Special tricks for getting the country like slide tone..?

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drpfeffer

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Hi i'm recording a song, that has a kind of laid back dirty country style to it, and I was wondering if any of you guys had some special tricks for getting an authentic electric country sound.. both for rhythm guitars and slide..

I'm working with a telecaster, marshall jcm900('cos thats what I have) on the clean channel, a little bit cranked, to get that dirty tone. In the mix phase I have applyed a lot of compression, fast attack, slow release, some short delay and a little bit of room..

I'm still not completely satisfied with the tone, so come on guys.. what's your tricks on recording country guitars..?
 
Buy an inexpensive Lap steel guitar....

Musicians friend has them for under $100.00.

Real steel just sounds better!

Dom :D
 
Hi Dom..


Yeah, I'd like to just walk into the nearest MF and get a lap steel for 60$, the only problem is that I live in denmark, and we don't have MF here..

Cheapest real lap-steel guitar on my side of the world is 450$, and i'm not prepared to pay that amount for making one tune with a country sound to it..

But anyway, thanks for the reply..

I'm looking for effects on the guitar sound, I have access to both pedals and plugins of almost every type, what should I try..?
 
drpfeffer said:
Hi Dom..


Yeah, I'd like to just walk into the nearest MF and get a lap steel for 60$, the only problem is that I live in denmark, and we don't have MF here..

Cheapest real lap-steel guitar on my side of the world is 450$, and i'm not prepared to pay that amount for making one tune with a country sound to it..

But anyway, thanks for the reply..

I'm looking for effects on the guitar sound, I have access to both pedals and plugins of almost every type, what should I try..?


Walk? Don't they deliver? I can't belive there isn't a UK mail order service that delivers to Denmark....but maybe I am wrong....
 
drpfeffer said:
Hi Dom..


Yeah, I'd like to just walk into the nearest MF and get a lap steel for 60$, the only problem is that I live in denmark, and we don't have MF here..

Cheapest real lap-steel guitar on my side of the world is 450$, and i'm not prepared to pay that amount for making one tune with a country sound to it..

But anyway, thanks for the reply..

I'm looking for effects on the guitar sound, I have access to both pedals and plugins of almost every type, what should I try..?

A lot of that sort of thing is done with pedal steel, which changes the tuning intervals on the fly. If that's the sound you are looking for, then a lap steel won't help you, anyway.
 
short of a pedal/lap steel i dont think you can really capture that authentic country sound any better than you probably already are. i try to get a twangy reverb sound as best i can, but it never sounds like a pedal steel.

as far as electric guitar slide work, check out some king sunny ade. although its not country, you might get some ideas.
 
I used a 6 string with a slide and a digitech RP-20, that had a steel guitar preset. The preset used a gate with extreme setting, to replicate a volume petal and a whammy petal, to raise and lower a second. Used in conjunction with the slide and some delay and verb, it worked quite well.
 
If you can't find a lap steel you might try adding an extension nut:

http://www.stewmac.com/shop/Nuts,_saddles/Resonator_nuts,_saddles/Slide_Guitar_Extension_Nut.html

It's small so I assume shipping would not be a problem. The nut will elevate your strings and allow you to place more downward pressure using a slide.
I would also think about using a volume pedal and reverb.

If you don't like doing things the old fashioned way, you could try the following:

http://www.sonymediasoftware.com/shopping/item.asp?PID=229&disp=1
 
Set your amp to it's cleanest tone, trim the bass just a little more, crank the reverb about half way. Plug your slide into a volume pedal then to the amp, set the guitar volume a little above half. With a little practice this way you can get a slide guitar to "almost" sound like a pedal steel. Layer a guitar track in with the slide to get the "off set" notes. That's about as cloce as you can get without a real pedal steel. It's the volume pedal and the variable pitch applied to certain individual notes which gives pedal steel it's unique sound. You might try tuning your slide to a standard pedal steel tuning starting with the lowest as follows; C#, F#, B, E, G#, C# (E9 chord I think). I've played with several pedal steel players who use this tuning.
 
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