LAP STEEL GUITAR
(Redirected from Lapsteel)
The 'lap steel guitar' is a type of steel guitar, from which other types developed.
There are three main types of lap steel guitar:
★ Lap slide guitars, the first developed, which use a similar sound box to a Spanish guitar.
★ Resonator guitars, particularly those with square necks.
★ Electric lap steel guitars, which include the first commercially successful solid body instruments.
Lap slide and resonator guitars may also be fitted with pickups, but do not depend on electrical amplification to produce their sound.
The distinguishing feature of a lap steel guitar is that the strings are raised at both the nut and bridge ends of the fingerboard, typically to about half an inch. This makes the frets unusable, and they may be replaced by markers on some guitars. Other lap steel guitars are designed to be adapted between lap and conventional playing, or are modified versions of conventional guitars, and the only difference may be the action height. Round-necked resonator guitars set up for steel playing fall into this category.
Guitars designed exclusively for lap playing typically have modified necks that make conventional playing impossible. The ''hollow neck'' acoustic lap steel, developed by Chris Knutsen and popularized by Hermann C. Weissenborn, extends the body cavity behind the neck all the way to the head. The square-necked resonator guitar has a strengthened square profile neck, allowing heavier string gauges and/or higher tunings impossible (or certainly ill-advised) on a conventional guitar. The electric lap steel guitar typically incorporates the entire neck into the solid body of the guitar, again providing extra strength to allow a greater variety of string gauges and tunings.
Steel guitars with more than six strings and/or with multiple necks are rarely played in lap steel fashion, but are also referred to as ''lap steel guitars'' by many makers and authorities. See ''table steel guitar''.
The lap steel guitar is typically placed on the player's lap, or on a stool in front of the player, who is seated.
The strings are not pressed to a fret when sounding a note, rather, the player holds a metal slide called a ''steel'' in the left hand, which is moved along the strings to change the instrument's pitch while the right hand plucks or picks the strings.
This method of playing greatly restricts the number of chords available, so lap steel music often features a restricted set of harmonies (such as in blues). Alternatively, the lap steel guitar player can play the melody or another single part.
The steel guitar, when played in Hawaiian, Country, Bluegrass, or Western Swing styles, is almost always plucked using a plastic thumbpick affixed to the right hand's thumb, and metal or plastic "fingerpicks" fitted to the first 2, 3, or even all 4 fingers of the right hand. This allows the player greater control when picking sets of notes on non-adjacent strings. Some Blues players, especially those who use a round-neck resonator guitar played upright, conventional-guitar-style, with a bottleneck or hollow metal slide on one left-hand finger, forego the fingerpicks and thumbpicks, and use their bare fingers and thumb instead. On the other hand, a minority of Blues players, and many Rock players, use a conventional flatpick. Tut Taylor is one of the extremely few Dobro players that uses a flatpick.
The lap steel probably began in La'ie, Hawai'i in the late 1800s. Various people have been credited with the innovation. [1]. The instrument was hugely popular - a major fad - in the United States during the 1920s and 1930s.
The lap steel, dobro and pedal steel guitar are associated most closely with Hawaiian music, country music and bluegrass, though some players have used them in rock music, jazz, blues, and other musical genres. The round neck, metal-bodied resonator guitar, on the other hand, is used almost exclusively by Blues, Rock, or Blues-Rock musicians.
Free and historic video of one the "Notable Lap Steel Players" listed below -- Freddie Roulette -- appears at the band's official site: www.myspace.com/daphneblueband.
