welcome to Ask Zac today we are going
0:52
to talk about Bernie leddon
0:54
so the reason why
0:58
is that I was at the Country Music Hall
1:00
of Fame a couple weeks ago with my
1:03
family I took them because I wanted to
1:06
see there was a new exhibit called
1:07
Western Edge so this goes back a little
1:10
bit further and then I went to see the
1:12
final show by the desert rose band with
1:14
Chris Hillman and John Jorgensen and
1:16
those amazing group of players
1:20
and then after that I really wanted to
1:23
see the the exhibit that uh that brought
1:26
about this concert and everything and it
1:28
was all about California country rock
1:31
so I went there and I was amazed to see
1:34
things like the Flying Burrito Brothers
1:36
outfits there the ones from the first
1:39
album that that Graham like you know
1:41
that that one's been on display but now
1:44
you had Hillman and uh and Sneaky Pete's
1:46
you know or Chris Chris Etheridge you
1:49
had three other outfits so I guess they
1:51
were missing one but they had three of
1:52
them
1:53
and then I saw it I saw the guitar so
1:59
they had Bernie Legends B Bender telly
2:03
so the one on Peaceful Easy Feeling and
2:06
Tequila Sunrise and all those all those
2:08
great tunes by The Eagles that feature a
2:11
b bender and
2:12
frankly the
2:15
I mean
2:16
when you talk about a b bender and
2:19
you're talking to the average person you
2:22
know you might have a hard time saying
2:23
oh yeah it's like on this tune well it's
2:26
really easy to mention Peaceful Easy
2:27
feeling well it's a guitar sound that
2:30
you hear on the Eagles Peaceful Easy
2:32
Feeling everyone has heard that song
2:34
you know it's the you know it's on the
2:37
Eagles Greatest Hits album which at
2:39
times is the greatest selling album of
2:42
all time so
2:45
yeah so I decided to do an episode about
2:47
burning we're going to talk about that
2:48
guitar and uh talk about his influence
2:52
outside of the Eagles and and things
2:54
that I love him and his playing for you
2:58
know outside of the Eagles because he
2:59
did a lot of cool work with some of his
3:02
old California country rock buddies
3:04
Through The Years so yeah
3:07
so while you're thinking about it if you
3:08
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3:10
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3:16
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3:24
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3:27
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3:29
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3:32
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3:34
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3:36
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3:39
all right so Bernie leddon uh well born
3:44
up in Minnesota he ended up down in
3:46
Gainesville Florida
3:48
which of course for some reason
3:50
Gainesville is kind of a hotbed of of
3:52
music and uh beside I mean you could
3:56
list off a number of people but just the
3:57
easy ones would be Don Felder who ended
4:00
up also being an eagle and then Tom
4:02
Petty that was you know of course
4:04
younger and lived down the street
4:07
so uh
4:09
you know Bernie kind of went back and
4:12
forth and uh he he had worked some with
4:16
Chris Hillman in the Scottsville
4:18
squirrel barkers oh my goodness what
4:21
what kind of name is that it's not as
4:22
bad as like Strawberry Alarm Clock or
4:24
the 13th floor elevators but that's
4:26
quite a name there
4:28
uh and then he ended up going back out
4:30
to California to play with hearts and
4:33
flowers
4:34
what like most bands hearts and flowers
4:36
falls apart well then he ends up joining
4:39
uh Dillard and Clark
4:41
so which of course was one of the
4:43
Dillards and Gene Clark from the birds
4:46
the main vocalist and they end up you
4:50
know riding some tunes and it was Bernie
4:53
kind of writing some instrumentals and
4:55
such and they cut a record and then the
4:58
band falls apart
5:00
of course
5:01
and then he runs into Chris Hillman who
5:04
his band is already falling apart the
5:06
Flying Burrito Brothers and
5:09
you know Graham is already trying to
5:12
hang out with the Rolling Stones all the
5:14
time and it's starting to you know do
5:17
some uh substances and such and uh and
5:21
so he ends up asking Bernie to join and
5:24
and so
5:25
Bernie joins the Flying Burrito Brothers
5:28
and of course it's a short-lived Graham
5:32
ends up leaving Rick Roberts comes in
5:34
and they kind of become more of a
5:36
