Slide

Re: Slide

If I was to dedicate a guitar to playing slide I would just buy one of those fretless bolt on necks from Guitarfetish.
 
Re: Slide

i dont have a dedicated slide guitar or anything like that. all my guitars are setup fairly similar. ill usually play one guitar all night long and switch back and forth between fretted and slide frequently. when learning its nice to jack up the action and use extra heavy strings but once you get the feel of it you can get around on most guitars even if the strings are thinner and the action isnt super low
 
Re: Slide

I definitely don't play slide. But for some reason, Seymour thought I did and he gave me a few very special slides. One was a glass Sonny Landreth signature model that Sonny gave Seymour. But the other two were amazingly special. One was John Lee Hooker's old medicine bottle (it seemed bigger than a Coricidin bottle). And the other was Jeff Beck's metal slide that he used at the ARMS concert, where Seymour teched for Jeff.

I have a good buddy in Chicago who's a slide player and I gave him the John Lee Hooker slide for his 50th birthday. He teaches slide at the Old Town School of Folk and lets his students try it out too. I still have the JB and SL slides.
 
Re: Slide

I love playing slide, but I'm not very good at electric slide in standard tuning. It's just not something I do very often, and I refuse to set up one of my electric guitars with action high enough to make it feasible.

Now, open-tuning bottleneck slide on a resonator? All day, baby. I'm waiting for the weather to break because I like to give my neighbors the blues while I grill.
 
Re: Slide

I play some slide with a brass and ceramic slide. I don't practice enough and limited to two tunings, Open D and Open E. I have built a couple of guitars around the idea of playing slide and they sound great.
Brass on a guitar sounds exquisite.
 
Re: Slide

I definitely don't play slide. But for some reason, Seymour thought I did and he gave me a few very special slides. One was a glass Sonny Landreth signature model that Sonny gave Seymour. But the other two were amazingly special. One was John Lee Hooker's old medicine bottle (it seemed bigger than a Coricidin bottle). And the other was Jeff Beck's metal slide that he used at the ARMS concert, where Seymour teched for Jeff.

I have a good buddy in Chicago who's a slide player and I gave him the John Lee Hooker slide for his 50th birthday. He teaches slide at the Old Town School of Folk and lets his students try it out too. I still have the JB and SL slides.

Oh man that is cool. Must've been a great friend to get one of Hook's slides!!!

I have one of Mick Mars slides, can't even fit it on my pinky, he must be one tiny dude?
 
Re: Slide

Slide is something that I love to hear, but can't get the technique down - think its something to do with my picking technique/aggressiveness as it always sounds buzzy irrespective of action
 
Re: Slide

I come and go with slide. I've never spent enough time to get really good at it. But I'm decent enough to not embarrass myself. I'm getting more into steel guitar lately, so the 6 string slide may get put on a back burner for a while.
 
Re: Slide

I have an epiphone Led Paul that sounds great, but has terribly worn out frets and the dreaded hump at the neck joint. I've been trying to decide for years how to justify getting it planed and refretted, so maybe this will be the slide guitar.
 
Re: Slide

Do you have any other slides? I'd love to hear how those contrast to a bottle or Pyrex.

I do have a very small glass slide (doesn't fit on a finger, it came with something that I bought on eBay once) that actually sounds better than the Brass and Stainless, and I prefer the Brass over the Stainless.

The thing I like about the Jet Slides is that you can quickly alternate between slide and regular playing without losing a finger for chording :)

The Glass is the most "organic" and raunchy sounding of the slides, the Brass is also raunchy. But the Stainless actually is amazing with an eBow
 
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Slide

I started playing slide for real a few years ago now and while I'm not the slide player I want to be I'm getting there and it's become a big part of my playing.

I suggest trying to get a set that works well for both with a slide and finger style. That might not be possible for but if it is you'll save yourself a lot of work in the long run.

I use 10s and don't really use a high action...it's not now and has never been super low but I didn't go higher for slide....it's about developing a light touch.

I play mostly in open tunings but do play some in standard.

I have a huge collection of slides but favor glass wine bottle necks most of the time and like Pyrex slides the least and my slide finger of choice is my middle finger...it just works best for me.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Re: Slide

I used to use a '67 SG Standard I had back in the day. We did all the Allman Bros stuff in a band I was in. I haven't played slide in years tho.
 
Re: Slide

It's always been a big part of my playing for over 20 years. In some of my bands, there was quite a bit of slide in the style of Haynes on electric and open tunings with a resonator or acoustic. Watching instructional videos helped quite a bit, because if I see it done well, I can perfect my technique and add a lot more original sounding licks. It's easy to fall into the typical patterns because there's only so much you can do in any given tuning.

In the late 90's, I opened for Eric Sardinas quite a bit, and there's no way to outshine him on slide, but it made me realize how being spot on is more important than your vocabulary of licks. But I definitely stole a lot of licks from him! ;)

I realized that I prefer to have a closed end glass or ceramic slide that fits comfortably over my entire pinky. Doing it that way keeps my ring finger available to fret chords. I never cared for having the slide halfway over a finger. Once I started playing slide live, I ran into the problem of what to do with the slide when it's not in use, so my drummer gave me some old drum hardware he wasn't using, and I made a "metal finger" that attaches to a mic stand.
Remembering to remove the slide holder after a show was something I had to get used to.
 
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Re: Slide

Wow, you opened for Eric Sardinas? That's cool as hell.

I've used bottles before, and still want to get one, but I'd like to get one with a vent hole so my finger doesn't get all clammy.
 
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