★ Adam Hole
★ Alan Akaka
★ Al Perkins
★ Batuk Nandy
★ Ben Harper
★ Bob Brozman
★ Bobby Ingano
★ Brij Bhushan Kabra
★ Brock Smith
★ Cindy Cashdollar
★ Chris Cheney (The Living End)
★ Darick Campbell
★ David Gilmour (Pink Floyd)
★ David Lindley
★ Denny Mathis (of Two Tons of Steel)
★ Derek Trucks (Derek Trucks Band)
★ Eddie Alkire
★ Freddie Roulette
★ G. Love
★ Gavin Hayes (dredg )
★ Glenn Ross Campbell (The Misunderstood and Juicy Luicy)
★ Greg Sardinha
★ Gerald Ross
★ Jeff Au Hoy
★ Junior Brown
★ Jimmy Spears
★ Joe Pisapia
★ John Butler
★ Jerry Byrd
★ Jerry Douglas
★ John Paul Jones (Led Zeppelin)
★ Jeff Lang
★ James Michael Thompson
★ Jeff Peterson (Clint Black)
★ Jon Rauhouse
★ Joe Perry (Aerosmith)
★ Jeremy Wakefield
★ Jordan Rudess (Dream Theater)
★ Kazi Aniruddha
★ Kay Das
★ Kelly Joe Phelps
★ Mike Mogis (Bright Eyes)
★ Marc Ford (The Black Crowes) (Ben Harper)
★ Mike Brenner (Badly Drawn Boy, Slo-Mo featuring Mic Wrecka)
★ Muddy Manninen (Gringos Locos, Wishbone Ash)
★ Myk Freedman
★ Nels Cline (Wilco)
★ Rose Sharma
★ Raman Bawa
★ Rohan De Silva
★ Robert Randolph
★ Rich Robinson (The Black Crowes)
★ Robert Rich
★ Roger Filgate (Wishbone Ash)
★ Rusty Young
★ Sunil Ganguly
★ Sol Hoopii
★ Steve Howe (Yes)
★ Travis Stever (Coheed and Cambria)
★ Troy Van Leeuwen (Queens of the Stone Age, A Perfect Circle)
★ Ted Turner (Wishbone Ash)
★ Terry Miller
★ Vishwa Mohan Bhatt
★ Van Shipley
★ Vance Terry
★ Xavier Rudd
The Lap steel guitar is not tuned in standard guitar tuning ('E-A-D-G-B-E', low to high). Rather, it is usually tuned to an open chord, often an extended chord like a 6th, 7th, or 9th.
There are nearly as many tunings for the Lap steel guitar as there are players, but a few are more common [all tunings are shown low-to-high; that is, thickest string to thinnest, or 6th string to 1st string].
Blues and Rock players tend to favor one of two tuning families: open G/open A, or open D/open E.
Open G is tuned 'D-G-D-G-B-D'; open A raises each of those notes a whole-step (2 frets) to 'E-A-E-A-C#-E'. David Lindley is one player who uses these tunings.
Open D is tuned 'D-A-D-F#-A-D', and open E is a whole-step higher: 'E-B-E-G#-B-E'. Joe Perry of Aerosmith uses Open E on his electric lap steel.
Bluegrass and Country Dobro players using a square-neck instrument tend to favor an altered G tuning, often called "High-G", where the 6th string is tuned up to "G" instead of down to "D", and the 5th string is also tuned up, to B: 'G-B-D-G-B-D'. They also sometimes raise it up to "High-A": 'A-C#-E-A-C#-E'. These are examples of tunings possible on a lap steel that would cause serious damage if attempted on a round-neck resonator or standard guitar.
Dobro players also generally use a set of strings with different gauges than those used on standard electric or acoustic guitars to help them to project more sound and to achieve their higher tunings.
Many Western Swing steel players, and some Old-Time Country steel players, use a C6 tuning. There is no "standard" C6 tuning; one popular one is 'C-E-G-E-C-A'. This tuning is a good one for copping Don Helms' steel licks off old Hank Williams records, although Helms actually used a steel with legs (a "table steel"), with two necks having 8 strings each; the two necks were tuned to 6 tunings, probably C6 and A6. C6 is also used by Western Swing pedal steel guitarists on their 10-string pedal steels. Helms also reportedly used an E13 tuning, which adds the Dominant 7th (D) and the 13th (C#) to the standard E tuning. This tuning is difficult to achieve on the 6-string steel. A6 is a commonly-used alternate for C6.
The E7 tuning is used by many players, especially those who cut their teeth on the ''Mel Bay Steel Guitar Method'' instructional books. The E7 tuning in those books is spelled either 'B-D-E-G#-B-E' or with the 6th string lowered to the tonic ''E'': 'E-D-E-G#-B-E'. Note the similarity of this second tuning to the open E tuning above: the only difference is the 5th string, which is lowered from the tonic E to the Dominant 7th note in the key of E, which is D.
