- Pete Drake
Pete Drake (
8 October 1932 –29 July 1988 ), born Roddis Franklin Drake, was a major Nashville,Tennessee -basedrecord producer andpedal steel guitar player. [ [http://www.augusta.com/leaders/slideshow_national/slide41.html Pete Drake Bio] @ Augusta.com]One of the most sought-after backup
musician s of the 1960s, Drake played on such hits asLynn Anderson 's "Rose Garden ",Charlie Rich 's "Behind Closed Doors"'Bob Dylan 's "Lay Lady Lay "' andTammy Wynette 's "Stand by Your Man ". (Drake's work on this last tune is debatable, in that some sources claimSonny Curtis to be the steel guitar player on that record.)Drake was born in Augusta, Georgia, the son of a
Pentecostal preacher , in 1932. In 1950, he drove to Nashville, heard Jerry Byrd on theGrand Ole Opry , and was inspired to buy a steel guitar. He organized a band, Sons of the South, in Atlanta in the 1950s, which included future country stars likeJerry Reed ,Doug Kershaw ,Roger Miller ,Jack Greene , andJoe South .In 1959 he moved to Nashville and went on the road as a backup musician for
Don Gibson ,Marty Robbins and others. In 1964 he had an international hit onSmash Records with his "talking steel guitar" playing on the album "Forever". His innovative use of what would be called the "talk box ", later used byPeter Frampton ,Joe Walsh andJeff Beck , added novel effects to the pedal steel guitar. The album "Pete Drake and His Talking Steel Guitar", harkened back to the sounds ofAlvino Rey and his wife Luise King, who first modulated a guitar tone with the signal from a throat microphone in 1939. The unique sound of the talk box with a steel guitar was new in the 1960s, and it made the sounds of vocalizing along with the strings of the steel guitar. According to an interview of Drake:Green, Douglas. [http://www.calsharp.com/music/Pete.html "Pete Drake: everyone's favorite"] - Steel Guitar Stories @ Calsharp.com]::"You play the notes on the guitar and it goes through the amplifier. I have a driver system so that you disconnect the speakers and the sound goes through the driver into a plastic tube. You put the tube in the side of your mouth then form the words with your mouth as you play them. You don't actually say a word: The guitar is your vocal cords, and your mouth is the amplifier. It's amplified by a microphone."
The equipment was only loud enough to be useful in the studio for recordings. [ [http://recforums.prosoundweb.com/index.php/m/347458/23481/0///0/#msg_347458 ProSoundWeb. Forum: Recording Engineering & Production. Thread: "JUNE is "Ask Bob Heil" Month!" Message: 347458. Bob Heil responds about the origin of the Talk Box. Posted June 6, 2008] ]
Drake played on Bob Dylan's three Nashville-recorded
album s, including "Nashville Skyline ", and onJoan Baez 's "David's Album ". He also worked withGeorge Harrison on "All Things Must Pass ", and withRingo Starr on "Beaucoups of Blues " in 1970. [Review: Shultz, Gary. [http://web2.iadfw.net/gshultz/beaucouprevu.html Beaucoups Of Blues] - June 9, 1999]Drake produced albums for many other musicians, and founded Stop Records and First Generation Records. He was inducted into the
Country Music Hall of Fame 's Walkway of Stars in 1970 and the Steel Guitar Hall of Fame in 1987. He died in Nashville in 1988.References
External links
* [http://recordrobot.blogspot.com/2006/06/it-shore-aint-no-vocoder.html Pete Drake - It Shore Ain't No Vocoder - Pete Drake on Record Robot]
* Davies, Phil. [http://www.rockabilly.nl/references/messages/pete_drake.htm Pete Drake]
* [http://www.countryrecords.com/aboutus.html First Generation Records] @ CountryRecords.com
* [http://wm07.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:39fexqy5ldhe~T1 Pete Drake Biography] by Craig Harris @Allmusic
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