Mar 9 2012

Pedal Line Friday – 3/9 Raphael Ticle

Today’s pedal line is from Raphael Ticle. If you have a pedal line (doesn’t have to be in a board) for your rig, please email me a photo, bio, description of pedals and routing to pedallineateffectsbaydotcom. Every Friday I’ll showcase a pedal line submission. Make sure you include any links to your band or music page.

Pedal Line Friday - 3/9 Raphael TicleI play lead guitar in a classic rock band Lola, from Belo Horiznte, Brazil. We play mostly Zep and Beatles tunes at local clubs and rock our own songs in the underground scene. You can check our songs at
www.soundcloud.com/lolabh
Following the signal chain:

TC Polytune: Awesome no brainer tuner. Everybody knows it.
Marshall ED-1 Compressor: This was the very first pedal I bought and I still use it. Unfortunately I broke the compressor knob but it was set on a nice spot so I won’t even bother to get it fixed. It’s not transparent at all but it adds a nice grit to the tone.
MXR Analog Chorus: Great and warm sounding analog chorus. It adds a little bit of a mid honk to the tone, that’s why i run it before the distortions.
Hardwire CM-2: I use this as a gain boost, not as a standalone distortion box (even though it sounds great like that). It’s essentially a tubescreamer with the added Bass and Treble instead of a tone knob.
Fulltone OCD: Great Marshally/Voxy drive. I use when I can´t bring my own amp or in front of the clean channel to have a different flavor of distortion.
Suhr Riot: It took me a while to figure it out but this thing is a beast! First of all: feels like an amp. The way I set it, sound more like a vintage JCM800 or Rat kind of drive. cranking the tone and flipping the switch to the left you get into modded modern Marshall meltdown. Damn this pedal is cool!

From this point it goes to the Input of my Marshall MA50C: People do not make justice of this poor amp. It’s been absolutely bashed all over internet forums but I suppose it’s because people don’t run it loud enough. I like because it has a serial effects loop and the power section runs pretty cold, so you have enough headroom for a volume boost.

MXR 10 band
. Usually to correct any frequency bumbs the room I’m playing might have.
POD HD500: I use this for fx only. I have a Tube Echo with no echo, just for the volume boost, a slap back delay, rotary speaker, tremolo and reverb. Call me crazy, but I prefer digital reverb over the spring reverb. From the FX Loop in the pod I run:
Custom made digital delay: very warm digital delay. Not the prettiest one but surely better than many other digital delays i have tried. Just wish the case wasn’t a tuna can. This guy made it: www.mroxy.com.br
MXR Carbon Copy: Do I really need to go over this one again?
BBE Boosta grande: Clean Volume boost. Wish it was smaller but it gets the job done.

It’s all mounted on a Pedal Train Pro.

Love my board ’cause it sounds great and it’s versatile. Freakin’ hate ’cause it’s heavy :)

Cheers!

Popularity: 6%

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Mar 2 2012

Pedal Line Friday – 3/2 – Mike Langford

Today’s pedal line is from Mike Langford. If you have a pedal line (doesn’t have to be in a board) for your rig, please email me a photo, bio, description of pedals and routing to pedallineateffectsbaydotcom. Every Friday I’ll showcase a pedal line submission. Make sure you include any links to your band or music page.

My pedal board system is homemade from 5/8 inch plywood and sports a 10 degree inclined angle. It has a hinged second shelf with two quick release latches. The pedal board houses 5 systems: a Marshall amp head pedal, a 7 component stomp box segment (includes a wah-wah), a voice-tone box, a custom computer mouse stomp box and a 10 LED (blue) lighting feature.

Pedal Line Friday - 3/2 - Mike Langford
The Marshall pedal and the 7 stomp boxes connect to my Marshall 100 watt amp head. The stomp box order is phaser (Behringer Ultra Phase Shifter), flanger (Danelectro DJ-8C Hash Brown), wah-wah (Dunlop GCB95), chorus (Washburn Lyon Chorus), echo (Danelectro D-4 FAB Echo), tremolo (Behringer Ultra Tremolo), reverb (Danelectro DJ-4 Corned Beef). The TC-Helcion voice-tone box connects to my Fender Stratocaster to my Bogen 1100 homemade PA system and the Marshall head. The computer mouse stomp box connects to my computer and it used to cycle through micro-soft power-point pages on my homemade floor monitor.

