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Last Call: Playing 'The Today Show'

Last Call: Playing 'The Today Show'

From left to right: John Bohlinger, Gabe Burdulis, Brooke Eden, Megan Jane, and Carl Fields on the set of The Today Show.

One of my recent gigs was playing pedal steel with country artist Brooke Eden on live TV in front of millions of eyeballs. Hereā€™s how it went.

Yesterday, I played The Today Show with country artist Brooke Eden. Iā€™ve played Today and/or Good Morning America seven or eight times over the past 28 years: a few times on guitar, four or five on steel, and once on banjo (Iā€™m terrible at banjo but can play a simple part under pressure). Hereā€™s an inside look at the gig while the memory is still fresh.


Last week, Brooke Edenā€™s musical director, Miles Aubrey, texted to ask if I was available. I jumped on it. The band was Miles on guitar, Megan Jane on drums, Carl Fields on bass, and me on pedal steel with Brooke singing. The steel part was prominent yet somewhat simple, but the song had some keypads and a second guitar part that I tried to cover with a dotted delay trick to fill out the sound. We had one quick rehearsal at Brookeā€™s home, and although the five of us had never played together, it sounded great on the first run-through. We played it once more then planned to meet in New York on Sunday night.

The next day, Miles texted everyone that he was sick and should bow out. Our drummer Megan brought in guitarist Gabe Burdulis, who she was touring with, to fill in for Miles.

I tried to re-find that sweet spot between deafening and inaudible, but erred on the side of volume, as my personal motto is ā€œbetter too loud than too quiet.ā€

Today has a 4:30 a.m. call time, allowing bands to soundcheck before the guests and hosts arrive, which means you fly in the night before. I checked my steel (a Show Pro single-neck E9 10-string), a duffle bag with show clothes, a volume pedal, some cables, and a small steel-specific pedalboard with a Peterson tuner, Keeley Compressor Mini, Keeley Red Dirt Mini Overdrive, Ibanez Echo Shifter for weird analog delay, and an Electro-Harmonix Oceans 11 for a second digital delay or ā€™verb, tremolo, etc. Both delays have a tap tempo: I used a dotted delay on the Oceans 11 running into a trippy quarter-note delay on the Ibanez to cover a lot of space.

I checked into the hotel by 5 p.m. and then spent Sunday night walking around Times Square people watching, eating, and dreading my 4:15 a.m. lobby call. Today requested that Brooke play a second song as a teaser, so I listened to the new song and the singleā€œLeft You for Meā€ on a loop on my phone as I walked around, hoping to solidify my parts. We hadnā€™t ever played the second song together, so I was a bit nervous about remembering it under the pressure of TV.

I was so deliriously tired when we arrived at 30 Rock that I literally had trouble putting my steel together. (I miss having a tech.) Because Todayā€™s studio is fairly small, I requested a Fender Deluxe but instead they had a massive ā€™90s-era, 100-watt Fender Tone-Master with a matching 4x12 cabinet. With the volume on 1, I could hear nothing but the hum of electronics. At 1.5 it was so loud it was peeling paint off the stage. I found a sweet spot just one hair over 1 that worked.

Todayā€™ssound team are total prosā€”they dialed in a high-fidelity mix very quickly. We ran the song twice, then were released to wait in the green room until our performance. Brookeā€™s team wanted to go with a summery wardrobe of light blues, gray, and white. Gabe, who left straight from tour, didnā€™t have time to grab extra clothes and had only black jeans. Megan, our drummer, had some white jeans. When Brookeā€™s manager noticed that Gabe and Megan were roughly the same size, he suggested that Gabe wear Meganā€™s pants, so Gabe would be in white out front while the black jeans would be hidden behind Meganā€™s drum kit. They did the switch and, although not a perfect fit, those tighty-whitey pants looked hip on Gabe, who is handsome enough that it would be impossible for him to look bad.

The talent wrangler brought us on deck at 9:30 a.m. The volume had been turned down on my amp, so I tried to re-find that sweet spot between deafening and inaudible, but erred on the side of volume, as my personal motto is ā€œbetter too loud than too quiet."

We ran the teaser song twice. I was thinking this was another soundcheck/rehearsal, but they filmed it and used it as a teaser. It was literally the first time these five people had played that song together, but it sounded great. After the teaser, Today host Craig Melvin walked over to me and said, ā€œI love pedal steel. Iā€™m a big Robert Randolph fan.ā€

They called quiet on the set, and we went live. The hosts did an interview with Brooke and then we played ā€œLeft You for Meā€ live. I thought I was a bit flat on the first bend in my turnaround solo, but other than that, it felt good going down. Brookeā€™s vocal performance was killer, and the band served the song well. What more could you want?

When you think about playing in front of 3 to 5 million people live, that can get in your head. The trick is to just play, donā€™t think. In fact, that may be the secret to life.

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