The lap steel guitar, also known as a Hawaiian guitar, is a type of
steel guitar
A steel guitar ( haw, kīkākila) is any guitar played while moving a steel bar or similar hard object against plucked strings. The bar itself is called a "steel" and is the source of the name "steel guitar". The instrument differs from a conve ...
without pedals that is typically played with the instrument in a horizontal position across the performer's
lap
A lap is a surface (usually horizontal) created between the knee and hips of a biped when it is in a seated or lying down position. The lap of a parent or loved one is seen as a physically and psychologically comfortable place for a child to ...
. Unlike the usual manner of playing a traditional
acoustic guitar
An acoustic guitar is a musical instrument in the string family. When a string is plucked its vibration is transmitted from the bridge, resonating throughout the top of the guitar. It is also transmitted to the side and back of the instrument, ...
, in which the performer's fingertips press the strings against
frets, the pitch of a steel guitar is changed by pressing a polished
steel bar against plucked strings (from which the name "steel guitar" derives). Though the instrument does not have frets, it displays markers that resemble them. Lap steels may differ markedly from one another in external appearance, depending on whether they are
acoustic or
electric, but in either case, do not have pedals, distinguishing them from
pedal steel guitar.
The steel guitar was the first "foreign" musical instrument to gain a foothold in American pop music. It originated in the
Hawaiian Islands
The Hawaiian Islands ( haw, Nā Mokupuni o Hawai‘i) are an archipelago of eight major islands, several atolls, and numerous smaller islets in the North Pacific Ocean, extending some from the island of Hawaii in the south to northernmost Kur ...
about 1885, popularized by an
Oahu youth named
Joseph Kekuku
Joseph Kekuku (1874–1932) is reportedly the inventor of the steel guitar.
Biography
Kekuku, also known as Joseph Kekuku’upenakana’iaupuniokamehameha Apuakehau, was born in Lāie, a village on the island of Oʻahu, Hawaii. When Joseph was ...
, who became known for playing a
traditional guitar by laying it across his lap and sliding a piece of metal against the strings to change the pitch. The instrument's distinctive
portamento sound, characterized by a smooth gliding between notes, became popular throughout the islands. American
popular culture became fascinated with
Hawaiian music during the first half of the twentieth century – to the degree of becoming a musical
fad. Americans were curious about the lap steel instrument featured in its performance, and came to refer to it as a "Hawaiian guitar", and the horizontal playing position as "Hawaiian style". Hawaiian music began its assimilation into American popular music in the 1910s, but with English
lyrics; a combination Hawaiians called ''
hapa haole
Hapa is a Hawaiian word for someone of multiracial ancestry. In Hawaii, the word refers to any person of mixed ethnic heritage, regardless of the specific mixture.: "Thus, for locals in Hawai’i, both hapa or hapa haole are used to depict p ...
'' (half-white). In the 1930s, the invention of
electric amplification for the lap steel was a milestone in its evolution. It meant that the instrument could be heard equally with other instruments, that it no longer needed a resonance chamber to produce its sound, and that electrified lap steels could be manufactured in any shape (even a rectangular block), with little or no resemblance to a traditional guitar.
In the early twentieth century Hawaiian music and the steel guitar began to meld into other musical styles, including
blues
Blues is a music genre and musical form which originated in the Deep South of the United States around the 1860s. Blues incorporated spirituals, work songs, field hollers, shouts, chants, and rhymed simple narrative ballads from the Afr ...
,
jazz,
gospel,
country music and, particularly, the country music sub-genres
Western swing,
honky-tonk, and
bluegrass. Lap steel pioneers include
Sol Hoopii,
Bob Dunn,
Jerry Byrd,
Don Helms,
Bud Isaacs,
Leon McAuliffe,
Josh Graves,
Pete Kirby
Beecher Ray "Pete" Kirby (December 26, 1911 – October 17, 2002), better known as Bashful Brother Oswald, was an American country musician who popularized the use of the resonator guitar and Dobro. He played with Roy Acuff's Smoky Mountain Bo ...
, and
Darick Campbell.