smooth easy listening kind of version of
5:40
California country rock and Bernie
5:43
leaves and he's been
5:46
kind of playing off and on on the side
5:48
with Linda Ronstadt who's a friend of
5:50
his and through that Association of
5:53
course you know again you have to
5:54
remember that this is a small you know
5:56
pool of guys that are playing this style
5:59
of music so he's running into Randy
6:01
Meisner he knows Don Henley and Glenn
6:04
Frey and Don and Glenn and Randy have
6:09
already you know they're putting a band
6:11
together and they're looking for the
6:13
fourth guy and they asked Bernie and so
6:15
Bernie's the last one to join of the
6:17
original four equals
6:20
and it's pretty Apparent from interviews
6:23
and just from the way they acted that
6:26
they wanted to do everything right with
6:28
the Eagles that those guys
6:31
all four of them had experienced success
6:34
and failure and being taken advantage of
6:38
and they all wanted to do things the
6:42
right way and you know Don had been in
6:45
Shiloh that fell apart
6:47
Glenn had been in Long Branch Penny
6:49
Whistle you know of course Randy had
6:52
been in poco and then left after the
6:54
album was was cut
6:56
and also of course we've been with Rick
6:58
Nelson
6:59
and uh yeah I think they they all wanted
7:03
to learn from their mistakes or the
7:04
mistakes that they observed and kind of
7:07
create the uh the perfect California
7:10
country rock band
7:12
and uh I think you know they as as close
7:15
as you could I think they they did it
7:17
with the Eagles and uh Bernie was a huge
7:20
you know contributor to their sound I
7:22
mean you have to remember that on the
7:23
first two albums it's four guys
7:26
and that first album you know right out
7:29
of the right out of the box they had
7:30
hits they had hits with Witchy Woman
7:32
which Bernie had co-written and it's
7:35
more of a rock tune so that's that goes
7:38
against all the guys that say Bernie
7:39
didn't want to rock well he co-wrote
7:41
Witchy Woman and played guitar on it and
7:44
then you have take it easy which
7:47
features fantastic you know intro and
7:50
solo on on a Telecaster by Bernie and
7:53
then he also plays this fantastic banjo
7:56
part that's later on in the tune that
7:58
really kind of gives it a lift
8:01
um yeah then you have Peaceful Easy
8:03
Feeling
8:04
which is just a a beautiful you know
8:07
tune that is still being played by Bar
8:09
bands you know every second of every day
8:12
somewhere in the world and that features
8:15
some really really gorgeous B Bender
8:18
work and uh of course I played the
8:21
second half of the solo the first half
8:23
is uh is really some really sweet Bender
8:27
work with some kind of melodic work
8:29
overdubbed over top of it but uh
8:33
the second half of course is a little
8:34
more exciting because he goes to the
8:36
bridge pickup and starts twanging out a
8:38
little bit more so
8:41
and that has to be the biggest hit that
8:45
features a b bender on it you know
8:47
heavily
8:48
so yeah so he uh you know you have the
8:51
banjo you have the acoustic guitar work
8:53
you have his knowledge of Bluegrass and
8:56
folk and and Harmony
8:59
and uh yeah and he was and he was riding
9:03
and that band was was was really great
9:05
and I don't think it's fair to really
9:07
call him the lead guitarist per se
9:09
because Glenn was also a really great
9:11
guitar player they're both lead guitar
9:13
players uh Glenn you know of course
9:16
you'd hear him on things like already
9:18
gone or better yet you know you have the
9:22
Timothy B Schmidt hit later on in the
9:25
70s with I Can't Tell You Why That's all
9:27
Glenn Frey you know playing you know the
9:30
all the fills and the solo on it that
9:33
that shows you what a what a great
9:35
arranger songwriter guitar player Glenn
9:37
Frey was so you know they were they were
9:41
definitely some of their parts and they
9:43
just sounded insanely good when they
9:45
harmonize together and uh and they
9:49
created an amazing first album and then
9:50
they followed it up with a concept album
9:52
that was kind of a dud it did end up
9:55
producing you know Tequila sunrises a
9:58
minor hit and then Desperado there'd be
10:01
a hit later and a fan favorite and yeah
10:06
but it wasn't until you know on the
10:08
border that they really started hitting
10:10
their stride again and that's also when
10:13
you start seeing Don Felder guesting and
10:15
then he joins the band after that and
10:17
then they make the one of these Knights
10:19
album which of course
10:22
that's when Bernie starts getting more
