So good! You don’t miss a note that Lindley oroginally played. Thanks for the faithful and meticulous recreation of not only the solo but lap steel fills behind the entire song. Beautifully done. Have you tackled “Walking Slow” from the same album? It’s still my all time favorite lap steel solo.
New Year's Day 2024 and wow! Just wow. Thankyou whoever fixed the algorithm, that's the 2nd video with way to few of a view count I've watched this morn
OMG - you totally nailed this, with every nuance and tone intact. It's like listening to the recording but with Jackson Browne's annoying vocals filtered out (Jackson, if you're reading this, that was a joke :). I bought a cheapo Rogue expressly to try learning this, and you have now made it seem possible :) I have been fascinated for years by Lindley's sublime performance on this track, particularly his outro solo. Every once in a while, you come across a performance that opens a window into a musician's soul, and this is one of them. Thanks very much for the recording, and I would also be very appreciative of a tab if you have time to put one together.
Thanks for your kind comment. The Certano benders offer more resistance than the Duesenberg ones. They are harder for bending but much better for “resting” your palm.
@adamdemasi156 They both played on that album, but on These Days I thought it was David Lindley on a Lap Steel, and not Sneaky Pete on a Pedal steel. I certainly couldn't say for sure.
You had me digging here, but a post on Facebook from Jackson Browne when David passed away, talks about David playing with him in 1969 playing These Days with a Lap Steel, this was long before the album For Everyman was released. facebook.com/jacksonbrowne/posts/david-lindley-the-guitarist-lap-steel-and-fiddle-player-who-gave-his-personality/766324154853318/
@@alejandrosanchez-samper9950saw Lindley perform for 90 minutes at a dinner club in Huntington Beach, CA until I had to leave. Solo, and I don't remember hearing one cover tune either! He had a plethora of lap steels on stage with him and they were all made of wood. Fantastic experience and performance!
Hi Mark! It’s a Gold Tone LS-6. I added the Certano benders and bridge. I bought it on FB marketplace and the guy who has it before me ended up adding a Seymour Duncan humbucker. I ended up doing a coil tap to it. Single coils and lap steels are the thing. I always play the single coil. I’m sure the stock pick up on it is good as well. As for the amp, Peavey Nashville 112.
I've performed this song hundreds of times and always wished I had someone to play the slide as perfectly as this. Please tell me what guitar you're playing here? thank you.
I believe the pickup on it is a JB jr from Seymour Duncan. It was installed on it when I bought it. I did a coil split on it because I couldn’t get the single coil sound I wanted from this instrument. I chased the tone for ages from the instrument, only to realize that the amp is more important to the tone than the pickup itself. I got a great deal on a Peavey Nashville 112 and couldn’t be happier with the tone I’m getting from all my lap steels now! I think the amp is the ticket!
Open D. Capo on three. But you could do open E as you mentioned. I’d have to change the gauge of strings to do E. I imagine Lindley tuned a half step up to F for this song.
So beautiful!!! Thank you.
@@lrblouie you’re welcome! New videos coming soon.
I can’t believe how good this is…
I never comment on anything…
Really beautiful Aaron😎
this just made my day
Thanks for your comment. Made my day too!
Flawless and magnificant!
Amazingly clean with impeccable legato and truly heart felt expression!
so beautiful - played with such tenderness and soul. Thank you for sharing your great gift with us.
Thank you! Much appreciated. New videos coming soon
WOW... fantastic
Simply wonderful. 👏👏👏
Good stuff dad! Made me tear up honestly
Thank you son! Your words encourage me to keep doing this. Love you!
Me too
Just beautiful. Thanks for posting
So glad I found your channel!
Beautiful, thanks for sharing!
Beautiful!!
So good! You don’t miss a note that Lindley oroginally played. Thanks for the faithful and meticulous recreation of not only the solo but lap steel fills behind the entire song. Beautifully done. Have you tackled “Walking Slow” from the same album? It’s still my all time favorite lap steel solo.
Thank you for your comments! I will add “Walking Slow” to my to do list. Thanks for watching.
New Year's Day 2024 and wow! Just wow. Thankyou whoever fixed the algorithm, that's the 2nd video with way to few of a view count I've watched this morn
Thanks for watching! More coming soon!
Beautiful👍👍👍
Great job. Cheers.
OMG - you totally nailed this, with every nuance and tone intact. It's like listening to the recording but with Jackson Browne's annoying vocals filtered out (Jackson, if you're reading this, that was a joke :). I bought a cheapo Rogue expressly to try learning this, and you have now made it seem possible :) I have been fascinated for years by Lindley's sublime performance on this track, particularly his outro solo. Every once in a while, you come across a performance that opens a window into a musician's soul, and this is one of them. Thanks very much for the recording, and I would also be very appreciative of a tab if you have time to put one together.
I'm glad you liked it! When I have some down time I'll work on the tab!
100%...you're a genius...
Well done and nicely played!
Nicely done Sir! Mr. Dave would approve.
Sounding great Aaron !
This is the juice my friend. Obrigado
Dido on the algorithm! A I love the lap steel, B I love this song - hoping Blue Grass keeps its come back going!!! Go Chris Stapleton go!
