Mooney!!
Moderators: Dave Mudgett, Brad Bechtel
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JB Arnold
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Indeed.
Hi Brad!
JB
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Fulawka D-10 9&5
Fessenden D-10 8&8
Mullen Royal Precision D-10 8 & 5
"All in all, looking back, I'd have to say the best advice anyone ever gave me was 'Hands Up, Don't Move!"
www.johnbarnold.com/pedalsteel
www.buddycage.net
http://www.nrpsmusic.com/index.html
Hi Brad!
JB
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Fulawka D-10 9&5
Fessenden D-10 8&8
Mullen Royal Precision D-10 8 & 5
"All in all, looking back, I'd have to say the best advice anyone ever gave me was 'Hands Up, Don't Move!"
www.johnbarnold.com/pedalsteel
www.buddycage.net
http://www.nrpsmusic.com/index.html
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Greg Simmons
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Hi John & Brad - yeah, Moon is the Man!
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Greg Simmons
Custodian of the Official Sho~Bud Pedal Steel Guitar Website
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Greg Simmons
Custodian of the Official Sho~Bud Pedal Steel Guitar Website
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Jerry Hayes R.I.P.
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He's been my hero for so dang many years it's hard to remember. I didn't make the Texas show but I saw him at Scotty's and he did one helluva show. I walked into the GFI room and there he stood with a cigarette in one hand and a bottle of beer in the other. This guy ain't changed a bit. He's still picking that great style as only he can do.
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Livin' in the Past and the Future with a 12 string Mooney Universal tuning.
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Livin' in the Past and the Future with a 12 string Mooney Universal tuning.
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Bob Blair
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Tom Olson
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Greg Simmons
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Look for a Wynn Stewart CD called “California Country: The Best of the Challenge Masters” (though I think this may be out of print and of course you can’t go wrong with the Bear Family box set “Wishful Thinking”), also I really like a Warren Smith compilation CD called “Call of the Wild” on Bear Family. Also there's a Waylon Jennings live album (at Billy Bob's?)
Obvious songs:
Buck Owens: Above and Beyond, Under Your Spell Again, High as the Mountains, Nobody's Fool But Your's.
Haggard’s Swinging Doors, The Bottle Let Me Down, (All My Friends Are Gonna Be) Strangers.
Warren Smith: Odds And Ends (Bits and Pieces) I Don't Believe I'll Fall in Love Today
Wynn Stewart: It's Such a Pretty World Today
Waylon Jennings: Rainy Day Woman
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Greg Simmons
Custodian of the Official Sho~Bud Pedal Steel Guitar Website
<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Greg Simmons on 11 March 2003 at 11:56 AM.]</p></FONT>
Obvious songs:
Buck Owens: Above and Beyond, Under Your Spell Again, High as the Mountains, Nobody's Fool But Your's.
Haggard’s Swinging Doors, The Bottle Let Me Down, (All My Friends Are Gonna Be) Strangers.
Warren Smith: Odds And Ends (Bits and Pieces) I Don't Believe I'll Fall in Love Today
Wynn Stewart: It's Such a Pretty World Today
Waylon Jennings: Rainy Day Woman
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Greg Simmons
Custodian of the Official Sho~Bud Pedal Steel Guitar Website
<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Greg Simmons on 11 March 2003 at 11:56 AM.]</p></FONT>
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Ron Page
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Chas Friedman
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I have a Buck Owens Box set of 3 CDs, and
Ralph Mooney plays steel on at least half of
the 21 or so cuts on the first CD. I always
had loved his playing. He was also one of my
favorites at the Dallas show. The style is
just great. He's got a lot of "Elvis"
(figuratively.)
Actually, all the performers were terrific.
My personal favorites were
Reece Anderson (technique so flawless, it
was hard to believe a person was actually
playing),
Al Brisco (didn't hear him play Sunday since
I had to leave early that morning, but
listened to him lots in the Carter room,
Incredibly smooth and clear!)
