Lloyd Green

title: "Lloyd Green" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1937-births", "living-people", "american-country-guitarists", "american-male-guitarists", "people-from-greene-county,-mississippi", "pedal-steel-guitarists", "steel-guitarists", "mgm-records-artists", "monument-records-artists", "university-of-southern-mississippi-alumni", "20th-century-american-guitarists", "country-musicians-from-mississippi", "20th-century-american-male-musicians"] topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lloyd_Green" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::data[format=table title="Infobox musical artist"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Lloyd Green |
| image | Lloyd Green, steel guitarist.jpg |
| caption | Lloyd Green in 2021 |
| background | non_vocal_instrumentalist |
| birth_name | Lloyd Lamar Green |
| birth_date | |
| birth_place | Leaf, Mississippi, U.S. |
| genre | Country |
| instrument | Pedal steel guitar |
| occupation | Musician |
| years_active | 1947–present |
| :: |
| name = Lloyd Green | image = Lloyd Green, steel guitarist.jpg | caption = Lloyd Green in 2021 | background = non_vocal_instrumentalist | birth_name = Lloyd Lamar Green | birth_date = | birth_place = Leaf, Mississippi, U.S. | genre = Country | instrument = Pedal steel guitar | occupation = Musician | years_active = 1947–present | website =
Lloyd Lamar Green (born October 4, 1937) is an American pedal steel guitarist and session musician. Green was a member of the country music studio musician collective known as the Nashville A-Team, and has performed on more than 5,000 recordings, for artists such as Charley Pride, The Byrds, Johnny Cash, The Monkees, Don Williams, Paul McCartney, and Bob Dylan. His playing on The Byrds' 1968 album Sweetheart of the Rodeo influenced generations of steel guitarists. Green was inducted into the Steel Guitar Hall of Fame in 1988.
Early life
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/99/Lloyd_Green_at_age_ten.jpg" caption="9}}"] ::
Early career
Green joined Faron Young's road band in December 1956 and stayed for 18 months. He soon played steel guitar on his first session, George Jones' "Too Much Water" recorded in the newly opened RCA Studio in Nashville. After a one-month tour with Ferlin Husky, with money tight, he swore never to tour again and temporarily gave up music to work as a shoe salesman, not playing his guitar for two years. By the spring of 1963 he was ready to try music again. Singer Roy Drusky offered him a job as Drusky's assistant working in the Nashville office of the music licensing company SESAC. At that time, Green didn't have enough money to renew his expired musicians' union card until Fred Rose's widow renewed it for him. The SESAC job put Green in the middle of the action on Nashville's Music Row. He said, "...the first week I was there, Slim Williamson, who owned Chart Records, hired me for a demo and master session." Green began working with a new artist, Lynn Anderson, whose hits for Chart led to her stardom on Columbia Records with hits such as "Rose Garden".
Success
In 1965, Green recorded a demo of a song called "The Bridge Washed Out" for Decca recording artist Warner Mack. Mack liked what Green played on the demo. It was a sharp-edged rapid style on muted strings now known as "chicken pickin'". Mack wanted to hire Green for the master session, but producer Owen Bradley objected. Green was an unknown outsider at the time and Bradley wanted Pete Drake, who was a veteran studio player. Warner persisted and Green got the job. At the session, Bradley was not happy and said over the talkback, "Turn them damn highs off-a that steel! They're killin'my ears". Bassist Bob Moore heard Green play and said, "Son, that's a career for you right there – there's your sound!" Moore's positive sentiment was not unanimous– Bradley was not convinced and guitarist Grady Martin issued a one-word expletive. However, when the record came out three months later, it went straight to number one and ushered Green into the circle of studio hit-makers. Well-wishers congratulated Bradley on the hit's ground-breaking new sound and his answer was "Well, I really appreciate that. We knew we were on to something new when we cut it." The unique style was copied by other steel players and remained in vogue for a few years thereafter.
For the next 15 years, Green remained an elite studio player averaging 400 sessions a year including a string of 17 years of performing on at least three No. 1 songs each year. He performed on recordings of about 500 artists. A partial list includes Faron Young, Freddie Hart, the Byrds, Charley Pride, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Dolly Parton, Ricky Skaggs, T.G. Sheppard, Ronnie Milsap, Waylon Jennings, Hank Snow, Jerry Lee Lewis, Nanci Griffith, Jim Reeves, Johnny Cash, Johnny Paycheck, and Loretta Lynn. He turned down a U.S. tour with McCartney due to the fact that he didn't want to lose work in Nashville.