There are many other tunings used by players. Pedal Steel guitarists switching over to lap steel often bring over a modified version of the 10-string E9 tuning that is the standard for Country pedal steel; pedal steels, and a few non-pedal "table steels" actually have multiple necks, each in a different tuning, and very often on a pedal steel the 2 main necks will be in E9 and C6 tunings. As noted under the C6 tuning, an A6 tuning is also used.
See the Links below for a list of additional tunings.
''This list is incomplete. Please add to it.''
★ Bear Creek Guitar
★ Asher Guitars & Lap Steels
★ Weissenborn (also under Gold Tone)
★ Rickenbacker
★ National String Instrument Corporation
★ Dobro
★ Regal
★ Cougar, went out of business when owner died
★ Epiphone
★ Fender
★ Gibson (also under Kalamazoo, Mastertone, and Recording King brands)
★ Gretsch
★ Harmony
★ Blue Moon
★ Chandler
★ Harmos
★ Sierra
★ Industrial Guitars
★ Morrell Music
★ Magnatone
★ Canopus of Japan
★ Guyatone of Japan
★ Excel of Japan
★ Melobar
★ Ellis Guitars
★ Jupiter Creek, Australia
★ Steel guitar
★ Lap slide guitar
★ Table steel guitar
★ Pedal steel guitar
★ Melobar
★ Brad's Page of Steel - Discusses lap steel guitars in more detail
★ Scotty's tunings - Scotty's has a list of non-pedal steel guitar tunings, for 6, 7, and 8-string steels.
★ Weissenborn Guitars - Brief history of the lap and Weissenborn steel guitars.
★ Steel Guitar Forum - A discussion board for steel guitarists.
★ Hawaiian Steel Guitar Association An organisation which promotes the development of lap steel guitar with worldwide membership.
The 'lap steel guitar' is a type of steel guitar, from which other types developed.
There are three main types of lap steel guitar:
★ Lap slide guitars, the first developed, which use a similar sound box to a Spanish guitar.
★ Resonator guitars, particularly those with square necks.
★ Electric lap steel guitars, which include the first commercially successful solid body instruments.
Lap slide and resonator guitars may also be fitted with pickups, but do not depend on electrical amplification to produce their sound.
| Contents |
| Description |
| Playing |
| History |
| Notable lap steel/table steel/hawaiian steel guitar players |
| Tunings |
| Manufacturers |
| See also |
| External links |
Description
The distinguishing feature of a lap steel guitar is that the strings are raised at both the nut and bridge ends of the fingerboard, typically to about half an inch. This makes the frets unusable, and they may be replaced by markers on some guitars. Other lap steel guitars are designed to be adapted between lap and conventional playing, or are modified versions of conventional guitars, and the only difference may be the action height. Round-necked resonator guitars set up for steel playing fall into this category.
Guitars designed exclusively for lap playing typically have modified necks that make conventional playing impossible. The ''hollow neck'' acoustic lap steel, developed by Chris Knutsen and popularized by Hermann C. Weissenborn, extends the body cavity behind the neck all the way to the head. The square-necked resonator guitar has a strengthened square profile neck, allowing heavier string gauges and/or higher tunings impossible (or certainly ill-advised) on a conventional guitar. The electric lap steel guitar typically incorporates the entire neck into the solid body of the guitar, again providing extra strength to allow a greater variety of string gauges and tunings.
Steel guitars with more than six strings and/or with multiple necks are rarely played in lap steel fashion, but are also referred to as ''lap steel guitars'' by many makers and authorities. See ''table steel guitar''.
Playing
The lap steel guitar is typically placed on the player's lap, or on a stool in front of the player, who is seated.
The strings are not pressed to a fret when sounding a note, rather, the player holds a metal slide called a ''steel'' in the left hand, which is moved along the strings to change the instrument's pitch while the right hand plucks or picks the strings.
This method of playing greatly restricts the number of chords available, so lap steel music often features a restricted set of harmonies (such as in blues). Alternatively, the lap steel guitar player can play the melody or another single part.