Conceptually, a lap steel guitar may be likened to playing a guitar with one finger (the bar). This abstraction illustrates one of the instrument's major limitations: its constraint to a single
chord
Chord may refer to:
* Chord (music), an aggregate of musical pitches sounded simultaneously
** Guitar chord a chord played on a guitar, which has a particular tuning
* Chord (geometry), a line segment joining two points on a curve
* Chord ( ...
that is not changeable during a performance without re-tuning the instrument. An early solution was to build lap steel guitars with two or more
necks, each providing a separate set of differently-tuned strings on a single instrument. The performer's hands could move to a different neck at will. Although in the early 1940s, elite players recorded and performed with these multi-neck guitars, most musicians could not afford them. The problem was addressed in 1940 by adding pedals to the lap steel to change the pitch of certain strings easily, making more complex chords available on the same neck. By 1952, this invention revolutionized how the instrument was played, in many ways making it virtually a new instrument, known as a "
pedal steel". An overwhelming majority of lap steel players adopted the pedal design, and, as a result, the lap steel became largely obsolete by the late 1950s, with only pockets of devotees in country and Hawaiian music remaining.
Early history

Spanish guitars were introduced into the
Hawaiian Islands
The Hawaiian Islands ( haw, Nā Mokupuni o Hawai‘i) are an archipelago of eight major islands, several atolls, and numerous smaller islets in the North Pacific Ocean, extending some from the island of Hawaii in the south to northernmost Kur ...
as early as the 1830s.
The Hawaiians did not embrace the standard guitar tuning that had been in use for centuries.
They re-tuned the guitars to make a chord when all the strings were sounded together, known as an "
open tuning
Guitar tunings are the assignment of pitch (music), pitches to the open string (music), open strings of guitars, including acoustic guitars, electric guitars, and classical guitars. Musical tuning, Tunings are described by the particular pitc ...
".
This was called "slack-key", known in
Hawaiian as "''kī hōʻalu''",
because certain strings were "slackened" to achieve it.
Hawaiians learned to play
fingerstyle this way, creating melodies over the full resonant tones of the open strings, and the genre became known as
slack-key guitar
Slack-key guitar (from Hawaiian ''kī hōalu'', which means "loosen the uningkey") is a fingerstyle genre of guitar music that originated in Hawaii after Portuguese cowboys introduced Spanish guitars there in the late 19th century. The Hawaiian ...
.
About 1885, after guitar strings made of steel
became available,
Joseph Kekuku
Joseph Kekuku (1874–1932) is reportedly the inventor of the steel guitar.
Biography
Kekuku, also known as Joseph Kekuku’upenakana’iaupuniokamehameha Apuakehau, was born in Lāie, a village on the island of Oʻahu, Hawaii. When Joseph was ...
, on the island of
Oahu developed and popularized playing an open tuning while seated with the guitar across his knees while pressing a steel bar against the strings.
Following Kekuku's lead, other Hawaiians began playing in this new manner, with the guitar laid across the lap, instead of in the traditional way of holding the instrument against the body.
Once the horizontal style became popular throughout the islands, the technique spread internationally, and was referred to (typically outside of Hawaii) as "Hawaiian style".
Hawaiian music, with the sound of the steel guitar as a marked featured of it, became a popular musical preoccupation or
fad in the United States in the first half of the twentieth century.
In 1916, recordings of indigenous Hawaiian music outsold all other U.S. musical genres.
This popularity initiated the manufacture of guitars designed specifically to be played horizontally.
The archetypal lap steel guitar is the acoustic Hawaiian guitar.
Despite incorporating a resonant chamber in their body, these early acoustic versions of the instrument were not loud enough relative to other instruments. However, in the early 1930s a steel guitarist named
George Beauchamp
George Delmetia Beauchamp (; March 18, 1899 – March 30, 1941) was an American inventor of musical instruments. He is known for designing the first electrically amplified stringed instrument to be marketed commercially. He was also a foun ...
invented the
electric guitar pickup.
Electrification not only allowed the lap steel guitar to be heard better, but it also meant that their resonance chambers were no longer essential, or even required.
The result was that steel guitars could be manufactured in any shape – even in the form of a rectangular block bearing little or no resemblance to the traditional guitar shape.
This led to table-like instruments in a metal frame on legs called "
console steels".
Types of lap steel guitars
There are three categories of lap steel guitars:
* Acoustic lap steel guitars: These are traditional acoustic
steel-string acoustic guitars modified to be played on the performer's lap.