10:25
frustrated with the band and I think it
10:27
I think it's again an oversimplification
10:29
to say he didn't like the direction the
10:31
band was going musically and maybe he
10:34
didn't but I think the the band uh it's
10:37
obvious that they it was such a high
10:39
pressure situation and I think they were
10:41
you know Don and Glenn were really
10:43
wanting to go in more of a Arena you
10:46
know kind of atmosphere and I don't know
10:49
that Bernie wanted to do that and I
10:52
think the toll of it got to him
10:54
and then it got to Randy and then it got
10:56
to Don and Glenn you know because the
10:58
band you know exploded uh
11:02
or imploded whichever whichever you
11:04
prefer by by 1980 and they were they
11:07
were done so it took a long time for
11:10
them to get get back together again
11:13
so when uh when Bernie left the Eagles
11:18
he uh you know he continued to be
11:21
involved in projects and I love you know
11:25
some of his you know guest work so I
11:27
remember the first time I heard this
11:29
album so this is uh you know Emmylou
11:32
Harris's pieces of the sky and this is a
11:35
fabulous album of course this was her
11:36
first album for Warner reprise and uh
11:40
you know Bernie is all over this thing
11:42
singing Harmony and playing acoustic and
11:45
he plays fantastic dobro on bottle let
11:47
me down along with James Burton playing
11:50
of course uh telecaster and uh you know
11:53
really really great great stuff also
11:57
emmylou's next album which is Elite
12:01
Hotel features Bernie playing a
12:04
beautiful acoustic guitar solo on the
12:06
tune sweet dreams and it's an overdub so
12:09
they uh they had recorded the song live
12:11
with the hot band and then they decided
12:14
to overdub an acoustic guitar solo over
12:17
uh it's actually overhang DeVito's steel
12:19
solo which I guess they feel didn't have
12:22
enough
12:22
um movement to it so they they had
12:25
Bernie play this solo that kind of fills
12:28
in the gaps in Hank solo so I guess to
12:31
be really fair it's Hank DeVito and
12:34
Bernie Ludden soloing at the at the same
12:36
time you know kind of trading off
12:39
and yeah so Bernie you know of course
12:43
did a did a solo record or a Duo record
12:47
and uh and then he really didn't see
12:50
much from him and he started working
12:52
some with Chris Hillman you get the ever
12:53
call ready album which of course I
12:56
talked about that in the desert rose
12:57
band episode that was
12:59
Chris Hillman and Bernie and Al Perkins
13:02
and some others doing kind of a gospel
13:04
bluegrass album
13:06
and because Bernie was playing in Chris
13:09
Hillman's band at the time and so Bernie
13:12
left Chris Hillman's band to join the
13:14
nitty-gritty Dirt Band and that left an
13:16
opening and that's where John Jorgensen
13:18
comes in but Bernie went to the Nitty
13:21
Gritty Dirt Band
13:22
and uh during when the the Dirt Band was
13:25
having quite a bit of chart success with
13:27
things like fishing in the dark and
13:29
other Tunes hold on and so Bernie was in
13:32
the band for a short time and there's
13:35
funny footage of uh of that era Nitty
13:40
Gritty Dirt Band or Dirt Band I should
13:42
say that's what they're being called at
13:43
that point on Nashville now hosted by
13:46
Ralph Emery and of course Ralph Emery as
13:48
much as I love him he was also really
13:51
good at putting his foot in his mouth
13:52
and so
13:54
you know they're he's kind of
13:56
interviewing the guys in the Dirt Band
13:57
and then he just asks you know he didn't
13:59
his question to Bernie is when are the
14:02
Eagles going to get back together and
14:05
it's just like really I've just joined
14:07
this band and we're having success and
14:10
you're going to ask about a group that I
14:12
quit 10 years ago and have nothing to do
14:15
with except for you know probably
14:16
getting mailbox money from him but uh
14:19
anyway it was funny and so then you know
14:23
kind of continued to see Bernie uh
14:25
guesting and even doing some producing
14:27
like with Restless Heart and playing on
14:29
sessions and so you you know if you if
14:31
you look up Bernie's you know kind of
14:33
discogs or all music you'll see that he
14:36
played on a fair amount of sessions here
14:38
in Nashville on a variety of country and
14:40
kind of Bluegrass and country rock type
14:42
projects
14:44
well then he kind of had a fun little
14:47
era where he did a kind of a
14:50
a fun project where he he had some
14:52
friends of his and they did a band
14:54
