It had only been about a year since Shawn Tamborini had started playing pedal steel guitar when he made the decision to record his forthcoming EP, To Eat.
It had only been about a year since Shawn Tamborini had started playing pedal steel guitar when he made the decision to record his forthcoming EP, To Eat.

It had only been about a year since Shawn Tamborini started playing pedal steel guitar when he made the decision to record his forthcoming EP, To Eat. After receiving his masterโ€™s in jazz and improvisational music, the composer and guitarist had grown bored.

โ€œI didnโ€™t really feel like the guitar was able to do specific things that I wanted it to do,โ€ Tamborini said. โ€œAnd I was hearing those sounds from the pedal steel. Or I could at least hear that those sounds could be made.โ€

He was particularly drawn to the pedal steel for its ability to create sounds characteristic of the human voice, like sliding notes and vibrato.

โ€œIโ€™d actually been critiqued when I was a guitar player by a teacher,โ€ Tamborini recalled. โ€œHe said, โ€™You use vibrato all the time. Stop using so much vibrato.โ€™ But I just love the sound of it. I love the sound of that. Thatโ€™s something I can gravitate towards with pedal steel, for sure, because thatโ€™s something pedal steel players use a lot of.โ€

The pedal steel also plays well with Tamboriniโ€™s musical interests. Despite the fact that itโ€™s most commonly associated with country music, and Tamborini is himself known for playing one in the local country band Jake Houston & the Royal Flush, he sees potential to apply the pedal steel to other genres.

โ€œI went to school for jazz, and I love improvisational music, and I love Black American music, whether itโ€™s R&B or hip-hop or jazz,โ€ he said. โ€œI really like a lot of gospel music. โ€ฆ A lot of that is really vocal oriented, with that kind of underlying groove beat. I think thatโ€™s kind of something I gravitated towards with my sound with the pedal steel.โ€

The EP, which features Dave Strawn on bass and Justin Tatum on drums, reflects Tamboriniโ€™s eclectic tasteโ€”managing to dance across genre conventions in the span of its four tracks.

โ€œWith this EP, I wanted to get something out, really,โ€ he said. โ€œIt was just a dire need to really put something out there. The compositions I chose are ones that I really like. I feel like you might hear some rock-based stuff in there, maybe a little bit of punk, maybe a little metal, maybe R&B, maybe jazz. Itโ€™s all, I guess, just trying to be honest about what I really like and what I wanted to put down with the money I had and with the time I had.โ€

Tamborini actually wrote three of the four songs on his EP for the guitar and had to relearn them on pedal steel. The fourth, a song called โ€œTha Shadough,โ€ was written for the instrument. It has a sexy, liquid soundโ€”sliding back and forth between long, slow notes and bouncier ones. But these wonโ€™t be the only songs played during the upcoming EP release. Tamborini intends to use the show to debut the results of some additional experimentation heโ€™s done with the pedal steel.

โ€œFor our EP release โ€ฆ weโ€™re going to do an opera song and then like a โ€™90s R&B/hip-hop thing,โ€ Tamborini said. โ€œAnd Iโ€™ve been getting a little bit into classical music with pedal steelโ€”learning a couple of Beethoven pieces and Debussy, because it really has such a different sound.โ€

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