The modification is to raise the strings higher off the fingerboard than a traditional guitar, which can be done by inserting an adapter on the instrument's
bridge and its
nut.
This prevents the steel bar from hitting against the frets.
*
Dobro-type guitars or
National guitars: These are typically acoustic steel guitars with a large aluminum cone under the bridge, called a
resonator, that increases volume output.
Wood-body resonator guitars are called "Dobros" and steel bodied ones are called "Nationals".
The types do not sound the same — the Nationals are brassier and are usually preferred by blues players.
Either type offers round necks (Spanish) or square necks (Hawaiian).
Square necks are sometimes necessitated both by the use of thicker strings and by the increased force the instrument is subject to as a consequence of its raised strings.
* Electric lap steel guitars: Describes instruments that are specifically designed to be played horizontally and feature an electric
pickup so that they do not require any resonance chamber. Guitars in this category may differ markedly from one another in external appearance, and include instruments made from rectangular solid blocks of wood.
Some may be small enough to be played on the lap; others may have more than one
neck
The neck is the part of the body on many vertebrates that connects the head with the torso. The neck supports the weight of the head and protects the nerves that carry sensory and motor information from the brain down to the rest of the body. In ...
(making the instrument heavier), and may be built on a frame with legs, which is then known as a
console steel.
Tunings
Over centuries in Western countries, the traditional
Spanish guitar developed a near-universal
tuning of ascending fourths (and one major third) consisting of E–A–D–G–B–E;
however, no such standard existed for the Hawaiian "open tunings" (guitar tuned in a chord). The Hawaiians simply tuned to a chord that suited the singer's voice.
Beginning in the days of slack-key guitar in the 1850s, Hawaiian tunings came to be as closely guarded as any trade secret, handed down in families.
Many players de-tuned their instruments when they were not playing them to keep others from discovering their tuning.
The tuning chosen for these instruments is a crucial foundation on which steel guitar style is built.
The tuning used determines the notes that the player has available in a chord, and affects how notes can be played in sequence.
Experimenting with different tunings was a widespread practice of the Hawaiian music of the 1930s
and provided templates that became a foundation for the playing style of later musicians.
Scores of tunings are available for lap steel players.
The addition of a
sixth interval into a tuning had a dramatic effect on the steel guitar because it created numerous positions and playing pockets which were not accessible in a simple
major chord.
The
C6 was a common tuning for six string lap steels in the 1920s and 1930s.
Tunings with a sixth interval are popular in Western swing and jazz, while tunings containing
sevenths are often chosen for blues and rock music.
A fundamental challenge of lap steel guitar design is the inherent constraint it places on the number of chords and
inversions available in any given tuning.
To address the meagre array available to them, some early players would simply have a second lap steel at hand, with a different tuning, ready when needed.
Another strategy was to increase the number of strings on the instrument
(the more strings available, the smaller the pitch intervals between them, and therefore more notes available when the
bar
Bar or BAR may refer to:
Food and drink
* Bar (establishment), selling alcoholic beverages
* Candy bar
* Chocolate bar
Science and technology
* Bar (river morphology), a deposit of sediment
* Bar (tropical cyclone), a layer of cloud
* Bar (u ...
is placed straight across the strings).
A third strategy was to add additional necks to the same instrument, thus providing separate sets of strings that could each be tuned differently.
The Hawaiian "craze" in the United States
In the
U.S. Mainland
The contiguous United States (officially the conterminous United States) consists of the 48 adjoining U.S. states and the Federal District of the United States of America. The term excludes the only two non-contiguous states, Alaska and Hawaii ...
in the early 20th century, after the 1898
annexation of Hawaii
Hawaii ( ; haw, Hawaii or ) is a U.S. state, state in the Western United States, Western United States, located in the Pacific Ocean about from the U.S. mainland. It is the only U.S. state outside North America, the only state that is ...
,
the Hawaiian "
craze"
was in full force, as evidenced by radio broadcasts,
stage shows,
and motion pictures
featuring Hawaiian music.
Hollywood
Hollywood usually refers to:
* Hollywood, Los Angeles, a neighborhood in California
* Hollywood, a metonym for the cinema of the United States
Hollywood may also refer to:
Places United States
* Hollywood District (disambiguation)
* Hollywood, ...
films perpetuated the musical image of an idealized island lifestyle.
