Pat Metheny – One Quiet Night
The music gear and equipment used by the artists, producers, engineers, and more involved in the making of the 2003 album One Quiet Night.
Music from One Quiet Night
Artists on One Quiet Night
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Roles:
Groups:
Pat Metheny Group Joni Mitchell (band) Noa & Pat Metheny John Scofield & Pat Metheny Pat Metheny Trio Pat Metheny Unity Group Pat Metheny Unity Band Pat Metheny & Lyle Mays Charlie Haden & Pat Metheny Anna Maria Jopek & Friends with Pat Metheny Pat Metheny & Ornette Coleman Pat Metheny & Sonny Rollins Trio Antônio Carlos Jobim, Pat Metheny Pat Metheny & Brad Mehldau Jim Hall & Pat Metheny Derek Bailey, Pat Metheny, Gregg Bendian, & Paul WerticoProducer Recording Engineer
Gear Used On One Quiet Night
Explore the instruments, equipment, software, and production tools used in the making of Pat Metheny – One Quiet Night (2003). Click more on each item to see exactly how it was used.
Guitars used by Pat Metheny on One Quiet Night
Originally designed for and with a New York City studio musician, this is a longer scale "Manzer" steel string guitar. It is not to be confused with a bass guitar. It is a low tuned guitar, giving a low strung rich quality to the usual guitar voice. Tuned B to B or A to A. The usual string gauges range between: plain 18, wound 24, 36, 46, 56, 70. Responsive, evocative. The tone of this guitar is rich and full, and its voice has been described as "hauntingly beautiful.". You can hear an entire CD of this instrument played solo by Pat Metheny, His grammy award winning CD "One Quiet Night"
Pat perfoming live on his Manzer Baritone Pat Metheny - Don't Know Why (nice reharmonization!) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BntNRMiI4PQ
Manzer Fanned-Fret Baritone Acoustic
You also have a few Manzer baritone guitars. Craig Snyder asked her to make him a baritone guitar. And like many guitar players, I’ve picked up baritone guitars over the years and thought, “Wow, that’s cool. What would I ever use that for?” And if I try to play chords, it’s too muddy. So, baritone guitar was never something on my radar – I thought. I’ve known Craig from around town; he’s a studio guitarist and jingle writer, and he owns CR Guitars in Rhinebeck, New York. We happened to be working in the same studio and he brought in the baritone Linda made for him. I loved it right away and asked her to make me a copy of the one she’d made for Craig. I played the few things I thought would sound good on it, and I found myself very quickly putting it aside. Again, it was too muddy.
Then, one night in 2001, after I’d had it four or five years, I remembered that in my hometown of Lee’s Summit, there was a colorful character named Ray Harris. An amazing guitar player – kind of country, but he’d go play with the jazz guys, too. He had these guitars he’d invented, including this double-neck that was a 12-string on one side, and the bottom was this wacky tuning where he could play the bass and melody at the same time. And I realized it was a baritone guitar, because it went from A to A. But he did a Nashville tuning – meaning he would take the middle two strings, replace them with lighter-gauge strings, and tune them up an octave – but with a baritone guitar.
So I remembered that and did the Nashville tuning, like I’d done on “Phase Dance,” to Linda’s baritone. I’d just gotten a new mic and thought, “I’m going to record this,” and ended up recording for about four hours in that tuning, not really knowing what I was doing. I finally arrived at thinking of the bottom two strings as a cello, the middle two strings as a violin, and the top two strings as a viola. So you could play your normal kinds of things, and they would come out sort of sounding backward, with some hip bass notes.
After I listened to the stuff for about six months, it wound up being the record One Quiet Night.
After hundreds of hours of live performance under my belt, I really understood what was going on with voicings and possibilities, because I got into the habit of playing baritone guitar at the beginning of every concert. So I made What’s It All About – the only time I played other people’s music. They were songs I’ve always loved and would play around the house, so I thought it would be fun to make a record like that.