His 1968 performance on the Byrds' landmark album Sweetheart of the Rodeo, made the biggest impact on the overall American music audience and influenced generations of non-mainstream country guitarists. Music writer Peter Cooper called the album "a genre-bender that illuminated a path that led to modern California Country, Americana and alternative country music". On the album, Green was featured on "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere", "Hickory Wind", "Nothing Was Delivered", and "One Hundred Years from Now". In Los Angeles, steel guitarist JayDee Maness performed on four other tracks. Green appeared with the Byrds at the Grand Ole Opry on March 16, 1968 to promote the album, but the Byrds were booed and heckled by the conservative Opry audience who considered them "long-haired outsiders". Part of the reason was that Gram Parsons assured the presenter that he would perform "Sing Me Back Home" by Merle Haggard, but instead performed his own song, "Hickory Wind". In 2018, Green and fellow steel guitarist JayDee Maness teamed up to make a tribute album called Journey to the Beginningː A Steel Guitar Tribute to the Byrds.
Many steel guitarists point to Green's 1968 performance on Charley Pride's In Person album as the highlight of Green's career to that point. In addition to his work as a sideman, Green has cut several of his own LPs, and had a top 40 hit with his instrumental version of “I Can See Clearly Now.”
Later years
In the 1980s, an inner ear ailment which distorted his hearing forced Green to stop working. Green said, "It was a nightmarish experience. It went on for about a year before I quit doing sessions. Everything sounded terrible [to me]." He described it as a half-step different pitch in each ear. After a few years the problem resolved and he tried to return to session work after a 15-year hiatus but younger players and different styles had evolved and producers and record labels would not hire him. Green was inducted into the Steel Guitar Hall of Fame in 1988. He has performed with over 500 artists, has played on 116 number one hits, and over 100 top ten hits. He was featured with a speaking part on Ken Burns' Country Music documentary film in 2019.
Instruments
Green 's first steel guitar at age seven was an Oahu-brand acoustic model, likely made by Kay or Harmony, but modified with an adapter to raise the strings so it could be played "Hawaiian style" across the knees using a steel bar. He moved up to a 1943/1944 Rickenbacker Bakelite electric at age ten (1947) with an Oahu amplifier (see photo). After hearing Bud Isaacs' playing on the hit song 'Slowly' in 1952, many lap steel players began to switch to pedal steel. About that time, Green was playing a Fender Stringmaster lap steel, which had been retrofitted with pedals. In 1956, he was hired by Faron Young for an 18-month tour. Young said Green's steel was an "embarrassment" because it looked so shoddy, then loaned Green a triple-neck Bigsby model with one pedal.
Green left Faron Young in mid 1958, and received a new guitar courtesy of Shot Jackson, who traded Green's old Fender for a Rickenbacker doubleneck with two retrofitted pedals. Green used this "Rick" for the next three years. In 1963, he played a double-neck Bigsby on which Jackson added six pedals. By 1964 he played Sho-Bud steels and in 1966 changed to a Sho-Bud "fingertip" double 10 model which he played on many country hits.
In 1973, Green designed a guitar for Sho-Bud. It was a single E9 neck on a double neck cabinet. The empty space (usually filled by a C6 neck) was a padded blank. Prior to this, a single neck on a double neck cabinet setup did not exist. Called the LDG, the guitar was named for Green, but the middle initial was incorrect. This was done purposely and with Green's knowledge by Sho-Bud's David Jackson but the exact reason is unclear. It was the fourth and last Sho-Bud guitar that Lloyd played on sessions. Green used three different Sho-Bud volume pedals, rotating them at intervals to keep the potentiometers working efficiently. He owned a 1943 Dobro square neck (serial number A–147) given to him by Hank Williams Jr. during a recording session in 1969. Green used it on many sessions, most notably on Don Williams' records.