Hawaiian guitars and lessons for youth were widely available. For example, the
Oahu Music Company sold their ''Oahu''-brand guitars and lessons to young people by door-to-door sales, canvassing nearly every city in the United States.
The steel guitar was the first "foreign" musical instrument to gain a foothold in American pop music.
Pioneer lap steel players between 1915 and 1930 included
Sol K. Bright Sr. Solomon Kamaluhiakekipikealiʻikaʻapunikukealaokamahanahana Bright Sr. (9 November 1909 – 27 April 1992) was an entertainer of Hawaiian and Castilian ancestry, who played steel guitar and is most widely known as the composer of ''Hawaiian Cowboy ...
,
Tau Moe,
Dick McIntire
Dick Kaihue McIntire (1902–1951) was a Honolulu-born steel guitarist active in the 1930s and 1940s. During that era, Hawaiian music was quite popular in the U.S. to the extent of being a musical fad. McIntire performed on hundreds of recordings ...
,
Sam Ku West
Sam Ku West (1907–1930) was an American steel guitar player from Honolulu, Hawaii he died in Neuilly sur Seine near Paris, France.
Career
West first performed professionally as a member of Irene West's touring band, adding the "West" surn ...
and
Frank Ferera. Ferera was the most-recorded of any lap-style guitarists in that time period.
Hawaiian music began to meld into American popular music in the 1910s – a combination Hawaiians called ''
hapa haole
Hapa is a Hawaiian word for someone of multiracial ancestry. In Hawaii, the word refers to any person of mixed ethnic heritage, regardless of the specific mixture.: "Thus, for locals in Hawai’i, both hapa or hapa haole are used to depict p ...
'' (half-white)
– which was essentially Hawaiian music, sung in English,
intended for white audiences.
As an example, Honolulu-born
Dick McIntire
Dick Kaihue McIntire (1902–1951) was a Honolulu-born steel guitarist active in the 1930s and 1940s. During that era, Hawaiian music was quite popular in the U.S. to the extent of being a musical fad. McIntire performed on hundreds of recordings ...
and his ''Harmony Hawaiians'' recorded Hawaiian songs sung by American pop crooner
Bing Crosby
Harry Lillis "Bing" Crosby Jr. (May 3, 1903 – October 14, 1977) was an American singer, musician and actor. The first multimedia star, he was one of the most popular and influential musical artists of the 20th century worldwide. He was a ...
in 1936.
Tin Pan Alley obliged the demand for Hawaiian songs by publishing a large supply of ''hapa haole'' music.
Many amateur and professional musicians throughout America formed Hawaiian combos in the 1930s and 1940s.
The introduction of electrified guitars in the 1930s had a profound effect, boosting commercial Hawaiian music.
Lap steel pioneers
In the development of lap steel guitar in the early twentieth century, many innovators contributed; among the most prominent were:
Sol Ho'opi'i (pronounced Ho-OH-pee-EE) was perhaps the most famous Hawaiian musician whose work spread the sound of instrumental lap steel play worldwide.
He was the first steel guitarist to combine Hawaiian music with American jazz.
Born in Honolulu in 1902, Hoopii was a gifted talent on lap steel from an early age. When he was a teenager, he stowed away on a
Matson liner on its journey from Hawaii to San Francisco. After his arrival in California, he formed a trio and became well known in clubs, theaters, movie appearances and recordings from 1925 to 1950.
He combined Hawaiian music with the jazz he heard from clarinet and horn players. He was a trendsetter in his use of the metal-bodied National Tricone guitar and, later, the
Rickenbacker Bakelite
Polyoxybenzylmethylenglycolanhydride, better known as Bakelite ( ), is a thermosetting phenol formaldehyde resin, formed from a condensation reaction of phenol with formaldehyde. The first plastic made from synthetic components, it was developed ...
(''
see photo above'') and Dickerson electric steels.
Bob Dunn was the first steel guitarist of renown playing Western swing.
Born in 1908 in
Fort Gibson, Oklahoma, he quit school in the eighth grade to join traveling musical troupes.
Considered a musical revolutionary,
according to music writer Michael Ross, Bob Dunn played the first electrified instrument of any type on a commercial recording.
It was a Western swing tune released in 1935, performed by Dunn in collaboration with "
Milton Brown and his Musical Brownies".