The steel guitar, when played in Hawaiian, Country, Bluegrass, or Western Swing styles, is almost always plucked using a plastic thumbpick affixed to the right hand's thumb, and metal or plastic "fingerpicks" fitted to the first 2, 3, or even all 4 fingers of the right hand. This allows the player greater control when picking sets of notes on non-adjacent strings. Some Blues players, especially those who use a round-neck resonator guitar played upright, conventional-guitar-style, with a bottleneck or hollow metal slide on one left-hand finger, forego the fingerpicks and thumbpicks, and use their bare fingers and thumb instead. On the other hand, a minority of Blues players, and many Rock players, use a conventional flatpick. Tut Taylor is one of the extremely few Dobro players that uses a flatpick.
History
The lap steel probably began in La'ie, Hawai'i in the late 1800s. Various people have been credited with the innovation. [1]. The instrument was hugely popular - a major fad - in the United States during the 1920s and 1930s.
The lap steel, dobro and pedal steel guitar are associated most closely with Hawaiian music, country music and bluegrass, though some players have used them in rock music, jazz, blues, and other musical genres. The round neck, metal-bodied resonator guitar, on the other hand, is used almost exclusively by Blues, Rock, or Blues-Rock musicians.
Free and historic video of one the "Notable Lap Steel Players" listed below -- Freddie Roulette -- appears at the band's official site: www.myspace.com/daphneblueband.
Notable lap steel/table steel/hawaiian steel guitar players
★ Adam Hole
★ Alan Akaka
★ Al Perkins
★ Batuk Nandy
★ Ben Harper
★ Bob Brozman
★ Bobby Ingano
★ Brij Bhushan Kabra
★ Brock Smith
★ Cindy Cashdollar
★ Chris Cheney (The Living End)
★ Darick Campbell
★ David Gilmour (Pink Floyd)
★ David Lindley
★ Denny Mathis (of Two Tons of Steel)
★ Derek Trucks (Derek Trucks Band)
★ Eddie Alkire
★ Freddie Roulette
★ G. Love
★ Gavin Hayes (dredg )
★ Glenn Ross Campbell (The Misunderstood and Juicy Luicy)
★ Greg Sardinha
★ Gerald Ross
★ Jeff Au Hoy
★ Junior Brown
★ Jimmy Spears
★ Joe Pisapia
★ John Butler
★ Jerry Byrd
★ Jerry Douglas
★ John Paul Jones (Led Zeppelin)
★ Jeff Lang
★ James Michael Thompson
★ Jeff Peterson (Clint Black)
★ Jon Rauhouse
★ Joe Perry (Aerosmith)
★ Jeremy Wakefield
★ Jordan Rudess (Dream Theater)
★ Kazi Aniruddha
★ Kay Das
★ Kelly Joe Phelps
★ Mike Mogis (Bright Eyes)
★ Marc Ford (The Black Crowes) (Ben Harper)
★ Mike Brenner (Badly Drawn Boy, Slo-Mo featuring Mic Wrecka)
★ Muddy Manninen (Gringos Locos, Wishbone Ash)
★ Myk Freedman
★ Nels Cline (Wilco)
★ Rose Sharma
★ Raman Bawa
★ Rohan De Silva
★ Robert Randolph
★ Rich Robinson (The Black Crowes)
★ Robert Rich
★ Roger Filgate (Wishbone Ash)
★ Rusty Young
★ Sunil Ganguly
★ Sol Hoopii
★ Steve Howe (Yes)
★ Travis Stever (Coheed and Cambria)
★ Troy Van Leeuwen (Queens of the Stone Age, A Perfect Circle)
★ Ted Turner (Wishbone Ash)
★ Terry Miller
★ Vishwa Mohan Bhatt
★ Van Shipley
★ Vance Terry
★ Xavier Rudd
Tunings
The Lap steel guitar is not tuned in standard guitar tuning ('E-A-D-G-B-E', low to high). Rather, it is usually tuned to an open chord, often an extended chord like a 6th, 7th, or 9th.
