Rig Rundown
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Re: Rig Rundown
Greeday
11:40 tech discusses how hes backstage manually switching amps multiple times mid song liked a mad game of spacies
No wonder us mere mortals can't recreate the sounds its all smoke and mirrors even live
Last edited by kwhelan on Tue Mar 14, 2017 10:09 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Rig Rundown
Hmmm, world-class guitar player from NZ, yet to be mentioned...guess nobody's heard of him...
Last edited by Sustainz on Thu Mar 02, 2017 12:43 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Play what you love. Practice what you must ~ Larry Carlton
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Re: Rig Rundown
I thought he was pretty good in Doom and some other stuff, but his fake scottish accent in star trek doesn't do it for me.Sustainz wrote:Hmmm, world-class guitar player from NZ, yet to be mentioned...guess nobody's hear of him...
I'm here all week.
So, is that low alcohol or no alcohol at all? mmmm, no alcohol, do you want to try it? Noooooooooo.
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Re: Rig Rundown
Country resistance.
Reminds me of someone posting on FB after a certain 'shall remain nameless' country singer died: RIP <unnamed>, thanks for taking the 'O' out of country music for me...
Reminds me of someone posting on FB after a certain 'shall remain nameless' country singer died: RIP <unnamed>, thanks for taking the 'O' out of country music for me...
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Re: Rig Rundown
meh they need two guys to replace Richie.....zero interest (although Phil X has great tone)ReidySetGo wrote:Bon Jovi Rig Rundown: https://youtu.be/_aOQJUY5BKY
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Re: Rig Rundown
Wrong UrbanBg wrote:I thought he was pretty good in Doom and some other stuff, but his fake scottish accent in star trek doesn't do it for me.Sustainz wrote:Hmmm, world-class guitar player from NZ, yet to be mentioned...guess nobody's hear of him...
I'm here all week.
Epiphone Riviera P93 & EJ200CE, Hagstrom Viking Bass, Doubleneck bass/guitar.
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Rivera Clubster 45, Carvin AG100D, Ashton BSK158.
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Re: Rig Rundown
so I should have said "I'm here all week, try the veal, I know thats actually karl, I'm just having a crap laugh?"H671 wrote:Wrong UrbanBg wrote:I thought he was pretty good in Doom and some other stuff, but his fake scottish accent in star trek doesn't do it for me.Sustainz wrote:Hmmm, world-class guitar player from NZ, yet to be mentioned...guess nobody's hear of him...
I'm here all week.
So, is that low alcohol or no alcohol at all? mmmm, no alcohol, do you want to try it? Noooooooooo.
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Re: Rig Rundown
yes you should have....you never what to make a joke to obviousBg wrote:
so I should have said "I'm here all week, try the veal, I know thats actually karl, I'm just having a crap laugh?"
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Re: Rig Rundown
Must be a subUrban joke - I didn't get it.
Epiphone Riviera P93 & EJ200CE, Hagstrom Viking Bass, Doubleneck bass/guitar.
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Re: Rig Rundown
I watched that AC/DC Rig Rundown last night. Surprised at amp settings. Presence, Treble, Middle, Bass all set on about three. I just tried it with an amp sim. It works. I have known to dial out the bass control on a couple of Superlead amps I have had, or with sims, but never the dial back the whole lot. Get the gain of having the amp cranked, but retains some clarity. Does not sound dull for some reason.
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Re: Rig Rundown
I think they may be related- but that could just be an urban myth....Bg wrote:so I should have said "I'm here all week, try the veal, I know thats actually karl, I'm just having a crap laugh?"H671 wrote:Wrong UrbanBg wrote:
I thought he was pretty good in Doom and some other stuff, but his fake scottish accent in star trek doesn't do it for me.
I'm here all week.
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Re: Rig Rundown
Slowy wrote: That's the problem; everything rewarding is just such hard work. Regret takes much less effort.
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Re: Rig Rundown
This is a description of the guitar system used by Peter Frampton- in his own words:
"The guitar system I have put together over the years has developed out of a continuing search for a guitar sound which can always be better and sometimes can just be different. When guitar effects started to become more than just a wah wah and a fuzz box; the sound got worse. Each time a new effect is added you hear the effect but you also hear the quality of the sound start to degenerate. What happened to that sound, I remember, when playing a Gibson through an early 60’s Marshall 50 watt? A guitar with a great sound right into the perfect valve amp - nothing like it! I wanted that sound while adding effects on top without losing any sound quality at all.
In order to achieve this you must completely bypass the effects when not in use and bring back any delays or echoes just like you would the echo returns on a mixing console. In essence, any effect I add is just that - an addition to the pure sound of the guitar straight into the amp. Bob Bradshaw, CEO of Custom Audio Electronics, has been designing and building this kind of system for years, and has come up with a way of switching effects and signal paths while at the same time being programmable. So, this is a description, or my interpretation of how this system works. I know how to get the sound and I understand the theory behind it, but that’s as far as I can understand - electronically!