Pedal Line Friday - 3/2 - Mike Langford 2
All major board components are mounted to a piece of sheet metal with two machine screws. The pedal is then mounted to the pedal board with two sheet metal type screws. The components are spaced far enough apart so the cabling can be checked or replaced for trouble shooting.

Pedal Line Friday - 3/2 - Mike Langford 3The entire pedal board is powered by a homemade power circuit (six LM317 (TO-220) chip circuits) and a computer power supply (minus the cooling fan). It is all housed in a chopped down computer tower. This unit can power up to twelve 9 volt DC pedals, etc.

Pedal Line Friday - 3/2 - Mike Langford 4Pedal Line Friday - 3/2 - Mike Langford 6Pedal Line Friday - 3/2 - Mike Langford 5
The UP side: It’s sturdy & rugged and feels solid when stepped on, somewhat lit in dim rooms, multi-functional amp & guitar effects controls, voice & computer controls, easy to service

The DOWN side: It’s heavy & bulky and requires 9 connections to be functional. It’s home to a rats nest of electrical wires and audio cables.

Pedal Line Friday - 3/2 - Mike Langford 7
Thanks for looking, Mike L.
Email: langfordwatcoxdotnet
Band Website: http://703band.mynetworksolutions.com/

Popularity: 6%

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Feb 24 2012

Pedal Line Friday – 2/24 – Scott Casey

Last week’s Pedal Line Friday was for Casey Scott, thought I’d follow up with today’s pedal line featuring Scott Casey. If you have a pedal line (doesn’t have to be in a board) for your rig, please email me a photo, bio, description of pedals and routing to pedallineateffectsbaydotcom. Every Friday I’ll showcase a pedal line submission. Make sure you include any links to your band or music page.

Pedal Line Friday - 2/24 - Scott CaseyHello, My name is Scott Casey, I live in New Orleans and play in a country/Americana band and a funk band. The middle board is for the funk band only.

The signal path:
Budda Bud Wah
TC PolyTune
Keeley Two Knob Compressor
Xotic EP Booster (Clean Boost)
Fulltone Fatboost 3 (Tight Drive)
Menatone Howie (Dirty Rhythm & High Gain)
Way Huge Pork Loin (Low Gain)

Boss Auto Filter
Boss OC-2 Octave
Ibanez CS-9 Chorus
Line 6 M5 & Expression Pedal

Fulltone Supatrem
TC Nova Delay
Xotic Blender (Nova in loop)
Pfeiffer Leveler
TC Hall of Fame Reverb

Amps:
Boogie Tranatlantic 15 Head
At Mars Specialist Head
2 Boogie 112′s (One V30 and One EV12L)

Pedal Line Friday - 2/24 - Scott Casey Amps
Guitars:
2001 R8
1974 Bigsby Tele Deluxe

Pedal Line Friday - 2/24 - Scott Casey Guitars

Popularity: 8%

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Feb 17 2012

Pedal Line Friday – 2/17 – Casey Scott

Today’s pedal line is from Casey Scott. If you have a pedal line (doesn’t have to be in a board) for your rig, please email me a photo, bio, description of pedals and routing to pedallineateffectsbaydotcom. Every Friday I’ll showcase a pedal line submission. Make sure you include any links to your band or music page.