John Hughey (beautiful sound!),
Ralph Mooney
But as I said, everyone that played was so
good that comparisons don't make much sense.
chas
Ralph Mooney plays steel on at least half of
the 21 or so cuts on the first CD. I always
had loved his playing. He was also one of my
favorites at the Dallas show. The style is
just great. He's got a lot of "Elvis"
(figuratively.)
Actually, all the performers were terrific.
My personal favorites were
Reece Anderson (technique so flawless, it
was hard to believe a person was actually
playing),
Al Brisco (didn't hear him play Sunday since
I had to leave early that morning, but
listened to him lots in the Carter room,
Incredibly smooth and clear!)
John Hughey (beautiful sound!),
Ralph Mooney
But as I said, everyone that played was so
good that comparisons don't make much sense.
chas
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Bill Myrick
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Randy Pettit
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Donny Hinson
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Ralph has been one of my favorites for over 40 years! Ralph, I guess, is what we call a "stylist", or one who plays stuff that's just totally different and instantly recognizable. However, a lot of players don't know just how "hot" and commercial he played before he started playing the "pedal-stomping" stuff he's famous for. They've only heard his stuff behind Haggard and Waylon, and some of his old Wynn Stewart songs. I'm lucky enough to have a Gary Dean record he played on from about 1962 (which I don't think was ever released), and I'm tellin' you...
...the man was <u>hot</u>!!!

...the man was <u>hot</u>!!!

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Buck Grantham R.I.P.
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Tom Olson
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Ricky Littleton
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Paul Frarnklin had a talk-tape course called E9 Styles and Moon was mentioned and PAul demonstrated a little Mooney lick.
Other CD's for Moon's style are Buck Owens Sings Harlan Howard, Buck Owens "You're For Me".
Definitely Waylon Live. Beyond "The Last Letter" Moon torn up "Lonesome O'nry and Mean", "Never Been to Spain".
Moon is definitely one-of-a-kind and is the main reason I hated missing the Dallas show this year.
Well, theres always St. Louis...
Ricky
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Emmons LeGrande - 8x4
Session 400 Ltd
Dan-Echo, E-Bow, Ibanez Distortion, Boss Comp./Sustain, Ibanez Auto-Wah
Other CD's for Moon's style are Buck Owens Sings Harlan Howard, Buck Owens "You're For Me".
Definitely Waylon Live. Beyond "The Last Letter" Moon torn up "Lonesome O'nry and Mean", "Never Been to Spain".
Moon is definitely one-of-a-kind and is the main reason I hated missing the Dallas show this year.
Well, theres always St. Louis...
Ricky
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Emmons LeGrande - 8x4
Session 400 Ltd
Dan-Echo, E-Bow, Ibanez Distortion, Boss Comp./Sustain, Ibanez Auto-Wah
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Jim Smith
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Jerry Hayes R.I.P.
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Those "Moon Eared" things were a regular series which appeared in the PSGA Newsletter from New York. I don't know whether Jeff ever put them out as a regular course but I think he should. It amazes me how Ralph gets that stuff that ain't on his guitar and the way he uses open strings along with his pedaled stuff up the neck. My favorite memory of him is a gig I did on a Sunday afternoon in the late 60's in LA. We had Bobby Austin for a guest and he brought Ralph so I got to pick lead guitar with them and watch him play looking right over his shoulder and I can say for certain that he does use both feet on those pedals. He's a national treasure. One of my favorite rides of his is on Wynn Stewart's "One More Memory"...JH
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Joerg Hennig
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He´s definitely among my "Top 5" of steel players. I don´t know if I´ll ever get a chance to see him in person, I´m just glad I caught both of his sets at last year´s Convention through Internet radio.
I think there is no such thing as a CD that catches the whole breadth of his style since it kind of evolved over the years. Mooney with Waylon is different than Mooney with Buck Owens, for instance.
Don´t forget the first (untitled) Buck Owens record, the one with "Under Your Spell Again", "Above And Beyond", "Second Fiddle", etc.
Some of the best Mooney I´ve heard so far is on "Just Between the Two Of Us" by Merle Haggard and Bonnie Owens. On some tunes he plays something that sounds way different, sweet and strange, almost like a non-pedal steel (I may be wrong)
Warren Smith "Call Of The Wild" is also loaded with Mooney on Fender.
