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Austin, TX's the Ghost Wolves take us on a guided tour of their righteous tour van, where they have all the necessities for healthy living on the road - an Ozzy Osbourne poster, a box of Franzia, and a trucker stove...
This month I’m giving thanks and paying respect to my favorite bassists flying under-the-radar. Reference this handy guide at dinner when your drunk uncle starts talking politics so you can drop some bass knowledge and change the subject just long enough to plan your escape...
Welcome back to the EarthQuaker Devices Studio Series! We caught up with film composer, Late Night With Seth Myers guitarist, and former member of Dischord's Shudder To Think, Nate Larson to chat about his creative process and how he uses EQD pedals on a variety of sources for gigs in movies, television, and rock and roll...
I vividly remember the show I finally found my signature sound, because it was the first time anyone pulled me aside afterwards to find out what pedals I was using...
If you’re reading this blog, chances are that you know a thing or two about the Avalanche Run. You probably already know that it’s the first EarthQuaker Devices delay and reverb to use our new proprietary DSP platform. You might be aware that it’s the first EQD to feature stereo ins and outs, tap tempo, ...
I'm a lady, a lady who turns her cheek to any pedal that takes a iota of my classic Peavey, hot rod SG tone. I like pedals that are not designed to change things because change is bad; everyone knows that. Think of the empty parking lot you walked through as a short cut becoming 300 fancy condos, WHY CHANGE? FOR WHO??? WHO ARE THESE PEOPLE???
They aren't my people, they aren't classic Peavey people . . . They are, "Look at this $12,000 guitar I play Eagles songs on from the comfort of my recliner," people and that's really fine. Maybe it will make a Trader Joe's open up, then we can all get fat on cookies and instead of being an It city, we can be a Fat city. Either way they won't hear me banging out songs in my practice room at all hours of the day, noodling until something cool happens.. They aren't the noodling kind. Unless it's $15 bowls of Ramnen?? Ramen is best enjoyed sitting on a curb slurped from a gas station Styrofoam cup or crunched in the bag and eaten like granola. 'Cause who can afford granola with all these condos going up?
I like having options. Change? Not so much. But options, yes.
If you think any pedal is gonna give you a signature sound you're sitting in a recliner eating expensive ramen for sure. Given enough options though, things can start to take shape - like rock and roll pentatonic box shape - and now you're cooking with gas Daddy. Don't stop.
If you are full of the good ramen and like taking shortcuts, you are ready to let the guitar play you. You are ready to toss it in the air and see what happens, to slide your hand down the fretboard lawlessly until it sounds like the ground is falling beneath you. That's power, you got a fat wallet and nice car, must be your drug of choice.
LG is the lead singer and guitar player for the power trio Thelma and The Sleaze. She currently resides in Nashville, drives a 1979 Ford Ranchero and has a brown dog named Waffles
Norm Block is a Los Angeles based producer, mixer, engineer, and drummer. He operates the Cautionary Tail record label and is owner of Happy Ending studios, whose clients include jennylee (Warpaint), Greg Dulli / Mark Lanegan, Christian Death, and Spacehog.
Hoarding effects pedals is fun, but what’s the point if you don’t play them? I’m crawling out of the Bass Hole this month to offer up some common-sense advice for when you decide to climb out of the basement, load up the VanBot and hit the road! These are just a few of the lessons I’ve learned in my 9+ years as a live sound engineer working with everybody from teenagers playing their first gig to Grammy-award winners...
In the days of yore, one simply bought a battery for your gizmo, and that would suffice as portable power. Batteries are great and serve up the Direct Current (DC) that most electronics need to perform their sonic wizardry. Batteries have limitations, though...
Larry Sheffey and Vic Wainstein are Garcia Bros., who recently produced the hit "Dapper" with Domo Genesis ft. Anderson .Paak. We caught up with Larry and Vic via email, and here's what they had to say...
Jon San Paolo, staff engineer, building manager, and "weekend guy" at Steve Albini's Electrical Audio shines some light on the "Electrical Method" and how he uses EarthQuaker Devices to save himself and his clients the heartache of trying to "fix it in the mix..."
“When the Levee Breaks.” “In the Air Tonight.” Californication. One of these things is not like the other. Compression can make or break a song, or an entire album, and yet remains a mystery to most listeners, puzzling even the savviest of musicians.
Dynamic range reduction, or compression, is present at every stage of the recording process from individual instrument rigs...
Greetings fellow Quakelings! In last month’s Tube Town we tackled preamp tubes and their compatible peers. Hope you all found it informative and carved some new wrinkles in your brains. This month’s topic is Harmonic Overtones. We’re going to chop it up about their sweet musicality, for better or worse. And, as promised, we will also take a look into one of my coworkers’ rigs, kicking off the monthly “Rigs of EarthQuaker Devices” feature. So let’s flip the power switch and let those tubes warm up!