The guitar he played was a Rickenbacker A22, nicknamed the "
Frying Pan".
Formerly a trombone player, Dunn's guitar playing introduced horn-like solos, with the
staccato
Staccato (; Italian for "detached") is a form of musical articulation. In modern notation, it signifies a note of shortened duration, separated from the note that may follow by silence. It has been described by theorists and has appeared in music ...
phrasing of jazz players, and, according to historian Andy Volk, was of indelible influence on subsequent generations of steel players.
Jerry Byrd was born in
Lima, Ohio, in 1920.
As a youth, he attended a traveling tent show that came to town; it was a troupe of Hawaiians playing Hawaiian music and featured a polished National steel guitar. Byrd was smitten by the sound as well as the physical appearance of the instrument and said, "That was the day that changed my life".
In a musical career divided between Hawaiian music and country music, Byrd helped lay the foundation for the Nashville steel guitar sound.
He is credited with developing the C
6 tuning that became the standard of C
6 pedal steels.
With
Hank Williams
Hank Williams (born Hiram Williams; September 17, 1923 – January 1, 1953) was an American singer, songwriter, and musician. Regarded as one of the most significant and influential American singers and songwriters of the 20th century, he reco ...
, Byrd recorded songs like "
I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry", "
Lovesick Blues" and "
A Mansion on the Hill". Byrd also recorded with
Marty Robbins,
Hank Snow,
Ernest Tubb and others.
After his Nashville career, Byrd made Hawaii his permanent home.
Western Swing

In the early 1930s, the newly electrified lap steel guitar took a prominent position in a type of dance music known as "
Western swing",
a form of
jazz swing that combined elements of country music and Hawaiian music.
Pioneers of the genre include bandleaders Milton Brown
and Bob Wills.
Wills in turn hired and nurtured innovative players, who subsequently influenced the genre, including
Leon McAuliffe,
Noel Boggs
Noel Edwin Boggs (1917–1974) was an American musician who was a virtuoso on the lap steel guitar and a member of the Steel Guitar Hall of Fame. He was one of the pioneers in electric steel guitar who helped popularize the instrument beyond i ...
, and
Herb Remington.
In October, 1936,
Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys
James Robert Wills (March 6, 1905 – May 13, 1975) was an American Western swing musician, songwriter, and bandleader. Considered by music authorities as the founder of Western swing, he was known widely as the King of Western Swing (although S ...
and McAuliffe, performing with a Rickenbacker B–6 lap steel, recorded the remarkably well selling record, "
Steel Guitar Rag".
Due to the need to have different chords or
voicings
''Voicings'' was the last recording by the Minneapolis jazz vocal group Rio Nido. The album was one of the early recordings to feature live "direct to digital" recording techniques.
Track listing
# "Northern Lights" (D. Karr, L. Ball)
# "I'm ...
available, the design of the lap steel and the way it was played underwent continual change as the style evolved.
McAuliffe had two Rickenbackers, each tuned differently.
The instrument's constraints caused leading steel guitarists to add
additional necks with different tunings on the same instrument.
Lap steels were the first multi-neck electric instruments.
The added size and weight meant that the instrument could no longer be reasonably supported on the player's lap and required placement in a frame with legs known as a "console" steel guitar, that is still ostensibly a lap steel.
Prominent players of that era, including Herb Remington
and Noel Boggs,
accommodated by instrument maker
Leo Fender, eventually played instruments with four different necks.
Honky-tonk
By the late 1940s, the steel guitar featured prominently in the emerging "
honky-tonk" style of country music, developed in Texas and Oklahoma bars and dance halls (called honky-tonks).
The style features a simple
two-beat sound with a prominent
backbeat.
Honky-tonk singers who used a lap steel guitar in their musical arrangements included Hank Williams,
Lefty Frizzell and
Webb Pierce.
Don Helms (1927–2008), born in
New Brockton, Alabama, played a double-neck
Gibson lap steel using an E
6 and a B
11 tuning
on recordings by all three of these artists, as well as on more than 100 Hank Williams songs, including "
Your Cheating Heart
"Your Cheatin' Heart" is a song written and recorded by country music singer-songwriter Hank Williams in 1952. It is regarded as one of country's most important standards. Williams was inspired to write the song while driving with his fiancée ...