If you want to hear Mooney play some beautiful timeless instrumentals, try to get a copy of "Corn Pickin´And Slick Slidin`" with James Burton. I´d say he does some pretty tricky stuff there sometimes, the hammer-ons on "Columbus Stockade Blues" sound real cool, and I wonder why "The Texas Waltz" hasn´t become one of the all-time classic steel instrumentals.
If you go and buy a bunch of old Waylon records hoping to hear a lot of Mooney, you´ll probably be disappointed because, overall, he´s shamefully under-represented there; on the average, only about two or three tunes per record have steel on them. But, to compensate, those usually really shine. For instance, "The Ramblin´Man" is worth checking out. Besides the title track and "Rainy Day Woman", it has Gregg Allman´s "Midnight Rider" with Mooney playing some real cool blues licks. What´s also excellent besides "Waylon Live" is the video from `78, "The Lost Outlaw Performance." Has several good close-ups of Mooney´s hands, less of his footwork, great selection of songs, very enjoyable.
I could go on and on...
Long live Ralph Mooney!
Joe H.
I think there is no such thing as a CD that catches the whole breadth of his style since it kind of evolved over the years. Mooney with Waylon is different than Mooney with Buck Owens, for instance.
Don´t forget the first (untitled) Buck Owens record, the one with "Under Your Spell Again", "Above And Beyond", "Second Fiddle", etc.
Some of the best Mooney I´ve heard so far is on "Just Between the Two Of Us" by Merle Haggard and Bonnie Owens. On some tunes he plays something that sounds way different, sweet and strange, almost like a non-pedal steel (I may be wrong)
Warren Smith "Call Of The Wild" is also loaded with Mooney on Fender.
If you want to hear Mooney play some beautiful timeless instrumentals, try to get a copy of "Corn Pickin´And Slick Slidin`" with James Burton. I´d say he does some pretty tricky stuff there sometimes, the hammer-ons on "Columbus Stockade Blues" sound real cool, and I wonder why "The Texas Waltz" hasn´t become one of the all-time classic steel instrumentals.
If you go and buy a bunch of old Waylon records hoping to hear a lot of Mooney, you´ll probably be disappointed because, overall, he´s shamefully under-represented there; on the average, only about two or three tunes per record have steel on them. But, to compensate, those usually really shine. For instance, "The Ramblin´Man" is worth checking out. Besides the title track and "Rainy Day Woman", it has Gregg Allman´s "Midnight Rider" with Mooney playing some real cool blues licks. What´s also excellent besides "Waylon Live" is the video from `78, "The Lost Outlaw Performance." Has several good close-ups of Mooney´s hands, less of his footwork, great selection of songs, very enjoyable.
I could go on and on...
Long live Ralph Mooney!
Joe H.
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Greg Simmons
- Posts: 1731
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I got happy feet, 'cus...
Moon is IN THE HOUSE!
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Greg Simmons
Custodian of the Official Sho~Bud Pedal Steel Guitar Website
<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Greg Simmons on 13 March 2003 at 08:46 PM.]</p></FONT>
Moon is IN THE HOUSE!
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Greg Simmons
Custodian of the Official Sho~Bud Pedal Steel Guitar Website
<FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Greg Simmons on 13 March 2003 at 08:46 PM.]</p></FONT>
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Keith Hilton
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Brad, listen to the old Wynn Stewart records, Moon is on all of the hits!
Extremely tasty originaly playing! Wynn grew up in Pleasant Hope, Missouri about 25 miles from where I live in Ozark. <FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Keith Hilton on 13 March 2003 at 09:12 PM.]</p></FONT>
Extremely tasty originaly playing! Wynn grew up in Pleasant Hope, Missouri about 25 miles from where I live in Ozark. <FONT SIZE=1 COLOR="#8e236b"><p align=CENTER>[This message was edited by Keith Hilton on 13 March 2003 at 09:12 PM.]</p></FONT>
