Nashville Studio Guitarist Legend Ray Edenton Now Online

Legendary Nashville Guitarist Ray Edenton

Legendary Nashville Guitarist Ray Edenton

Nashville studio guitarist Ray Edenton is a legend of the rhythm guitar. His guitar was an important ingredient of the so called classic “Nashville Sound”.

He created this timeless sound together with among others guitarist Harold Bradley, drummer Buddy Harman, and bass player Bob Moore.

Ray Edenton’s playing gave a defining edge to immortal songs like Crazy (Patsy Cline), Some Day’s Are Diamonds (John Denver), Till I Get It Right (Tammy Wynette), Chug a Lug (Roger Miller) or Wake Up Little Susie (Everly Brothers).

Now the Ray Edenton Website is online. It includes a short biography and there’s a wonderful collection of songs.

See also: Ray Edenton And The Secret Of His Nashville Guitar Tuning

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Music Legends Attend “Nashville Film Festival”

studio musicians at work in Los Angeles

The music documentary The Wrecking Crew featuring the great studio musicians from Los Angeles who recorded countless hits in the nineteen-sixties comes to Nashville on Thursday, April 24th.

It will be shown at 7:00 PM as part of the Nashville Film Festival at Green Hills Cinema. Some of the legendary studio musicians will be present at the screening.

Besides the officially confirmed attendance of piano player Don Randi and bass/ukulele player Lyle Ritz it is rumored that guitar and producer/arranger legend Billy Strange (“These Boots Are Made For Walkin'”) will be present together with his wife Jeanne Black who was a singer in the nineteen-fifties and sixties (“He’ll Have To Stay”).

At 09:00 pm there will be a closing night celebration at the Cannery Ballroom with live music played by some of the musicians who are featured in the documentary.

More about studio musicians:

Drummer Buddy Harman: Shaping The ‘Nashville Sound’

Drummer Buddy Harman

Roy Orbison’s “Pretty Woman” has a simple, but great opening: a pounding snare on every downbeat, and the hi-hat on the eights. It takes a genius to keep it simple and make it sound distinctively at the same time.

The genius in this case is Buddy Harman, a Nashville studio drummer who was essential in shaping the classic and sophisticated “Nashville Sound” in the late nineteen-fifties and early nineteen-sixties.

You’re not sure, if you ever heard him play? Don’t worry, you heard him countless times. He played on many classic country and pop hit records such as Crazy (Patsy Cline), Bye Bye Love (Everly Brothers), Ring of Fire (Johnny Cash), Stand By Your Man (Tammy Wynette) or Viva Las Vegas (Elvis Presley). According to Drummerworld he played on 18,000 recording sessions in the last 40 years.

Listen to “The Drum History Minute”, a short but very informative introduction to Buddy Harman’s style of drumming narrated by drummer Daniel Glass:

This little piece of audio is a real ear opener and you will treasure the fine and discreet drumming of Buddy Harman even more next time you hear him playing.

Update Article from New York Times (August 22, 2008): Buddy Harman, 79, Busy Nashville Drummer, Is Dead

Ray Edenton And The Secret Of His Nashville Guitar Tuning

Ray EdentonYou may have never heard the name Ray Edenton, but you surely heard his rhythm guitar on the Everly Brothers songs “Bye Bye Love” and “Wake Up Little Suzie”. Top Nashville studio guitarist Ray Edenton recorded with Eddy Arnold, Johnny Cash, Little Jimmy Dickens, Pats Cline, Sammy Davis Jr., Elvis Presley, Neil Young, Brenda Lee, Loretta Lynn, Roger Miller, Charley Pride, Bob Wills and many more.

Last year I had the pleasure to hear Edenton talk about his career. He was interviewed at the “Country Music Hall Of Fame” in Nashville as part of the Nashville Cats series. This series honors country musicians who played a crucial role in the past. He told many interesting stories from his life as a top Nashville studio musician. What I found noteworthy – besides his incredible amount of work in the Nashville studios from 1953 until 1991 – was the “high third” and “high string” tunings that he often used. These tunings are simple but they sound very good, especially in combination with other guitars. Let’s have a look at these tunings.

“High third” tuning: only the third string (G) is tuned one octave higher. The other strings remain in standard tuning.

“High string” tuning: only the first and second strings (E and B) remain in standard tuning. Strings three to six (G, D, A, E) are tuned one octave higher.

Further information about Ray Edenton