Someone told me a long time ago that when Jimmy Day created his first pedal guitar, he got A and C pedals mixed up.He evidently had no written instructions on how to rod and set-up his "new" guitar. These terms generally don't say much about the knee lever arrangement, but Buddy Emmons' LKL and LKR are very common among people who play the "Emmons setup". "Day Setup" is the reverse, sort of a left-handed version. "Emmons Setup" refers to the more common arrangement of the 3 standard E9th pedals. From that day to this, players have referred to the tunings as the "Emmons" or "Day" setup.) For some reason Jimmy did it just the opposite than Buddy. Buddy Emmons "split" this one pedal into 2 pedals. (little history: when Bud Isaacs set the world on fire with his one pedal changing an E tuning to an A tuning (E, B and G# became E C# and A with one pedal). However most of what you see in this link Buddy has had for a very long time.Īlso, the term Emmons "setup" versus the Jimmy Day "setup" has to do with the A and C pedals (and possibly LKL and LKR). This topic was originally posted in this forum: Pedal SteelĬan someone tell me exactly what Emmons Setup means? Thanks.īut remember, Buddy often changes his setup). Profile | join | preferences | help | search Classic country shuffle styles for Band-in-a-Box, by BIAB guru Jim Baron.
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