called run C and W which was where they
14:57
did
14:57
Bluegrass versions of Motown tunes and
15:01
again this was the early 90s and they
15:03
wore kind of uh
15:06
I don't know I mean it looked like
15:08
sometimes they were wearing workout
15:09
clothes and sunglasses and stuff they
15:11
looked they looked pretty crazy but uh
15:14
anyway they were fantastic and Bernie
15:16
got to play a lot of banjo
15:19
and uh yeah I didn't didn't see a whole
15:22
lot of Bernie for a little while after
15:24
that I think he worked at a label for a
15:26
while and did a variety of other things
15:28
then all of a sudden the the Eagles were
15:31
inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
15:33
Fame and as part of it they had all the
15:36
various members so they didn't just have
15:39
the five that were part of the Hell
15:41
Freezes Over tour they also had Randy
15:43
Meisner and Bernie leddon of course both
15:45
original members so they had all seven
15:47
Eagles that were you know all alive at
15:50
that point and they all performed
15:52
together and they did take it easy and
15:54
they did uh Hotel California which of
15:57
course Bernie was not part of but uh
16:01
yeah they did that then I while I was
16:04
living in France in 99 or so I picked up
16:06
an album it was Emmylou Harris and Linda
16:09
ronstad together and uh
16:12
and it was a beautiful you know Duets
16:14
album and
16:16
all over the record was Bernie leddon
16:19
and then when I saw footage of them
16:20
performing on television Bernie was in
16:23
the band and he was playing this black
16:25
Telly with a person's white bender and
16:28
uh
16:29
yeah beautiful stuff
16:32
then you know fast forward a number of
16:34
years I saw
16:36
I saw Bernie play at a festival up in
16:39
Canada so I was up there working and and
16:42
this was in the middle of nowhere in
16:43
Canada and Bernie showed up in his white
16:47
Suburban with Tennessee plates on it
16:49
unloaded his black face twin and his
16:52
Telly and he had a couple other things
16:54
and he and a fiddle player just you know
16:56
performed you know as a Duo and they
16:59
even did the the tune my man which was
17:01
of course his
17:02
tune that he dedicated to Graham Parsons
17:05
that was back from the Eagles era
17:08
so uh yeah didn't didn't see you know
17:11
again you know he seemed to lay somewhat
17:14
low and then lo and behold you know the
17:17
Eagles did this uh history of the Eagles
17:19
documentary
17:21
and on it
17:24
there's you know Bernie talking about
17:26
his time in the band and they of course
17:28
they talk about the whole you know
17:31
pouring the beer on the head of Glenn
17:33
Frey blah blah blah
17:35
and but you can tell that uh Bernie you
17:40
know didn't didn't feel good about it
17:43
that that he was you know apologetic
17:45
about it and so then not long after that
17:48
it was announced that Bernie was going
17:50
to be touring with the Eagles again and
17:52
uh
17:53
so that was that was really neat because
17:56
that's kind of the last thing you ever
17:57
thought was going to happen
17:59
um you know because of course he had
18:00
quit the band in 75 and uh so here it
18:04
was you know 30 plus years later how
18:07
many and uh there he is up there you
18:10
know playing the B bender and uh and the
18:13
banjo and singing harmonies and uh you
18:16
know playing all those tunes and they'd
18:17
even start off the show
18:19
with uh you know Don and Glenn and then
18:22
they'd bring Bernie out and and Bernie
18:24
would sing a tune and they would do
18:26
Peaceful Easy Feeling and and then they
18:28
do Witchy Woman and then they would kind
18:31
of strike things and then he would play
18:33
with the uh you know with the full band
18:36
with the you know of course the uh B3
18:40
and all the percussion and backup
18:42
instruments that are all part of the
18:44
Eagles
18:45
you know thing now
18:47
so yeah some loved Bernie's playing you
18:51
know through the years and he's
18:53
contributed to a lot of records that I
18:55
love and uh let's talk a little bit
18:58
about his uh his gear
19:00
so his b Bender Telly which again is on
19:04
display at the Country Music Hall of
19:05
Fame it was originally a 1966 telecaster
19:09
and so here's a picture of it
19:11
so that's of course he's got his big you
19:13
know afro and he's playing it it's of
19:16
course blonde or white with a rosewood
19:19
fretboard so the guitar gets stripped of
19:21
its finish and then Dave Evans puts a b
19:24
Bender in the guitar so this is so
19:29
Bernie ends up being you know one of the
