Jump down to:    GUITAR SLIDE TIPS    SLIDES ENDORSEMENTS     

Gen-U-Wine Bottleneck guitar slides are made from recycled materials (wine bottles) in four main varieties: Curved, Straight, Single Cut, and Double Cut. Our best seller for the past several years has been the so-called "Martin/Taylor" model, a very subtly curved ("so subtle you can hear the "b" in the word") Gen-U-Wine Bottleneck slide, designed to accommodate today's fine hand-built steel-stringed guitars. Available in Single or Double Cut. Lately there has been quite a fuss over our "Cobalt blues" model: available in all the same styles as our other models, but made from hard-to-find cobalt blue glass! Cobalt blue ring slides are readily available. Contact Eric for availability of other styles of cobalt blue slides before ordering. Lately, Eric has been getting "smoky blue" (a dark blue glass) and occasional "powder (pale) blue" bottles. He is planning to fix a separate new price for those, in between the regular colors and the cobalt blue.Click here to see a photo of 4 colors of bottleneck slides: pale green, pale blue, cobalt blue, and traditional dark green  Bottlenecks
Many steel-stringed guitars have a curved fingerboard and hence a curved string-plane, with the middle strings upraised. The Curved Gen-U-Wine Bottleneck guitar slide allows the simultaneous playing of all six strings by compensating for the fret board "radius". It allows the player to produce true chords, without distortion and buzz, and to fingerpick while sliding.  Gen-U-Wine bottleneck guitar slide - curved
The Straight Gen-U-Wine Bottleneck guitar slide may be used with flat necked guitars or when the guitar player wants only one or two strings to sound, as with lead guitar styles, whether in open or standard tuning. It may also be used for chordal or multi-stringed applications on guitars with flat string-panes, e.g. classical (nylon-stringed) guitars, some dobro-guitars, and 20's parlor style guitars. For lap-style guitars, you'll need a Gen-U-Wine "Long Boy" guitar slide to span the wider neck. Contact Eric for price and availability of long boy guitar slide before ordering.  Gen-U-Wine bottleneck guitar slide - straight
 Gen-U-Wine bottleneck guitar slide - double cut Any Gen-U-Wine Bottleneck may be either Single Cut (i.e., with lip still attached) or Double Cut (with both the lip and the container part of the bottle removed). Single-Cut users must practice to avoid playing with the lip of the bottleneck. Double-Cut users pay a a little extra to avoid this learning process.  Gen-U-Wine bottleneck guitar slide - single cut
One of Bonnie's Raitt's teachers, Mississippi Fred McDowell, used a ½ - inch "Ring" guitar slide. We can make them short, too, whatever length you request. As for the width, most bottlenecks are slightly bigger around than a cork, with the lower end a little bit larger around. Some bottle openings, especially European bottles, may vary due to irregular glass thickness. If you have a special style guitar slide in mind, please ask, and we will try to accommodate you.  Gen-U-Wine bottleneck guitar slide - ring slide
Meanwhile, just crook your finger inside your Gen-U-Wine Bottleneck guitar slide, and it isn't going anywhere. Or if you're totally hard-core about the fit, try a bit of cotton wadding and some double-stick tape. Other bottleneck guitar slide 
Other Leading Brand.

BOTTLENECK GUITAR SLIDE TIPS:
1. Your Gen-U-Wine Bottleneck guitar slide is a moving fret. Don't use it to press strings all the way down onto the fretboard. A light but definite pressure over the strings is needed. Avoid bumps and rattles against the regular frets.

2. Play directly over, and parallel to, the fret wire, not just behind it as in fingerstyle. Gen-U-Wine bottleneck guitar slide demo

3. "Damping" means using a trailing finger to mute scratches, string-buzzes, and unwanted vibrations, especially at takeoff and landing of the slide. Properly matching your Gen-U-Wine Bottleneck guitar slide to the fret board radius is the other major factor in avoiding excess noise.

4. In Open Tunings, expect "I-IV-V" song constructions to involve the "open" strings and twelfth fret ( I chord), fifth fret (IV) and seventh fret (V).
For example, G(I)-C(IV)-D(V).