Key: Reverb - Roland SRV 2000 digital reverb unit
Comp. - DBX 1 65 Limiter for squashing the clean sound
Pedals - A choice of four front end effects controlled by a satellite pedal board
TC 2290 - T.C. Electronics stereo delay! chorus unit (Only used for delays)
Talk - You’ll have to guess this one!
Marshall - Main solo amplifier
TC1210 - T.C. Electronics stereo chorus
SE 70 - Roland multi-effects processor(Used for stereo pitch shift)
Yams - 2 x Yamaha 1000 mono digital delay units (1 outputs to left,1 outputs to right)
Leslie - Controls guitar signal to Leslie on/off
3+PRE - Custom Audio Electronics 3 in one pre-amp/ Clean Channel
3+EQ - Overall EQ on/off
CH2 - C.A.E.+ Crunch Channel/Rhythm sound
CH3 - C.A.E.+ Lead Channel
Les.Fast - Speed control for Leslie speaker cabinet
The picture above is a template of the pedal board from which I control the system . Each switch is either a choice of amplifier or effect. I have a CAE 3+ pre-amp and a Marshall 100 watt as my choice of pre-amplifiers, and I also have a Leslie rotating speaker cabinet which is better known for it’s use with the Hammond organ. I first saw a Leslie speaker being used for guitar when in the early seventies, I supported the band Poco quite a few times and Rusty Young who is a great pedal steel player was using one exclusively. What an unbelievable sound! It is the ultimate chorus effect which inspired the invention of all the choral and flanging effects of today ( and there’ll be more tomorrow! ). On 'Frampton Comes Alive' you can hear the Leslie sound as the speed changes from slow to fast. 'Do You Feel' is a good example to check out, also ‘Go To The Sun’. I do use the Leslie all the time but on these tracks it is easier to recognize.
Those effects that are midi controlled can be programmed from the pedal board. so for every bank, of which there are 22, there are also 6 presets. For my own show I look at it as one bank per song. Therefore I have 6 different programmable combinations of amps and effects for that song or tune. The reason for using a bank per song is that the delay times are all different as every song varies in speed. The verse might need a clean sound and the chorus a more dirty one and then perhaps a really filthy one for the solo!"
"The first effects that the guitar sees are an lbanez tube screamer, then a Mutron octave divider that gives you an octave down in combination with the note you are playing. I have a reissue MXR Phase 90 and an old Foxx Tone distortion giving you an octave above as well as the note you are playing. Next, the guitar sees the input of either of the two pre-amplifiers. The CAE pre amp has a clean, a crunch and a lead channel combined with the Marshall for most solo sounds. There is a total of four different basic sounds. The Marshall and C.A.E.+ preamps send the signal to the effects units. The output from theses effects return to two Marshall 100 watt amplifiers where just the power or output section is used to send the signal to the left and right Marshall 4 x 12 speaker cabinets. If that wasn’t confusing enough there’s more!
So now you have all the vari- ous effects coming back to a stereo pair of speakers. But, where’s the dry normal sound go? Well, my fight over the years has been to be able to keep that wonderful sound of ‘A GUITAR’ plugged straight into ‘A GUITAR AMPLIFER’ with no effects to degrade the sound, PLUS having the added luxury of all the effects you want on top. So you may have these bonus sounds in addition to the sound you worked so hard to get in the first place. Wow, did you get that? Now the original, dry sounds from the front ends or pre-amplifer sections of both the C.A.E.+ and the Marshall go straight to the power section of the same Marshall and right into another 4 x 12 Speaker cabinet. So there are three cabinets. The center is the dry and the two outside cabinets are the wet or effected stereo returns of all the effects.
There is one more amplifier in a rack with the other three, which is a 70’s, 50 watt Marshall that is the designated amp for the ‘TALK BOX’ ( originally made and given to me by Bob Heil of Hell Sound in Michigan - Jim Dunlop now supplies them and there is talk of a Frampton model! ).
Now you have a basic picture, I hope, of what Bob Bradshaw of C.A.E. and myself have come up with over the last decade plus. Bob is continually working to improve signal quality and there’s always something new to try and I usually let him try it!!!! Thanks Bob and all at Custom Audio Elec- tronics in being there to help in the search for the ‘Holy Grail’ of guitar sounds which, of course, will never be found. But the search is where lies the fun and excitement to inspire one to play new and different things. Having said that, a Les Paul or Strat plugged straight into an old Fender, Marshall or Vox (etc., etc.,) amplifier is, for me, a sound that will always be hard to beat!"
"The guitar system I have put together over the years has developed out of a continuing search for a guitar sound which can always be better and sometimes can just be different. When guitar effects started to become more than just a wah wah and a fuzz box; the sound got worse. Each time a new effect is added you hear the effect but you also hear the quality of the sound start to degenerate. What happened to that sound, I remember, when playing a Gibson through an early 60’s Marshall 50 watt? A guitar with a great sound right into the perfect valve amp - nothing like it! I wanted that sound while adding effects on top without losing any sound quality at all.
