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Posts Tagged ‘Fryette Deliverance 60’

Tone Tuesday!

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Welcome to Tone Tuesday, a new feature here at MinorLeagueRocker.com! Every Tuesday, I’m going to offer some advice or just get on my soapbox about what I consider good guitar tone. Today, I’m going to talk about how to EQ your amp.

These days, metal guitarists want to sound HEAVY. That means they usually crank the gain and the bass knob, and turn the mids way down. In your bedroom, this will sound cool. It will sound like thousands of Tony Iommis churning out molten riffs in the caldera of an active volcano.

Onstage, with a bassist and possibly another guitarist, this will sound like honey-roasted poop chute. Sorry, old bean, but there it is.

I love gain. Distortion makes me swoon. Heaviness … I live for it. But there’s a better way to do it. Ease off the gain just a touch, and you’ll hear greater definition come back into your playing. If you use triads, you’ll hear each individual note come through better.

Now, let’s talk about that Bass control. Don’t crank that up. If you do that, your tone will blend in with the bassist. Your frequencies will blend together and produce a spongey mess. Ease back on that Bass knob, and look for the one labeled “Mid.” Those Mid frequencies will help you cut through the mix, and will separate your tone from the bassist’s. I know a lot of guitarists think lots of bass + scooped mids = HEAVY. But the low end is your bassist’s job. I promise your band will sound better if you use these frequencies wisely.

Now let’s say you have two guitars in your band … you guys need to work together. Consider the type of wood in your guitars, the distortion character of your amps, the output of your pickups. Do your best to occupy difference frequencies in the spectrum. In Hung Dynasty, Todd uses a mahogany guitar through a dark-sounding Mesa F-100 (a wonderful amp, by the way). I use a swamp ash guitar through a brighter-sounding Fryette Deliverance 60. He sets his guitar up to have a little less middle-end, where I boost mine quite a bit. Neither of us pile on the low frequencies, because that’s where Chris the Bassist lives. I also dial in a touch more top end.

The result? We sound like three distinct instrument with their own characters. My leads punch through the mix nicely. The bass and the rhythm guitar synch perfectly. And when we all play the same riff in unison? Oh, it’s a pants-shrinking eargasm. I can’t wait to record with our current gear. It’s gonna sound beautiful!

So, to some up: Don’t scoop your mids. Be smart with the bass frequency. And you might, just might, have a tiny bit too much gain. This might sound weird, but you should aim to make your guitar and amp sound good with the band, rather than good by itself.

New Amps … and Another Mixed Bag of Shows

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

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It’s odd how you can take the same band, hear them twice and get two different results.

Last weekend at Smokey’s in Mesa, Chris the drummer and I felt out of sorts the whole night. Everything was a struggle, and I had a near catastrophic mistake. Fortunately, it was in the last few bars of one of our songs. He and I usually mesh really nicely, and everything goes pretty smoothly. Not that night.

Last night at Donna Jean’s, though, was another story. That performance was polished to a high sheen. I can attribute some of it to the crowd. Donna Jean’s had a lively bunch, and that always makes it more fun to play live.

A lot of them were regulars, so we decided to switch our set up a touch. That meant excluding a few crowd favorite covers for a few different ones, but it went over really well. We took Judas Priest’s “Breaking the Law” and Metallica’s “Seek & Destroy” out, replacing them with “The Gambler” (yes, the Kenny Rogers song, but done OUR way!) and AC/DC’s “TNT”, which was great.

For you gear heads, Todd (singer/guitarist) and I have really created a very hard-hitting guitar sound. He recently picked up a used Mesa F-100. It pairs really nicely with my Fryette Deliverance 60. Both of us now have a very aggressive distortion character which lends itself well to our music. But we’re not pooping all over each other sonically, which is really cool. Each of us has a distinct but complementary tone.

Speaking of the Deliverance, it’s very new to me but has become my number-one amp. I’ve been promising you a review of it, I know. Give me a day or two and you’ll finally have it!

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