5. Some common Open Tunings:
"C": CGCGCE (used by John Fahey, Leo Kotte, and many more)
"G": DGDGBD (Robert Johnson, much country dobro music, Hawaiian "Taro Patch" tuning)
"D": DADF#AD (John Hurt, many others including Eric Park)

Eric Park enthusiastically recommends Mark Hanson's books The Complete Book of Alternate Tunings and Alternate Tunings Picture Chords for detailed information on a great many possible guitar alternative tunings. Mark lists Eric Park as a source of 3 unusual open tunings: G minor, G major seventh, and CGCGBflatD, which might be a C7plus9 or a Gminor sus4, depending on how you use it.  

SLIDES ENDORSEMENTS:
Gen-U-Wine is privileged to have cultivated at least two celebrity users: Chris Proctor, a National Fingerpicking Champion, uses the double-cut Martin/Taylor Gen-U-Wine Bottleneck guitar slide. Bonnie Raitt, the Grammy Award-winning singer and guitarist, uses a single-cut straight Gen-U-Wine Bottleneck guitar slide to produce her unique slide style.

Eric received a nice note from Two Street Music in Eureka, one of his long-time customers: "Thanks, Eric, Your slides are the best we carry!!" - John Mrotzek, Store Buyer. May 2008

Rik Elswit, of "Bananas at Large," a music store in San Rafael, plays lead guitar with a Gen-U-Wine Bottleneck guitar slide. His band, "Gayle Lynn and the Hired Hands", is set to release their self-titled CD soon.    April 2008

Email from musician, Ray Porter, who wrote: "Just wanted to say hello and thank you for the great slides. I have been playing them for years and have made gifts of them all over the world. Whenever they are in stock here in Ashland, Oregon, I buy as many as I can as I don't always know where I can find them elsewhere. I have tried other slides by other makers but I always come back to the ones you make. I play a 1934 National Trojan and I use the basic green (or blue) ones with the smooth ends (Double-cut.) and they are consistently the best slides I have ever played with. You can hear me using them on the album "Freedoming" by Free Dominguez, on the first track. Everyone who uses these loves them which is why I cannot keep them for very long."    August 2005

In a second email, Ray wrote: "Incidentally, one of your slides is in a movie. I am an actor and a few years ago I was working all summer long on a movie. I went to Nashville and bought my 1934 National and brought it back to L.A. with me. When I played it the first time with your slide it was heaven. I was playing a roadie in the movie and asked the director if I could have the guitar be in one of the scenes and he said yes. If you watch "Almost Famous" and watch the scene between Billy Crudup and Patrick Fugit where Patrick is interviewing Billy on the bus while he plays slide, you will see a genuine Gen-U-Wine slide making it big in Hollywood." Eric Park added that "The slide used in the movie 'Crossroads' was also one of mine."    September 2005

Eric Park received a call and a CD and card from a musician named Steve White out of Leucadia, near San Diego, CA. He's a blues guy with some reputation in that area. He wrote, "Taking your slides to Europe... Great gifts. Great product."    June 2005

Seth Stimson, aka Slidecat Royale said that "His Gen-U-Wine slide feels like family to him."    May 2005
If you are a fan of the Violent Femmes, the Rolling Stones, or Pink Floyd, Seth Stimson has a total of 10 videos available on YouTube! Slidecat does his own take on some classic rock tunes - bottleneck slide guitar style, of course, using Gen-u-Wine guitar slides!     Updated June 2007.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NBkLK-YOw4w 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2minfSyEG8U 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sf5QRERvLsg
 
In Sept 2001, Eric received an email and photo of a pro player, Les Johnson, playing guitar with a Gen-U-Wine Bottleneck guitar slide. He wrote "This picture was taken at Camp Eagle Base in Tuzla, Bosnia, during our second Dep't of Defense USO show." Unfortunately, Les dropped and broke his guitar slide at the end of the show, but he replaced it as soon as he got back. September 2001.