There are nearly as many tunings for the Lap steel guitar as there are players, but a few are more common [all tunings are shown low-to-high; that is, thickest string to thinnest, or 6th string to 1st string].
Blues and Rock players tend to favor one of two tuning families: open G/open A, or open D/open E.
Open G is tuned 'D-G-D-G-B-D'; open A raises each of those notes a whole-step (2 frets) to 'E-A-E-A-C#-E'. David Lindley is one player who uses these tunings.
Open D is tuned 'D-A-D-F#-A-D', and open E is a whole-step higher: 'E-B-E-G#-B-E'. Joe Perry of Aerosmith uses Open E on his electric lap steel.
Bluegrass and Country Dobro players using a square-neck instrument tend to favor an altered G tuning, often called "High-G", where the 6th string is tuned up to "G" instead of down to "D", and the 5th string is also tuned up, to B: 'G-B-D-G-B-D'. They also sometimes raise it up to "High-A": 'A-C#-E-A-C#-E'. These are examples of tunings possible on a lap steel that would cause serious damage if attempted on a round-neck resonator or standard guitar.
Dobro players also generally use a set of strings with different gauges than those used on standard electric or acoustic guitars to help them to project more sound and to achieve their higher tunings.
Many Western Swing steel players, and some Old-Time Country steel players, use a C6 tuning. There is no "standard" C6 tuning; one popular one is 'C-E-G-E-C-A'. This tuning is a good one for copping Don Helms' steel licks off old Hank Williams records, although Helms actually used a steel with legs (a "table steel"), with two necks having 8 strings each; the two necks were tuned to 6 tunings, probably C6 and A6. C6 is also used by Western Swing pedal steel guitarists on their 10-string pedal steels. Helms also reportedly used an E13 tuning, which adds the Dominant 7th (D) and the 13th (C#) to the standard E tuning. This tuning is difficult to achieve on the 6-string steel. A6 is a commonly-used alternate for C6.
The E7 tuning is used by many players, especially those who cut their teeth on the ''Mel Bay Steel Guitar Method'' instructional books. The E7 tuning in those books is spelled either 'B-D-E-G#-B-E' or with the 6th string lowered to the tonic ''E'': 'E-D-E-G#-B-E'. Note the similarity of this second tuning to the open E tuning above: the only difference is the 5th string, which is lowered from the tonic E to the Dominant 7th note in the key of E, which is D.
There are many other tunings used by players. Pedal Steel guitarists switching over to lap steel often bring over a modified version of the 10-string E9 tuning that is the standard for Country pedal steel; pedal steels, and a few non-pedal "table steels" actually have multiple necks, each in a different tuning, and very often on a pedal steel the 2 main necks will be in E9 and C6 tunings. As noted under the C6 tuning, an A6 tuning is also used.
See the Links below for a list of additional tunings.
Manufacturers
''This list is incomplete. Please add to it.''
★ Bear Creek Guitar
★ Asher Guitars & Lap Steels
★ Weissenborn (also under Gold Tone)
★ Rickenbacker
★ National String Instrument Corporation
★ Dobro
★ Regal
★ Cougar, went out of business when owner died
★ Epiphone
★ Fender
★ Gibson (also under Kalamazoo, Mastertone, and Recording King brands)
★ Gretsch
★ Harmony
★ Blue Moon
★ Chandler
★ Harmos
★ Sierra
★ Industrial Guitars
★ Morrell Music
★ Magnatone
★ Canopus of Japan
★ Guyatone of Japan
★ Excel of Japan
★ Melobar
★ Ellis Guitars
★ Jupiter Creek, Australia
See also
★ Steel guitar
★ Lap slide guitar
★ Table steel guitar
★ Pedal steel guitar
★ Melobar
External links
★ Brad's Page of Steel - Discusses lap steel guitars in more detail
★ Scotty's tunings - Scotty's has a list of non-pedal steel guitar tunings, for 6, 7, and 8-string steels.
★ Weissenborn Guitars - Brief history of the lap and Weissenborn steel guitars.
★ Steel Guitar Forum - A discussion board for steel guitarists.
★ Hawaiian Steel Guitar Association An organisation which promotes the development of lap steel guitar with worldwide membership.
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