Peter Drake: The Gentle Genius of Nashville’s Steel Guitar

In the long history of recorded music, there are figures whose influence can be heard everywhere, even if their names are not immediately recognised. One such figure is Pete or Peter Drake, the Nashville producer and pedal steel guitarist whose quiet innovation helped shape country, pop, and rock through the 1960s and beyond. His sound was subtle, but once heard, impossible to forget — a warm, bending tone that seemed to sing.

Drake’s story begins in Georgia, where he was born in 1932. Like many musicians of his generation, he came to Nashville in search of opportunity, carrying not only talent but also a willingness to experiment. The pedal steel guitar, at that time, was largely confined to traditional country. Drake saw it differently. He imagined it as a voice, capable of human expression — something that could bridge styles and reach listeners far beyond the honky-tonk.

His earliest session work in the late 1950s established him as a reliable, versatile player. By the early 1960s, he was one of Nashville’s busiest session musicians. His credits read like a roll call of mid-century greats: George Jones, Tammy Wynette, Dolly Parton, and countless others. Yet it was Drake’s work with artists outside of country that gave him his unique reputation. He played on Bob Dylan’s Nashville Skyline and John Wesley Harding, helping to define a new, gentler sound for the songwriter. His steel guitar on “Lay Lady Lay” became iconic — smooth, warm, and perfectly understated.

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