Robert Lee "Bob" Dunn (February 5, 1908 – May 27, 1971) was an American pioneer Western swing steel guitarist.
Bob Dunn's style was virtually unique among the steel guitarists of his time. He was an admirer of the trombonist Jack Teagarden and took a similar approach to his soloing, using a horn-like phrasing far away from the Hawaiian style of the day. He always tried to treat the steel guitar as a jazz instrument, or what he termed a "modern instrument".
Whilst at Fort Worth he met Milton Brown, who invited him to a studio jam. Dunn made a great impression on Brown and immediately became a member of Milton Brown and His Musical Brownies. Dunn, with his homemade pickup and became the first to use an electric guitar to record a country-rooted song, entitled "Taking Off." Dunn fell in love with western swing music. His amplified steel guitar was featured on several recordings. He played and recorded more than ninety tunes with the Brownies before Brown's death in 1936.
He left the band following the death of Milton Brown in 1936 and played with many different groups, including Moon Mullican, Roy Newman and His Boys (1937), Cliff Bruner's Texas Wanderers, Bill Mounce and the Sons of the South, and Buddy Jones and the Sheldon Brothers (1939).
He made some recordings on Decca under the name Bob Dunn's Vagabonds (actually Cliff Bruner's Texas Wanderers). When the Vagabonds broke up, Dunn played in a variety of different western swing bands, including Bill Boyd’s Cowboy Ramblers, Dickie McBride’s Village Boys, Bill Mounce’s Sons of the South, and the Sons of Dixie.
Bob Dunn' with Benny Leader's Band 1948 |
After serving in the United States Navy during World War II, he played in a number of bands in the late 1940s. In 1950 he retired from performing and opened his own music store in Houston, where he also taught music. He operated the store for more than twenty years, until his death from lung cancer on May 27, 1971. Dunn influenced generations of steel guitar players. In 1992 he was inducted into the Steel Guitar Hall of Fame and the Texas Western Swing Hall of Fame. In late 2010 the Origin Jazz Library label released a comprehensive 2-CD set of remastered recordings of Dunn's work, titled Bob Dunn: Master of the Electric Steel Guitar 1935-1950.
(Edited mainly from The Handbook Of Texas &, Brad’s Page Of Steel)
For “Bob Dunn - Master of the Electric Steel Guitar (1935 – 1950)” go here;
ReplyDeletehttps://krakenfiles.com/view/94c3f7023d/file.html
CD1
1 Milton Brown And His Brownies– Taking Off 2:49
2 Milton Brown And His Brownies– I Love You 2:49
3 Milton Brown And His Brownies– Wabash Blues 2:46
4 Milton Brown And His Brownies– Who's Sorry Now 2:57
5 Milton Brown And His Brownies– You're Tired Of Me 2:57
6 Milton Brown And His Brownies– The House at the End of the Lane 3:10
7 Milton Brown And His Brownies– Somebody Stole My Gal 2:27
8 Milton Brown And His Brownies– Ida! Sweet as Apple Cider 3:01
9 Milton Brown And His Brownies– Beale Street Mama 2:48
10 Milton Brown And His Brownies– An Old Water Mill By a Waterfall 3:15
11 Roy Newman & His Boys– Everybody's Blues 2:51
12 Roy Newman & His Boys– She's Doggin' Me 2:47
13 Roy Newman & His Boys– Takin' Off 2:12
14 Roy Newman & His Boys– Catch On and Let's Go 2:32
15 Cliff Bruner's Texas Wanderers– Over Moonlit Waters 2:48
16 Cliff Bruner's Texas Wanderers– Yearning Just For You 2:39
17 Cliff Bruner's Texas Wanderers– When You're Smiling 2:44
18 Cliff Bruner's Texas Wanderers– I'll Keep On Loving You 3:01
19 Cliff Bruner And His Boys– Star Dust 3:13
20 Buddy Jones– Easy Rider - Easy Rider 2:36
21 The Shelton Brothers– Just Because You're in Deep Elem 3:07
22 Leon Selph & His Blue Ridge Playboys– A Precious Memory 2:36
23 Leon Selph & His Blue Ridge Playboys– Some Day 2:44
24 Bob Dunn's Vagabonds– Mama's Gone Goodbye 2:41
25 Bob Dunn's Vagabonds– Blue Skies 2:47