", "
I Can't Help It (If I'm Still in Love with You)" and "
Cold, Cold Heart".
Helms' playing style helped move country music away from the hillbilly string-band sound popular in the 1930s and toward the more modern electric style that took over in the 1940s.
His guitar
intros,
leads, and
fills have been widely imitated for 50 years.
Other classic country recordings featuring Helms' work were "
Walkin' After Midnight" (
Patsy Cline) and "
Blue Kentucky Girl" (
Loretta Lynn). Many recordings of that era (1950s) were made using a steel guitar tuning in a
sixth chord, often a
C6, which is sometimes called a "Texas tuning".
Dobro
The
Dobro
Dobro is an American brand of resonator guitars, currently owned by Gibson and manufactured by its subsidiary Epiphone. The term "dobro" is also used as a generic term for any wood-bodied, single-cone resonator guitar.
The Dobro was originally ...
or
resonator guitar is a uniquely American lap steel guitar with a resonator cone designed to make a guitar louder.
It was patented by the
Dopyera brothers
John Dopyera ( Slovak: ''Ján Dopjera''; 1893–1988) was a Slovak-American inventor and entrepreneur, and a maker of stringed instruments. His inventions include the resonator guitar and important contributions in the early development of the ...
in 1927,
but the name "Dobro", a portmanteau of DOpyera and BROthers, became a generic term for this type of guitar.
The dobro never became popular with blues players, who generally prefer the
National guitar, which has a similar resonator design but uses a metal body.
In the opinion of music writer
Richard Carlin, the dobro probably would have disappeared from the musical scene had it not been for two influential players: Pete Kirby and Uncle Josh Graves (Buck Graves).
Beecher "Pete" Kirby (1911–1992), known as
Bashful Brother Oswald
Beecher Ray "Pete" Kirby (December 26, 1911 – October 17, 2002), better known as Bashful Brother Oswald, was an American country musician who popularized the use of the resonator guitar and Dobro. He played with Roy Acuff's Smoky Mountain ...
, was born in
Sevierville, Tennessee. As a member of
Roy Acuff
Roy Claxton Acuff (September 15, 1903 – November 23, 1992) was an American country music singer, fiddler, and promoter. Known as the "King of Country Music", Acuff is often credited with moving the genre from its early string band and "hoedown ...
's "
Smoky Mountain Boys
Roy Claxton Acuff (September 15, 1903 – November 23, 1992) was an American country music singer, fiddler, and promoter. Known as the "King of Country Music", Acuff is often credited with moving the genre from its early string band and "hoedown ...
", in 1939 his dobro playing on the
Grand Ole Opry
The ''Grand Ole Opry'' is a weekly American country music stage concert in Nashville, Tennessee, founded on November 28, 1925, by George D. Hay as a one-hour radio "barn dance" on WSM. Currently owned and operated by Opry Entertainment (a divis ...
helped define country music in its formative years.
Kirby introduced the instrument to a nationwide radio audience.
He played a Dobro Model 27,
and sometimes a steel-bodied National guitar. He was known to perform a comedy act dressed as a
yokel, wearing a wide-brim slouch hat and overalls.
His dobro attracted interest and fascination; he said, "People couldn't understand how I played it and what it was, and they'd always want to come around and look at it."
He stayed with Acuff for 53 years.
Buck "Josh" Graves (aka "
Uncle Josh Graves"), born in 1927, played dobro in the pioneering
Bluegrass band "
Flatt and Scruggs" in 1955.
Graves played a role in establishing dobro as a common fixture in a bluegrass band.
He honed a style that elevated his dobro skills to rival the prowess of his bandmates.
To do so, he abandoned Hawaiian stylings and adopted
hammer-on and
pull-off notes to combine
open strings
''Open Strings'' is an album by French jazz fusion artist Jean-Luc Ponty, released in 1971 on vinyl by the MPS label.
Track listing
All songs written by Jean-Luc Ponty, except where noted.
Side one
#"Flipping, Pt.1" – 4:40
#"Flipping, Pt.2 ...
with fretted notes rapidly; additionally, he adopted a three-finger picking style taught to him by
Earl Scruggs
Earl Eugene Scruggs (January 6, 1924 – March 28, 2012) was an American musician noted for popularizing a three-finger banjo picking style, now called "Scruggs style", which is a defining characteristic of bluegrass music. His three-fin ...