In order to achieve this you must completely bypass the effects when not in use and bring back any delays or echoes just like you would the echo returns on a mixing console. In essence, any effect I add is just that - an addition to the pure sound of the guitar straight into the amp. Bob Bradshaw, CEO of Custom Audio Electronics, has been designing and building this kind of system for years, and has come up with a way of switching effects and signal paths while at the same time being programmable. So, this is a description, or my interpretation of how this system works. I know how to get the sound and I understand the theory behind it, but that’s as far as I can understand - electronically!
Key: Reverb - Roland SRV 2000 digital reverb unit
Comp. - DBX 1 65 Limiter for squashing the clean sound
Pedals - A choice of four front end effects controlled by a satellite pedal board
TC 2290 - T.C. Electronics stereo delay! chorus unit (Only used for delays)
Talk - You’ll have to guess this one!
Marshall - Main solo amplifier
TC1210 - T.C. Electronics stereo chorus
SE 70 - Roland multi-effects processor(Used for stereo pitch shift)
Yams - 2 x Yamaha 1000 mono digital delay units (1 outputs to left,1 outputs to right)
Leslie - Controls guitar signal to Leslie on/off
3+PRE - Custom Audio Electronics 3 in one pre-amp/ Clean Channel
3+EQ - Overall EQ on/off
CH2 - C.A.E.+ Crunch Channel/Rhythm sound
CH3 - C.A.E.+ Lead Channel
Les.Fast - Speed control for Leslie speaker cabinet
The picture above is a template of the pedal board from which I control the system . Each switch is either a choice of amplifier or effect. I have a CAE 3+ pre-amp and a Marshall 100 watt as my choice of pre-amplifiers, and I also have a Leslie rotating speaker cabinet which is better known for it’s use with the Hammond organ. I first saw a Leslie speaker being used for guitar when in the early seventies, I supported the band Poco quite a few times and Rusty Young who is a great pedal steel player was using one exclusively. What an unbelievable sound! It is the ultimate chorus effect which inspired the invention of all the choral and flanging effects of today ( and there’ll be more tomorrow! ). On 'Frampton Comes Alive' you can hear the Leslie sound as the speed changes from slow to fast. 'Do You Feel' is a good example to check out, also ‘Go To The Sun’. I do use the Leslie all the time but on these tracks it is easier to recognize.
Those effects that are midi controlled can be programmed from the pedal board. so for every bank, of which there are 22, there are also 6 presets. For my own show I look at it as one bank per song. Therefore I have 6 different programmable combinations of amps and effects for that song or tune. The reason for using a bank per song is that the delay times are all different as every song varies in speed. The verse might need a clean sound and the chorus a more dirty one and then perhaps a really filthy one for the solo!"
"The first effects that the guitar sees are an lbanez tube screamer, then a Mutron octave divider that gives you an octave down in combination with the note you are playing. I have a reissue MXR Phase 90 and an old Foxx Tone distortion giving you an octave above as well as the note you are playing. Next, the guitar sees the input of either of the two pre-amplifiers. The CAE pre amp has a clean, a crunch and a lead channel combined with the Marshall for most solo sounds. There is a total of four different basic sounds. The Marshall and C.A.E.+ preamps send the signal to the effects units. The output from theses effects return to two Marshall 100 watt amplifiers where just the power or output section is used to send the signal to the left and right Marshall 4 x 12 speaker cabinets. If that wasn’t confusing enough there’s more!
So now you have all the vari- ous effects coming back to a stereo pair of speakers. But, where’s the dry normal sound go? Well, my fight over the years has been to be able to keep that wonderful sound of ‘A GUITAR’ plugged straight into ‘A GUITAR AMPLIFER’ with no effects to degrade the sound, PLUS having the added luxury of all the effects you want on top. So you may have these bonus sounds in addition to the sound you worked so hard to get in the first place. Wow, did you get that? Now the original, dry sounds from the front ends or pre-amplifer sections of both the C.A.E.+ and the Marshall go straight to the power section of the same Marshall and right into another 4 x 12 Speaker cabinet. So there are three cabinets. The center is the dry and the two outside cabinets are the wet or effected stereo returns of all the effects.
There is one more amplifier in a rack with the other three, which is a 70’s, 50 watt Marshall that is the designated amp for the ‘TALK BOX’ ( originally made and given to me by Bob Heil of Hell Sound in Michigan - Jim Dunlop now supplies them and there is talk of a Frampton model! ).
Now you have a basic picture, I hope, of what Bob Bradshaw of C.A.E. and myself have come up with over the last decade plus. Bob is continually working to improve signal quality and there’s always something new to try and I usually let him try it!!!! Thanks Bob and all at Custom Audio Elec- tronics in being there to help in the search for the ‘Holy Grail’ of guitar sounds which, of course, will never be found. But the search is where lies the fun and excitement to inspire one to play new and different things. Having said that, a Les Paul or Strat plugged straight into an old Fender, Marshall or Vox (etc., etc.,) amplifier is, for me, a sound that will always be hard to beat!"