26 Bob Dunn's Vagabonds– Mean Mistreater 2:33
CD2
1 Bob Dunn's Vagabonds– When Night Falls 2:47
2 Bob Dunn's Vagabonds– You'll Pay Someday 2:43
3 Bob Dunn's Vagabonds– You Don't Know My Mind 2:49
4 Bob Dunn's Vagabonds– Graveyard Blues 2:44
5 Bob Dunn's Vagabonds– I Want the Whole World to Know 2:57
6 Bob Dunn's Vagabonds– Stompin' at the Honky Tonk 2:35
7 Bob Dunn's Vagabonds– I'll Tell The World 2:40
8 Bob Dunn's Vagabonds– Juke Box Rag 2:39
9 Bob Dunn's Vagabonds– Marcheta 2:46
10 Floyd Tillman– There Must Be Someone For Me 2:41
11 Floyd Tillman– I Never Felt This Way Before 2:24
12 Bill Boyd And His Cowboy Ramblers– Swing Steel, Swing 2:33
13 Bill Mounce And Sons Of The South– I Don't Get It 2:51
14 Bill Mounce And Sons Of The South– From The Start 2:46
15 Bill Mounce And Sons Of The South– It's Just My Imagination 2:46
16 Bill Mounce And Sons Of The South– Kickin' It Off 2:20
17 Bill Mounce And Sons Of The South– I Found A New Baby 2:49
18 Bill Mounce And Sons Of The South– What's Bob Done? 2:41
19 The Sons Of Dixie– Bugle Two-Step 2:49
20 The Sons Of Dixie– I'm Always Dreaming of You 2:46
21 The Sons Of Dixie– Don't Ever Go Wrong 3:01
22 Modern Mountaineers– Mary Jane 2:28
23 Modern Mountaineers– Takin' Off 2:29
24 Modern Mountaineers– Baby, You've Let Me Down 2:48
25 Cliff Bruner's Texas Wanderers– San Antonio Blues 2:49
26 Tommy Dover And His Texas Rhythm Boys– Blue Over You 2:46
27 Harry Choates– I've Quit My Cattin' Around 2:45
This two-disc box set contains 53 newly remastered performances from original 78-r.p.m. vinyl recordings. And while one can never expect them to sound modern, there is a clarity and separation that allows easy identification of many instruments.
Although Dunn’s professional music career was a relatively short 15 years, his early and enthusiastic adoption of the electrically amplified lap steel led to its earliest use on recordings and subsequent acceptance and adoption by an array of players. In a way, Dunn was a sort of Jeff Beck of the steel guitar; his solos were often otherworldly, with cascades of arpeggios, jarring staccato notes, and Hawaiian chime effects blasting through the mix of instruments
Thank you for this classic old country.
ReplyDeleteMark
Thanks for this. I remember as a kid there were lots of these steel guitar players around but they're thin on the ground these days.
ReplyDeleteSmall correction:
ReplyDeleteThe next to last picture you posted is actually Paul Tutmarc...another fine steel player, but probably better known for his pioneering work in developing electric guitars in the early and mid 1930s. Tutmarc also made a bunch of cool steel recordings, many with his wife Bonnie, later known as Bonnie Guitar.
Thanks for the correction lafong. Picture now hopefully replaced by a correct one.
ReplyDeleteBob:
ReplyDeleteNot quite.
The second to last pic now shows the Benny Leaders band at the Hayloft Club in Houston in 1948. Dunn is in fact the steel player at the far right, but it's not Bob Dunn's Vagabonds, which I don't think was active after the war.
Leaders is the bass player shown in the middle of the pic.
Good job on the post and glad to see Dunn and this CD getting some exposure..we had to wait a decade for it to finally be released.
Hello lafong, Got the information from a YouTube post via Google images search.Photo comment now rectified. Sure glad I have backup with those in the know! Thanks again.
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry i missed this one. Would you kindly re-up?
ReplyDeleteCheers,
Andrew
Hi Andrew, This link should last a bit longer.
ReplyDeletehttps://mega.nz/file/A7IWlBqS#ue6FaEBOMNwJY5IRLe2XUjAo4DS1FlzebLN1DIyWf6w
Regards, Bob
Thank you Bob, this is wonderful. I love the Leon McAuliffe as well.
ReplyDeletePeace
Thanks a ton, Bob.
ReplyDeleteYou're the best. Filling a lot of holes in my western swing collection today.
Cheers,
-Rick