Overtones can be best described as a series of harmonic information. They often accompany the fundamental pitch of a note, creating a tasty complexity or timbre. They usually are multiples of the fundamental pitch. For instance, if you were to play your open A string, as the note decays, overtones will be present that give the singing string it’s tone or color. The A string is vibrating at 110Hz. The overtones present may be at octave points like 220Hz, again at 440Hz, 880Hz, etc. Or more interestingly, perhaps the overtone series contains more musical tones like the Major 3rd or Perfect 5th.
Now, instead of a composite timbre of just the fundamental note you played (A) and it’s higher unison octaves, you have the complexity and rich timbre of chordal harmony. This gives the string its own sound and distinctive quality. The instrument has this feature built into it. We may perceive the fundamental note we played as the pitch due to its dominant nature with respect to frequency, but it’s little harmonic buddies are there, in smaller amplitude, to lend some tone! This natural characteristic of the guitar is one of the reasons I love using electronics with it. The gear, whether it be pedals, amps, plug-ins, or whatever, adds its own overtones to the equation creating vast permutations and variation to this already “harmonic” sound. This is especially true with tubes, which are known for their rich, warm, and musical tone.
After gigging for 20 plus years I have learned that some amps have a sound to them that almost envelops the notes you’re playing, lending a life all their own to the guitar. Some amps do this so well that it almost is perceived as a reverberation of the notes, animating the sound and giving it feel and imaging. This ability of the tube to produce even order harmonics gives the sound this robust harmonic complexity. And is the basis of guitar players’ love of tube amps! To get a grasp of this in action, just grab a Hoof Fuzz. Plug it in and stomp on it. Start with the Fuzz knob low and play a note. Start turning the Fuzz control up. You’ll hear the volume increase of course. But more interestingly, you’ll also hear the overtones showcased by the pedal when the input sound of your guitar starts to clip, or distort. The pedal is now acting like a harmonic content amplifier. All techy nerd stuff aside, the sound is spectacular and has more life and color. Every piece of guitar gear on the planet leaves its mark on your sound this way, gently (and not so gently) accentuating the inherent overtones of your instrument. Kinda rad, don’t ya think?
I’m sure you’ve come across a magical combination of gear that does it for you! We would love to hear some of your pairings that blew the back wall out of your last show! Hopefully we may have even built some of the gear you used to get there!
This month’s “Rigs of EarthQuaker Devices” belongs to Brad Thorla. Besides being a master circuit builder, having some of the steadiest hands for surface mount component soldering (yes we do that), and ambassador of all things Quake, Brad is a titan of the traps, effortlessly holding down the drums for his band Relaxer with our President and founder Jamie Stillman. Brad doesn’t just play drums though. He’s a composer and recording artist with some mean gear! Check it.
Here's Brad's description of his rig:
Signal path 1: MIJ Fender Jaguar Baritone Special HH, modded Big Muff, TC Electronics tuner, EQD Terminal, EQD Hoof, EQD Organizer, EQD Disaster Transport SR, EQD Dispatch Master, EHX Superego, Lightfoot Labs Goatkeeper, Boss RC-20XL, EQD Grand Orbiter, EQD Depths, EQD Tone Job, into input 1 of the Kustom K200B with a 2x15 cabinet. (Expression pedal into Disaster Transport SR's "Repeats.")
Effects loop off the Superego: EQD Pitch Bay, EQD Arpanoid, Behringer Flanger, Behringer Vintage Delay.
Signal path 2: Electric Tanpura, volume pedal, EHX Octave Multiplexer, EQD Sea Machine, EQD Rainbow Machine, EQD Disaster Transport into Ampeg with an 8x10 cabinet.
Well folks, that's it for this month! Be sure to see us again next time, and feel free to post your own "Rigs of EQD" in the comments!
Welcome to the EarthQuaker Devices Studio Series! Since so many of our favorite musical moments happen on recordings, we're peeling back the curtain and shining the spotlight on the men and women who use EarthQuaker Devices to help create new sounds and capture our favorite music on tape, hard drive, and ye olde wax cylinder...
Yo! Hello from the depths of my studio, 5 Starr Sound Labs, where I practice, video, explore and record everything I do for my career. I built this studio back in 2011 and have kept developing it till this day. I think every musician should have a space where they are surrounded by their tools and can be inspired to create...
The Rainbow Machine is the black sheep of the EarthQuaker Devices family. It’s our red-headed step child, the wizard in the cupboard under the stairs, the one Device to rule them all; the audio equivalent of a map to Luke Skywalker that’ll take your tone to the twilight zone, open your third eye, tickle your lizard brain, and fire up your Improbability Drive faster than you can say “Zaphod Beeblebrox...”
Hello pedal enthusiasts. Nick Reinhart here, doing some guest blogging for EarthQuaker Devices. Some of you may know me from my music, namely Tera Melos, or my work with Zach Hill, or possibly a new band I have with Nels Cline, Mike Watt, and Greg Saunier called Big Walnuts Yonder...
Rumor has it that the Bit Commander doesn't track well on bass. Well, you can just forget about that, because with a little finesse, there's plenty of rump-shaking monophonic sub-octave to be had...