19:32
earliest users of the
19:35
B vendor now
19:37
yes there were guys in Nashville using
19:40
you know another type of Bender back in
19:43
the early 60s that had levers right here
19:45
and it was usually installed on
19:46
something with a stop tail piece like an
19:48
es355 or 335 guys like Jerry Kennedy and
19:52
Grady Martin who were A Team guys for
19:55
sure
19:57
but you know of course you have
19:58
clearance you know the first guy with
20:00
the Telecaster where you have the
20:02
mechanism where the strap attaches to it
20:04
so and then the second one would be Bob
20:08
Warford where he and his dad actually
20:11
created one and again this was uh
20:14
outside of the body so part of the
20:17
mechanism is in the body and then part
20:19
of it's outside and then you would have
20:20
to have this shell over the top and
20:22
that's why on Clarence White's guitar
20:24
that Marty Stewart plays why it's
20:26
thicker it's because it's got a shell on
20:28
top well even
20:29
um Bob warford's Telly also has that
20:32
same kind of shell but I think his is
20:34
actually a little bit thinner well Dave
20:36
Evans was the first one to put it inside
20:38
the guitar and then have the big plate
20:40
that just covers you know kind of an
20:42
L-shaped plate or his is actually quite
20:44
a bit bigger
20:45
and many times he would put them in
20:49
Butcher Block bodies and he would just
20:50
sell these Butcher Block bodies that had
20:52
the Bender already in it and you would
20:54
put your own neck and pickups on it and
20:56
so that's what oh Albert Lee had one
21:00
like that I even had one for a while
21:02
that I had and then I I gave it to a
21:04
friend and then my friend ended up
21:07
sending it off to Dave Evans more
21:09
recently and Evans was able to start
21:11
making them again for a while
21:13
but uh with back to Bernie Bernie had
21:18
the Evans pull string because he called
21:20
it up pull string not a b Bender he had
21:22
the pull string put in his 66 tele and
21:25
so that's what you see him you know
21:27
playing early on in the Eagles and so it
21:29
has it still has the Rosewood board but
21:31
it's missing the fender logo the Finish
21:33
has been stripped and it's got a
21:35
humbucker in the neck position and then
21:36
it's got a Gibson style toggle switch
21:40
effects at this time would have been
21:42
minimal you can hear some phasing used
21:45
on things like midnight flyer and such
21:48
but not a lot of effects and amp wise
21:52
they were small most the time he was
21:54
playing a Princeton reverb on stage or a
21:57
deluxe Reverb sometimes in the in the
22:00
last era you know kind of the one of
22:03
these nights kind of tour era
22:06
you see him using a silver face vibrolux
22:10
that has kind of a western Motif Grille
22:12
on it Grill cloth
22:14
uh and that's you know and if you use
22:16
that tele you know of course he'd use
22:18
some kind of Martin acoustic and an old
22:20
Gibson mandolin and uh and a Les Paul
22:24
Deluxe for playing the more of the
22:26
rock-ish tunes and he got a a 53 tele
22:30
toward the end of his time with the
22:32
Eagles and he ended up switching the
22:35
parts on the B Bender Telly so he took
22:37
the 66 neck off and put a 53 neck on and
22:41
he took as much as we could as much as
22:43
he could off the 53 tele and stuck it on
22:46
the 66 Telecaster body that had the
22:50
Evans pull string
22:51
that guitar ended up getting damaged
22:54
later on and he ended up replacing it
22:57
with a uh a kind of Parts guitar that
23:01
was uh black with white binding and with
23:03
a rosewood fretboard neck and with a
23:06
Parsons white bender and that's the
23:08
guitar that you see him play throughout
23:09
the 90s and on the history the Eagles
23:11
tour and footage of him with Linda
23:13
Ronstadt and Emilio Harris in the late
23:15
90s and such that's that's the guitar
23:17
you see him with
23:19
um
23:20
when he went on the road or back out on
23:23
the road with the Eagles I actually
23:25
contacted one of the guitar techs with
23:28
the Eagles and they were willing to
23:30
relay to me what Bernie was using so
23:34
they even sent me a pic picture of his
23:36
pedal board so here it is all in its
23:39
Glory so he you know I love it this is
23:42
you know this is you know the Simplicity
23:44
this is all he needed so again you see a
23:46
compressor and you know CS3 compressor
23:50
you see a you know Dan Electro Daddio
23:54
you know Distortion and you see the uh
23:57
the boss dd3 delay or maybe it's a dd5
24:01
