First Instro You Learned To Play Please
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nick_allen
- Veteran RRF member
- Posts: 305
- Joined: Wed Sep 04, 2002 11:52 pm
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
Probably Wildwood Flower, then Apache...
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
It was either Misirlou or Pipeline.
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
Miserlou really opend a door but also slowed me down for a few years. I learned to play it like DD with the whole melody on the low and high E strings..my ear got used to trying to play everyting up and down the neck that way ..it became a habit I had to break.lennon211 wrote:It was either Misirlou or Pipeline.
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
Apache by The Shadows was the first true instrumental that I learned. I have played lead guitar from the age of 14 on to today. Jeez now that I am thinking about this, I just realised that I am getting to be an old fart.
Oops can I say that on this forum?

Oops can I say that on this forum?
“We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.” - Albert Einstein
"You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother" - Albert Einstein
"You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother" - Albert Einstein
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
Yep, Pipleline or Wipe Out was mine too.
Also, a Local band called Rich Clayton and the Rumbles had a pipleine sounding song that was a big Omaha hit. Forgot the name but I learned that about '62 or '63.
T
Also, a Local band called Rich Clayton and the Rumbles had a pipleine sounding song that was a big Omaha hit. Forgot the name but I learned that about '62 or '63.
T
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
They're still together!manta wrote:Yep, Pipleline or Wipe Out was mine too.
Also, a Local band called Rich Clayton and the Rumbles had a pipleine sounding song that was a big Omaha hit. Forgot the name but I learned that about '62 or '63.
T
http://www.rumbles.com/Rumbles/history.html
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
Yea, I know. Clayton was a really talented guitarist and he headed to California to find fortune and fame. Not sure what happened to him. But The Rumbles have survived like The Stones and The Who.
I recall Bud the bass guy being the last of the original members, I think. Although there may still be another one playing now.
They did a Hollies rendition of Bus Stop using a RIC bass and 360/12 that knocked your socks off back in the '60s. When I heard them play that, I started saving for a RIC.
Best,
T
I recall Bud the bass guy being the last of the original members, I think. Although there may still be another one playing now.
They did a Hollies rendition of Bus Stop using a RIC bass and 360/12 that knocked your socks off back in the '60s. When I heard them play that, I started saving for a RIC.
Best,
T
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
Thanks for that history. I see Steve's still there!
Best,
T
Best,
T
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yettoblaster
- Veteran RRF member
- Posts: 44
- Joined: Sun Aug 27, 2000 1:52 am
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
Paladin, by Duane Eddy, got me playin' guitar.
But I think I got a one string version of the melody to Sentimental Journey down long before I could actually play the Ballad of Paladin.
But I think I got a one string version of the melody to Sentimental Journey down long before I could actually play the Ballad of Paladin.
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
Wow Ballad of Paladin..I had forgotten all about that song..hmmm..that was Duane huh? Gotta check that out...yettoblaster wrote:Paladin, by Duane Eddy, got me playin' guitar.
But I think I got a one string version of the melody to Sentimental Journey down long before I could actually play the Ballad of Paladin.
So..who did the original on the TV shows w/vocals?
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yettoblaster
- Veteran RRF member
- Posts: 44
- Joined: Sun Aug 27, 2000 1:52 am
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
Dunno about that one. Maybe some studio guy with Glenn-Glenn Sound?
Duane Eddy's version was my first 45 RPM record. I was about ten years old and had a Kay electric single pickup model (with the generous 3/4 inch string clearance).
I searched out an oldies Duane Eddy CD and had forgotten there were strings and French horns and stuff on that 45! I don't even remember hearing that stuff on the record, I was so focused on the guitar sound as a kid. This was about 1960.
I loved the TV show with Richard Boone too. I also listened to Gunsmoke, and some other Westerns, on AM Radio. They were already on TV too, but some radio stations had them in syndication.
I'm a nostagic geezer sometimes.
Duane Eddy's version was my first 45 RPM record. I was about ten years old and had a Kay electric single pickup model (with the generous 3/4 inch string clearance).
I searched out an oldies Duane Eddy CD and had forgotten there were strings and French horns and stuff on that 45! I don't even remember hearing that stuff on the record, I was so focused on the guitar sound as a kid. This was about 1960.
I loved the TV show with Richard Boone too. I also listened to Gunsmoke, and some other Westerns, on AM Radio. They were already on TV too, but some radio stations had them in syndication.
I'm a nostagic geezer sometimes.
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
Wipe-Out, "Flying", from Magical Mystery Tour, Pipeline. "In Memory Of Elizabeth Reed". That's too many, but I don't remember which I learned first. OK. Rolling Stones songs don't count either, but it took me forever to learn the words. To me, many were instrumentals for a long time 
All I wanna do is rock!
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
The first instro for me was Walk Don't Run. I still love it today. It is a very simple melody. Why was it so successful on the charts?
Life, as with music, often requires one to let go of the melody and listen to the rhythm
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Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
The first instrumental I learned was either the Bert Jansch composition "Angie" or else J.D. Loudermilk's "Windy & Warm." Both were at one time must-learn tunes if you were a serious finger picker. I still play "Windy & Warm" occasionally.
JimK
JimK
Re: First Instro You Learned To Play Please
Kinda late here but what the hell........Surf Rider by The Lively Ones.
Leprosy is rare & scarce but nobody wants that!