Beautiful, thank you!
With pleasure! Thanks for your comment.
LOVE it.
That was great Man
You nailed it.
Briliant! Thank you!
You're welcome!
Really good. I'm glad you used this camera angle, because I've always wondered if the benders get in the way when you're playing "straight" lap steel.
Thanks for your kind comment. The Certano benders offer more resistance than the Duesenberg ones. They are harder for bending but much better for “resting” your palm.
Thanks what a great Video!
Glad you enjoyed it! Tell me more about your amps! I’ve been looking for a vibroluxe for some time but I’m curious about your builds
Bravo 👏
Very well done, and David Lindley is a tough act to follow!
Wasn't it Sneaky Pete Kleinow?
@adamdemasi156 They both played on that album, but on These Days I thought it was David Lindley on a Lap Steel, and not Sneaky Pete on a Pedal steel. I certainly couldn't say for sure.
You had me digging here, but a post on Facebook from Jackson Browne when David passed away, talks about David playing with him in 1969 playing These Days with a Lap Steel, this was long before the album For Everyman was released. facebook.com/jacksonbrowne/posts/david-lindley-the-guitarist-lap-steel-and-fiddle-player-who-gave-his-personality/766324154853318/
WoW! Great! What tuning do you use?
Gorgeous man, would love a tab for this to learn on my steel
I’d love to, but not enough hours in the day to sit down and tab this out. I may do a step-by-step how to video soon.
@@aarondaulmusic totally get it! That would be awesome
That is a great performance of Lindley's lap steel part of the song. I may have missed this question below. What lap steel are you playing?
Gold tone Lap steel. LS-6. Thanks for watching!
What would it take to get you to do a tab sheet and a tutorial video? It is hard to find any tab for Lindley's work
I’m working on it! Any other Lindley tunes you are interested? Please let me know.
@@alejandrosanchez-samper9950 the way you play, I would be happy to hear it all.
@@alejandrosanchez-samper9950saw Lindley perform for 90 minutes at a dinner club in Huntington Beach, CA until I had to leave. Solo, and I don't remember hearing one cover tune either! He had a plethora of lap steels on stage with him and they were all made of wood. Fantastic experience and performance!
May I ask what instrument that is? (brand/model) So beautiful
Nice
Subscribed because of this video. Great playing, great tone! Is that the Certano Bender?
Yes. Certain benders on a Goldtone LS-6. More videos coming soon.
That sounds so beautiful. What brand is your Lap Steel? I love it.
Thanks! It’s a Gold Tone lap steel.
Great! Is this an actual lapsteel?
Where does one get a capo for lapsteel? I need one bad.
Love it ❤ conversion or did this come manufactured as a lap steel?
It’s a Gold tone lap steel. I modified by adding the palm benders.
Beautiful performance. Is the lap steel tuned to open E major? Many thanks.
You can either tune it to open E or Open D. I tuned it to open d with a capo on the third fret. The tune is in the key of F.
Anybody know what tuning hes using? Tab available? thx
D tuning. Capoed at the third fret so essentially it’s open F
what lap steel is that i see the certano bender on it but steel is it and amp your playing through wow good job love it
Hi Mark! It’s a Gold Tone LS-6. I added the Certano benders and bridge. I bought it on FB marketplace and the guy who has it before me ended up adding a Seymour Duncan humbucker. I ended up doing a coil tap to it. Single coils and lap steels are the thing. I always play the single coil. I’m sure the stock pick up on it is good as well. As for the amp, Peavey Nashville 112.
What tuning are you using please? And what palm bender is installed? Sounds great! Also looks like you have it capoed at 2nd fret position?
I’m using open D capped at the third fret since the song is in the key of F. As for the benders, they are Certano benders. Thanks for watching!
Quelle est la marque de ce lap steel?
I've performed this song hundreds of times and always wished I had someone to play the slide as perfectly as this. Please tell me what guitar you're playing here? thank you.
Gold tone LS-6
That is so beautiful, may I ask what pickup you have in your gold tone?
Seymour Duncan Lil 59. However, I put a coil split on it for single coil sound. Thanks for watching!
Thank you, it sounds amazing.
@@johnlogan7271 thanks! Much appreciated.
Specs on lap steel? Pondering a build of my own and I like what I see and hear on yours. Thx!
I believe the pickup on it is a JB jr from Seymour Duncan. It was installed on it when I bought it. I did a coil split on it because I couldn’t get the single coil sound I wanted from this instrument. I chased the tone for ages from the instrument, only to realize that the amp is more important to the tone than the pickup itself. I got a great deal on a Peavey Nashville 112 and couldn’t be happier with the tone I’m getting from all my lap steels now! I think the amp is the ticket!
Very nice. Open E with capo on one?
Open D. Capo on three. But you could do open E as you mentioned. I’d have to change the gauge of strings to do E. I imagine Lindley tuned a half step up to F for this song.
Hard to believe he wrote this at age 16
What model guitar is that??
It’s a Gold tone lap steel.
😢вот это и есть музыка
Tunings please!
D tuning capoed at the third fret for F tuning.
Top metci
Beautiful!!