Discography as a solo artist
Albums
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| Year | Album | US Country | Label |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1964 | * Hawaiian Enchantment* (his name is not featured on the cover) | — | Modern Sound |
| Big Steel Guitar (aka The Big Steel Guitar) | — | Time | |
| 1966 | Day for Decision | — | Little Darlin |
| 1967 | The Hit Sounds | — | |
| 1968 | Mr. Nashville Sound | 37 | Chart |
| Cool Steel Man | — | ||
| 1969 | Green Country | — | Little Darlin |
| 1970 | Moody River | — | Chart |
| Music City Sound (with Pete Wade) | — | MGM | |
| 1971 | Lloyd Green and His Steel Guitar | — | Prize |
| 1973 | Shades of Steel | 21 | Monument |
| 1975 | Steel Rides | 47 | |
| Ten Shades of Green | — | Midland | |
| 1977 | Stainless Steel (aka Feelings) | — | GRT |
| 1980 | Lloyd's of Nashville | — | Midland |
| 1992 | Reflections | — | Spark |
| 2003 | Revisited | — | LG |
| 2018 | ''Journey to the Beginning: A Steel Guitar Tribute to The Byrds ‘Sweetheart of the Rodeo''' (with Jay Dee Maness) | — | Coastal Bend |
| :: |
Also appears on
- 1984: The Celestial Sounds of Steel Guitars (VGK) with JB Van - produced by Robin Vosbury and Lloyd Green
-
- The Lloyd Green Album (Red Beet) with Eric Brace
- 2010: Master Sessions (Red Beet) with Eric Brace and Peter Cooper
Singles
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| Year | Single | Chart Positions | Album | US Country | CAN Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1967 | "Pedal Pattle (aka Pedal Paddle) | — | — | "The Hit Sounds" | |
| 1968 | "Mr. Nashville Sound" | — | — | Mr. Nashville Sound | |
| 1969 | "Bar Hoppin'" | — | — | Cool Steel Man | |
| "Robin" | — | — | Moody River | ||
| "Tell Ya What" | — | — | |||
| 1970 | "Ride Ride Ride" | — | — | Mr. Nashville Sound | |
| "My Happiness" (with Pete Wade) | — | — | Music City Sound | ||
| "Release Me" (with Pete Wade) | — | — | |||
| 1971 | "Midnight Silence" | — | — | Lloyd Green and His Steel Guitar | |
| "Sound Waves" | — | — | |||
| 1972 | "Morning Has Broken" | — | — | Shades of Steel | |
| 1973 | "I Can See Clearly Now" | 36 | 98 | ||
| "Here Comes the Sun" | 73 | — | |||
| "Dixie Drive-In" | — | — | |||
| 1974 | "Atlantis" | — | — | ||
| "Seaside" | — | — | Steel Rides | ||
| "Canadian Sunset" | — | — | |||
| 1975 | "Sally G" | — | — | ||
| "I Can Help" | — | — | |||
| 1976 | "Darisa" | — | — | Ten Shades of Green | |
| "You and Me" | 92 | — | Feelings | ||
| 1977 | "Feelings" | — | — | ||
| "Whistler" | — | — | single only | ||
| 1979 | "Ricochet" | — | — | Lloyd's of Nashville | |
| :: |
References
References
- (2008-07-01). "Lloyd Green Tribute".
- (2012). "The Encyclopedia of Country Music : the ultimate guide to the music". Oxford University Press.
- (1997). "All music guide to country : the experts' guide to the best recordings in country music". Miller Freeman.
- "Lloyd Green Biography". Oldies.com.
- (September 1, 2008). "Lloyd Green: From the A-Team to Americana". Vintage Guitar.
- (July 20, 2003). "Prolific picker ready to fire up his steel guitar". The Tennessean.
- (July 20, 2003). "Return to Glory". The Tennessean.
- "Country Musicː A Film by Ken Burns/ Participant biographies". Public Broadcasting Service.
- "Lloyd Greenː Artist Biography". AllMusic.
- "Lloyd Green/Credits".
- (1999). "Music USA : the rough guide". Rough Guides.
- "Lloyd Green/Credits".
- "The Steel Guitar Hall of Fame/". The Steel Guitar Hall of Fame.
- "Lloyd Green on Top Forty Records".
- "Guitar List: Oahu Guitars".
- (2017). "The Oxford Handbook of Country Music". Oxford University Press.
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