When someone asks "how do I play C6 sounds on the standard 10 string E9th tuning", I have to ask "which C6 sounds?" In most cases they are looking for the traditional country C6 sounds ranging from Don Helms' Hank Williams stuff to Curly Chalker's massive chords. I've decided to document in tuning charts, tab and a bit of text discussion what I've been able to figure out about this topic. A ton of C6 sounds are available on the E9th tuning. Many only require the use of the standard Emmons pedal setup and are easy to play. Some require more advanced pedals and more exotic picking grips at non-standard fret positions. In some cases it's not possible to duplicate the low bass strings that are on the C6 tuning if you only have a 10 string E9th tuned guitar. So that's a disadvantage. In other cases you can get a lot of the same chords but the voicing is clearer on E9th and they can be freely mixed with standard E9th pedal and chromatic sounds. That gets you out of sounding like a country picker all night long!
In the chart below I've listed the 7 or so major pockets and pedal combinations that I use to get C6 sounds on the E9th tuning. Many are surprised to find that half pedaling or split tuning pedal 1 not only gives full sounding diminished chords but offers a lot of the 9th chords that C6 pedals 5 and 6 can produce. The tabs listed in the table below the pocket charts vary from very basic up to a version of Ray Price's Night Life that very closely mimics the original C6 version.
If all the tuning stuff is not of interest to you, go straight to the tabs and learn a few until the grips and positions become playable by reflex. It's also helpful to sit at your guitar with the pocket charts and strum through the listed notes at all the positions in one key to familiarize yourself with the basic concepts. Once you get into this you will also find neat uses for pedal 3 to get a full sounding maj7 chord just like the one on C6 strings 9,7,6, and 4. Lowering the 9th E9th string give you a nice minor7 chord just like the one on C6 strings 8,6,5 and 3.
For reference I've included the copedant for my personal pedal steel guitar. It's not perfect and I've left out some useful changes in favor of other changes that suit my style of playing. It's not necessary to have all the pedals and knee levers that I do. But having them available leaves room for experimentation and makes practice time more interesting! If you don't have the B to Bb knee lever on E9th, or if you don't have split tuning on your guitar, just press
pedal half way to get a C note on strings 5 and 10.
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Click here for pocket chart in pdf format
Description | Tab | Hear It! |
Collection Of Full Sounding Riffs | Tab | Hear It! |
Single String Riff With New Pocket Of Notes at Fret 5 - Key Of G | Tab | Hear It! |
Diminished chord using split tuning on string 5 | Tab | Hear It! |
Diminished chord using split tuning on string 5 | Tab | Hear It! |
Some more C6th Sounds on E9th! | Tab | Hear It! |
Easy C6th sound on E9th | Tab | Hear It! |
Maj7 - Min 7 progression using either 3 or 4 string grips | Tab | Hear It! |
C6 Sounds On E9 Using A Variety Of Techniques | Tab | Hear It! |
1st String Whole Tone Raise - More Possibilities | No Tab | Hear It! |
Nice chord sequence | Tab | Hear It! |
A Few More C6 Sounds On E9th | Tab | Hear It! |
More simple chord sequences | Tab | Hear It! |
Maj7 + 13b9 sounds | Tab | Hear It! |
Non-pedal sound, swing style | Tab | Hear It! |
Open string vamps | Tab | Hear It! |
Common C6 vamp (second part of audio file) | Tab | Hear It! |
Nice Little Swing Ride | Tab | Hear It! |
Minor7th grips | Tab | Hear It! |
Key Of G - More C6 Sounds | Tab | Hear It! |
Split tuning diminished longer snippet | Tab | Hear It! |
Some Pete Drake Sounds (2nd half of tab and audio, 2nd tab is E9th despite mis-labeled strings) | Tab | Hear It! |
Some Hawaiian Sounds! | Tab | Hear It! |
More C6 Sounds On E9th Using 1/2 Press On Pedal A | Tab | Hear It! |
C6 pedal 5 + 7 sounds | Tab | Hear It! |
Parts of this show E9th F# to G# raise emulating C6 pedal 4 | Tab | Hear It! |
1st string full tone raise | Tab | Hear It! |
3 nice chords - Maj7 position | Tab | Hear It! |
A Little Swing Thing | Tab | Hear It! |
More Jazz - Key of C | Tab | Hear It! |
Jazzy Ending! - Key of C | Tab | Hear It! |
Jazzy Tri-Tone Sounds On E9th - Theory Link | Tab | Hear It! |
C6 Pedal 4 like dissonant sound at the beginning of this tab | Tab | Hear It! |
More C6 Pedal 4 like dissonant sound | Tab | Hear It! |
Texas Playboy Rag - simple version with C6 type sounds | Tab | Hear It! |
Panhandle Rag - simple version with C6 type sounds | Tab | Hear It! |
Jazzy ending with open drone | Tab | Hear It! |
Open string ending | Tab | Hear It! |
Using the E9th 1st String Whole Tone Raise For Hank Thompson Style Ending | No Tab | Hear It! |
Using the E9th 1st String Whole Tone Raise | Tab | Hear It! |
Emulating the pedal 7 + Bb knee lever for the 7b13 sound | No Tab | Hear It! |
Far Out There! | No Tab | Hear It! |
Night Life - E9th | Tab | Hear It! |
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