul.
It nice to have you here.
We are not the most active Forum but there are a few of use regulars that hang out here.
This thread is kind of dedicated to 'getting to know you'
Here's who I am, how old I am, what my interests are, what I like to play, listen to, etc
It would probably be best if we could discuss your needs in a new guitar in one of the other areas, like 'slide guitar discussion', I guess.
But welcome to the Forum.
barry

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  #41  
Old April 18th, 2005
LightninBoy LightninBoy is offline
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Hi there Paul.
Welcome aboard.


I'd rather a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy.
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  #42  
Old May 4th, 2005
1four5 1four5 is offline
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Hi ya'll (Sorry, I'm from Kansas) 8) Dean here. Sorry about the lame screen name, but at least I can remember it. I've been playing for a year and a half. Mostly blues, almost totally improv. About a month ago I found some pipe in my garage and made a slide to try. It sounded cool and I was hooked. Three weeks ago I tried drop G and the D tuning for the first time. I was searching the net for a drop D pentatonic note scale when I some how found this board. I recognize some of the members here from BRB. I have an Ibanez AEJ70 acoustic electric F-hole, Tele, and a National Radiotone. I also play ukulele (don't laugh, the little suckers are a blast!). I play for myself, with no desires or aspirations of going any further than my front porch. I also have several co-workers who play, and we jam every day at lunch time. I've got some of my stuff at an audio host site HERE. I'm hoping to try and record some slide stuff soon.

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  #43  
Old May 4th, 2005
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allthumbs allthumbs is offline
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how you doing. Always glad to see a little life on this board. Ukes are cool. It is on my to do list to make one out of a wooden cigar box old style.

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  #44  
Old May 5th, 2005
1four5 1four5 is offline
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Hi Allthumbs! Yep...I've also though about a cigarbox uke. I do have one conventional uke I built from a kit...a very positive experience! BTW, speaking of ukes, I tuned my bari uke to open d the other night and tried some slide on it with very positive results!

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  #45  
Old May 5th, 2005
Frankenstrat2 Frankenstrat2 is offline
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the late George Harrison was a big uke fan

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Forum Home > Guitar For Beginners & Beyond General Forum > Introduce Yourself > Member Introductions


The GfB&B Guitar Slide Rule

Download the PDF of the 'Guitar Chord Slide Rule', print it out, fold it together and you'll have at your disposal a very neat tool that will not only show you all the positions for the main flavors of chords, but will also teach you a very important lesson about how the guitar works... It consists of a folded sleeve and six double sided inserts, instructions for cutting it out and folding it together are included with the PDF ... it's very simple to do, and if you botch it, you can simply print it out again!

Buy it now for only $10

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