.
Dozens of other bluegrass groups added a dobro after hearing Graves' lightning-fast solos that fit into the bluegrass instrumental style.
He took lap steel guitar to a new level, able to complement the banjo, fiddle, and mandolin.
Dobro fell out of favor in mainstream country music until a bluegrass revival in the 1970s brought it back with younger virtuoso players like
Jerry Douglas, whose Dobro skills became widely known and emulated.
Sacred steel
This gospel music tradition, now called "
sacred steel", began in the 1930s church services in the "House of God", a small
African-American denomination where the steel guitar emerged as an alternative to the church organ.
Darick Campbell (1966–2020) was a lap steel player for the gospel band,
The Campbell Brothers
The Campbell Brothers are an American Sacred Steel gospel group from Rush, New York composed of three brothers and one son.
The ensemble features prominent pedal steel guitar and began as the house band for a House of God Keith Dominion congrega ...
, who took the musical tradition from
Pentecostal churches to international fame.
Campbell played a traditional Hawaiian lap steel:
a
Fender Stringmaster 8-string (Fender Deluxe-8).
He regulated the volume up on top of the guitar with his hand as he played and used a
wah pedal.
Born in Rochester, New York,
Campbell was a master at mimicking the human singing voice with his guitar. He said, "My method is to always think of my guitar as a voice".
Campbell played many music festivals, but his renown in rock and jazz circles was not well-received by church leaders.
The Campbell Brothers parted ways acrimoniously with the Nashville-based House of God Church, Keith Dominion, because the Pentecostal church wanted to keep the band's music within the church walls.
Campbell recorded with The
Allman Brothers and
Medeski Martin and Wood.
Lap slide guitar
Lap slide guitar is not a specific instrument, but a style of playing lap steel that is typically heard in blues or
rock music.
Players of these genres typically use the term "slide" instead of "steel";
they sometimes play the style with a flat pick or with fingers instead of finger picks.
Pioneers in lap slide include
Buddy Woods,
"Black Ace" Turner (who used a small medicine bottle as a slide),
and
Freddie Roulette.
Turner played a National Style 2 squareneck Tricone guitar on his lap.
Another blues guitar playing style is called "
slide guitar
Slide guitar is a technique for playing the guitar that is often used in blues music. It involves playing a guitar while holding a hard object (a slide) against the strings, creating the opportunity for glissando effects and deep vibratos tha ...
", a hybrid between steel guitar and conventional guitar. It is played with a conventional guitar held flat against the body, fretting the bass strings in the usual way (for rhythm accompaniment), while using a tubular slide (or the neck of a bottle) placed on a finger of the same hand to slide against the treble strings.
In 1923,
Sylvester Weaver was the first to record this style.
In the 1940s, blues players like
Robert Nighthawk and
Earl Hooker popularized electric slide guitar this way, using a traditional guitar in standard tuning.
The term "bottleneck" was historically used to describe this type of playing.
Early blues players used open tunings, but most modern slide players use both standard and open.
Lap steel obsolescence
The expense of building multiple necks on each guitar made lap steels unaffordable for most players and a more sophisticated solution was needed.
Many inventors sought a mechanical linkage to change the pitch of strings on the steel guitar.
Gibson introduced a pedal steel guitar as early as 1940, but it never caught on.
About 1946,
Paul Bigsby created a new design for the pedal action, greatly improving it.
Bigsby, working alone in his shop, made guitars for leading players of the day, including
Joaquin Murphey Earl James "Joaquin" Murphey (often spelled "Murphy", 30 December 1923 in Hollywood, California – 25 October 1999) was an American lap steel guitarist. Nicknamed "Joaquin" by bandleader Spade Cooley to refer to the San Joaquin Valley, Murphey was ...
and
Speedy West
Wesley Webb West (January 25, 1924 – November 15, 2003), better known as Speedy West, was an American pedal steel guitarist and record producer. He frequently played with Jimmy Bryant, both in their own duo and as part of the regular Capitol ...
.
Nashville guitarist
Bud Isaacs received one of Bigsby's two-pedal guitars in 1952.
It was a wooden double–eight string model.