I'll have to recheck the picture and
24:04
then an old you know original run TC
24:06
chorus and you can even see it has his
24:08
name scrawled into it all on a pedal
24:11
train board
24:12
so then amp wise uh looks like he had
24:16
like an acoustic Sonic amp for acoustic
24:19
and then he had either a a brown deluxe
24:23
from the early 60s which is a course a
24:25
great amp got mid-range bark to it or a
24:29
lot of many times you would see him with
24:31
a uh a reissue Tweed twin like a 50 watt
24:34
Tweed twin and that's even what he plays
24:36
at the Grammys right after uh after
24:39
Glenn's passing and that Jackson Brown
24:41
joined them and they did take it easy so
24:45
yeah so that was kind of his his gear
24:49
and such and I just think Bernie's such
24:53
an important part of the early Eagles
24:55
sound and both you know his his vocals
25:00
his songwriting his instrumental prowess
25:03
I mean the fact that he played pedal
25:05
steel and dobro and mandolin and all
25:07
sorts of stuff and he kind of he was one
25:09
that really kind of pushed that where it
25:11
was kind of like everyone had to kind of
25:14
come to that and so that's why there was
25:16
you know when when uh you know Don
25:18
Felder when Joe Walsh joined the band
25:20
they had to they had to play keyboards
25:22
and banjo and you know pedal steel all
25:25
sorts of stuff so yeah there you have it
25:28
and so I'll have a uh a Bernie leddon uh
25:33
you know kind of uh
25:35
playlist that I'll put a
25:38
there'll be a link down in the
25:39
description all right
25:42
now it's time for our ongoing series
25:45
Zach's book time
25:47
this is book I just recently read and
25:51
and enjoyed
25:53
it's called buddy emin's steel guitar
25:54
Icon by Steve Fishel so Steve Fishel has
25:58
been a wonderful writer but I mean
26:03
what he's best known for is for playing
26:05
a pedal steel guitar and Emilio Harris's
26:07
hot band so he joined after Hank DeVito
26:09
left in the early 80s and he played that
26:12
wonderful weisenborn solo on the trio
26:14
record on those memories of you still
26:16
haunt me
26:17
yeah that uh beautiful beautiful
26:19
weisenborn intro and solo uh is uh Steve
26:23
he also produced big hit records for uh
26:27
Rodney Foster like just call me Lonesome
26:29
that was uh Steve producing that he also
26:32
produced hits for uh for Pam Tillis and
26:35
other acts and he went back out on the
26:37
road with Rodney crowl and Emmylou
26:40
Harris when they they did a tour a
26:41
couple years ago and Steve has also been
26:44
a writer and so he's done interviews
26:47
through the years and so if you have old
26:49
guitar player magazines you've probably
26:51
read some of his interviews and so some
26:54
of he interviewed Ry Cooter and Wadi
26:57
wattel and James Burton and Albert Lee
27:00
and on and on because all these guys
27:03
were his contemporaries people that he
27:05
was working with and knew from being
27:07
part of that scene and so more recently
27:10
he well in the last decade or more he
27:15
was spending time with Buddy Emmons and
27:17
buddy had written down
27:20
kind of his own Memoirs up to a point
27:22
and buddy gave them to Steve and then
27:26
Steve spent a lot of time with Buddy
27:28
before he passed and also interviewed a
27:31
ton of you know the old guard that
27:35
really knew buddy well including you
27:37
know Ray Price and Willie Nelson and on
27:39
and on
27:40
and this is a fantastic book It's a
27:43
Wonderful you know biography of of Buddy
27:46
Emmons that you know really tells his
27:50
story and it's an amazing one I don't
27:52
care whether you play or love pedal
27:54
steel or not this is a fantastic book
27:57
it's well written really gives his kind
28:02
of upbringing his musical history just
28:05
some of his the problems that he had and
28:08
how they kind of influenced his career
28:10
also just how important he was in the
28:13
development of the pedal steel guitar I
28:15
mean he really developed the modern you
28:20
know pedal setup the co-pendant or
28:23
whatever you know the those phrases that
28:26
pedal steel players use but you know if
28:29
you play a pedal steel guitar well it's
28:31
set up that way because that's what
28:33
buddy developed and he is so important
28:37
and his playing is so important so I
28:40
highly recommend buddy emin's steel
28:43
guitar Icon by Steve Fishel check it out
28:46
all right guys
28:47
I hope you've enjoyed today's episode
28:48
talking about Bernie laddin of course
28:50
talking about Buddy Emmons and we'll see
28:52
you next time bye-bye