Isaacs experimented with the new pedals in an
E9 tuning, trying to imitate the sound of two fiddles playing in harmony. In doing so, he came upon something new – he innovated pushing the pedal ''while the strings were still sounding''.
This practice had been strictly avoided by other players of the era, because it was considered poor technique and "un-Hawaiian".
Isaacs' intent was to use the pedal mechanism itself as a feature of the music. The technique created a
triad
Triad or triade may refer to:
* a group of three
Businesses and organisations
* Triad (American fraternities), certain historic groupings of seminal college fraternities in North America
* Triad (organized crime), a Chinese transnational orga ...
chord, where two lower notes bend up in
glissando
In music, a glissando (; plural: ''glissandi'', abbreviated ''gliss.'') is a glide from one pitch to another (). It is an Italianized musical term derived from the French ''glisser'', "to glide". In some contexts, it is distinguished from the co ...
counterpoint from below, to harmonize with a third note on top that remains unchanged.
The pedal facilitated the move in perfect synchronization and pitch, which was consistent and reliable.
Isaacs tried it in a 1953 recording session on a
Webb Pierce song called "
Slowly".
The song became one of the most-played
country songs of 1954 and was No. 1 on the
Billboard's country charts for seventeen weeks.
Isaacs' guitar became the first pedal steel guitar on a hit record.
More importantly, the sound was immediately recognized by lap steel (non-pedal) guitarists as something both unique and impossible to produce on a non-pedal lap steel.
Dozens of instrumentalists rushed to get pedals on their steel guitars to imitate the unique bending notes they heard in Isaacs' play.
In the months and years after this recording, instrument makers and musicians worked to duplicate the innovations of Bigsby and Isaacs.
Even though the instrument had been available for over a decade before this recording, the pedal steel guitar emerged as a crucial element in country music after the success of this song.
The pedals allowed playing more complex and versatile music than it was possible on lap steel.
The pedal steel design was adopted by an overwhelming majority of lap steel players in the early 1950s. The resulting new and distinctive style of playing became a defining characteristic of the country music coming out of Nashville for decades thereafter.
In accordance, the ''non''-pedal lap steel became largely obsolete, with only pockets of devotees remaining in country and Hawaiian music.
Jimmy Day was an example of an established lap player who was able to make a successful switch to pedals in mid-career.
Other prominent lap steel players—including Noel Boggs, Jerry Byrd and Joaquin Murphey—refused to switch. According to music historian Rich Kienzle, this decision hindered Boggs' later career.
Speaking about the pedal steel in a 1972 interview, Jerry Byrd said: "Mechanically, there were a lot of bugs, you couldn't keep them in tune, and that drove me crazy"
... So I decided to stay with what I had and keep my identity and ride it out... I never made the change-over."
Joaquin Murphey stayed with the non-pedal lap steel long after his contemporaries had switched over,
and with his C
6 tuning. He felt that the Nashville-standard E
9 was, in his words, a "gimmick".
He stated in a 1995 interview, "I can't do all that fancy Nashville stuff and I hate it anyhow".
See also
*
Steel guitar
A steel guitar ( haw, kīkākila) is any guitar played while moving a steel bar or similar hard object against plucked strings. The bar itself is called a "steel" and is the source of the name "steel guitar". The instrument differs from a conve ...
*
Pedal steel guitar
The pedal steel guitar is a Console steel guitar, console-type of steel guitar with pedals and knee levers that change the pitch of certain strings to enable playing more varied and complex music than any previous steel guitar design. Like all s ...
–(Contains a sample of the song "Slowly")
*
Slack-key guitar
Slack-key guitar (from Hawaiian ''kī hōalu'', which means "loosen the uningkey") is a fingerstyle genre of guitar music that originated in Hawaii after Portuguese cowboys introduced Spanish guitars there in the late 19th century. The Hawaiian ...
*
Slide guitar
Slide guitar is a technique for playing the guitar that is often used in blues music. It involves playing a guitar while holding a hard object (a slide) against the strings, creating the opportunity for glissando effects and deep vibratos tha ...
Notes
References
External links
Hawaiian Steel Guitar Association– An organization which promotes the development of lap steel guitar with worldwide membership.
{{Guitars, state=collapsed, Type
Guitars
Continuous pitch instruments
American inventions
Steel guitar
1885 musical instruments