Hey Effects Bay!  I just recently redid my pedal board, and thought I’d share it!  The sound guys at church affectionately call it “The Flux Capacitor.”  The board is home-made out of half-inch plywood, half-inch aluminum angle, and other bits of hardware.  I also installed 8 little rubber feet on the bottom of it to keep the wood off the carpet and make it a more stable platform that won’t move around on any surface.  The pedals are attached through a variety of methods that include Velcro, zip ties, and screwing through the plywood base into the pedal’s existing “foot” holes. Here’s the board:
Pedal Line Friday - 2/17 - Casey Scott
Starting at the top right, we have an ART CoolSwitch.  This is here so that if I want to run two guitars into the board, I don’t have to switch cables. Unless I have two guitars hooked up, I leave it out of the line.  But it’s there.  Just below that is a GFS tuner.  It’s a great unit.  All the functionality of a Korg Pitch Black at half the price.  Next in line is the Way Huge Swollen Pickle Fuzz.  I have it before the Wah for now, but I may change that.  I’m gonna see if it grows on me.  Next (at the bottom right) is my cherished Tech 21 Killer Wail Wah pedal.  It’s a small wah with a huge sound.  Very full range (though it also has a vintage mode and a bass mode). It’s out of production now, so if you can find one, buy it!  Great wah for a crowded pedalboard.  Out of the wah we have the Way Huge Fat Sandwich Distortion, then the Way Huge Green Rhino Overdrive, then the Way Huge Pork Loin Soft-Clip Overdrive.  Can you spot the trend?  ;-)   From there, we go to the Line 6 M5.  This is kinda the Swiss Army Knife of my pedalboard. Next we have the Ibanez PH7 Phaser (quite an underrated pedal, IMHO – though I’m hoping to replace it with the Hardwire phaser soon), and the Digitech / Hardwire Stereo Chorus.  From there, we go back down to the Digitech Timebender Delay (which is connected to the FS3X in the upper right for memory patch switching).  After that comes the last stop on the tone express, the TC Electronic Hall of Fame Reverb.  As you may have guessed, there is an upper deck (fuzz, distortion, multi, phaser, chorus).  Under the deck are lots of cables, but you may also have noticed a blue strip just above the Swollen Pickle.  That’s actually the top of a Qwik-Lok expression pedal that I keep tucked under there that I can use with the M5 or the Timebender.  I don’t use it much, but want the option.  That little cubby hole under the upper deck is the perfect spot for that pedal to live until I need it.

Finally, in the upper right we have the power strip.  This is just an industrial quality power strip from the home-improvement store.  Everything is powered by a Godlyke PowerAll adapter (except the M5 and Timebender, they have their own power supplies).  Believe it or not, this is a very quiet rig, I think in part because I have a space on the power strip to plug in my amp.  Having everything on the same circuit really reduces any hum or ground loops.  That’s about it.  I’ll probably be tweaking it some over the next few weeks, but I doubt it will change for quite some time.  With this board and my Parker Fly Deluxe and Egnater Rebel amp, there’s not much tonal ground I can’t cover.  Thanks for letting me share.

Popularity: 7%

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Feb 10 2012

Pedal Line Friday – 2/10 – Brian Theoret

Today’s pedal line is from Brian Theoret. If you have a pedal line (doesn’t have to be in a board) for your rig, please email me a photo, bio, description of pedals and routing to pedallineateffectsbaydotcom. Every Friday I’ll showcase a pedal line submission. Make sure you include any links to your band or music page.

Pedal Line Friday - 2/10 - Brian TheoretHi there, I love Effects Bay and often find myself just waiting for Friday to com around just so I can check out the latest Pedal Line Friday.  It is one of my favorite spots to check out online these days.

I started putting this collection of pedals together a few years ago, adding one at a time here and there while I fine-tuned various sounds I wanted to emulate.  I started off with Chorus and worked my way up to my most recent two additions, the Boss BD-2 Blues Driver and the Boss TR-2 Tremolo.

Please visit my Facebook, Twitter, Reverbnation, or homepage to hear some original tunes, see what we are up to, or just to say hi:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Barlow-Saints/321073286517
http://www.twitter.com/thebarlowsaints
http://www.reverbnation.com/thebarlowsaints
http://www.barlowsaints.com

Pedal Routing:

- Boss NS-2 Noise Suppressor – I mostly use this to cut off my sound if I’m switching instruments mid-show.  It is great for cutting out any unwanted noise as well.
- Fender PT-10 – Your basic tuner.  Works like it should, does what it’s supposed to.
- MXR EVH Phase 90 – Great phaser with a little extra EVH edge.
- Danelectro Milkshake – My ol’ standby chorus pedal.  Simple controls, yet sounds great.
- Boss BD-2 Blues Driver – This is the only driver/distortion pedal that I have found that works amazingly with both my electric AND my acoustic.  You can get amazingly diverse sounds out of this, anything from face melting to warm blues.  I tend to lean more towards to blues.
- Boss TR-2 Tremolo – It’s a pretty standard tremolo.  I really enjoy the various types of tremolo I can get out of this pedal.  I’d like to check out The Tremolessence by Dr. Scientist.  From what I hear, it is one of the best sounding tremolo pedals around today.
- Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
- Boss DD-20 Giga Delay – There are loads of things I can do with this pedal.  Anything from Sound on Sound to Modulation, it does its job beautifully.
- Morley Power Wah Volume – Great double duty pedal.

Thanks!
Brian

Popularity: 5%

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Feb 3 2012

Pedal Line Friday – 2/3 – Andrew Foster

Today’s pedal line is from Andrew Foster. If you have a pedal line (doesn’t have to be in a board) for your rig, please email me a photo, bio, description of pedals and routing to pedallineateffectsbaydotcom. Every Friday I’ll showcase a pedal line submission. Make sure you include any links to your band or music page.

Pedal Line Friday - 2/3 - Andrew FosterThe everyman Psychedelic Board

Excellent site for us guitar geeks out there and the world of effects is a vast one! I thought id submit my board as it could be one for people who havent got the money for the lovely boutique effects we all want, but i get some great results with them.

I recently did a gig in a Theatre that is up on my website to listen to using this board throughout. Its the everymans Psychedelic Pedal Board!

Guitarman Tuner:
Tuning although imperative, is something I’ve never understood why people spend £200 on a pedal for. Its not going to sort your terribly set up guitar to stay in tune! This is noise free, extremely cheap, accurate, with a bypass for not annoying the crowd. Job done!

Boss SD1 Super Overdrive
:
We all know what this does! Its the old faithful. I bought this in 1995 and have used it ever since. Its a great pedal for various musical genres and emulates that driven amp sound very well. A stage one overdrive for the start of the chain.

Artec Classic Fuzztone:
This thing is strange! Its a germanium pedal that is a real animal to control. It has some quite nasty top end that needs to be tamed but if you know what your doing with it you can get some really weird fuzz sounds like the ones they used for soloing in the 60′s Psychedelia. Not for the lazy guitarist it completely kills the guitars tone and transforms it into something quite strange, but if you like that, then Fuzz it up! Your mind will be expanded!

Digitech Clapton Crossroads:
This pedal is my main distortion. It had some jib from the press saying the acoustic tone, setting wasn’t good enough, don’t use it then! The Distortion and overdrive settings really are authentic and if your careful of the natural “suck” of the distortion, for a guitar tone that emulates a valve amp at the top of its headroom you wont look back. This is one underrated pedal. Its all over my live record (www.andrewfostermusic.co.uk)

Danelectro Cool cat Tremolo:
This little cheap pedal has some gorgeous vintage tremolo tones in it and works great for old skool rock & roll right up to Johnny Marr nuttiness when used in conjunction with an overdrive. Again I’ve had this for years.

Ibanez DE7 Delay:
This is my favourite pedal I’ve ever bought and i swear by it. The range of use is exceptional with all delay tones that you could think of. I prefer and use the vintage echo setting the most as it suits my style of music, but you can get your Edge and Greenwood delays if you wish. Slap back, long Gilmore solos, long repeats its all there with a complimentary feel that doesn’t kill the guitars tone.

Storm Octave….?????
Now this is something i was hoping Effects Bay could shed some light on! Its the strangest Octave I’ve ever heard with a habit of doing what it wants, but what a sound! Apparently its late seventies, but i cant find any info on it. With one a 9v battery and no power socket i haven’t adapted it yet to the board for live use, but if i did everything would sound like Jack White so maybe i wont!

My amps are Vox AC30 vr, Vox AC4 through a 70s Marshall Cab, and a Session Rockette 50.

Many thanks Effects bay keep up the good work!

Andy

Pedal Line Friday – 2/3 – Andrew Foster

Popularity: 7%

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Jan 27 2012

Pedal Line Friday – 1/27 – A. Bovara

Today’s pedal line is from A. Bovara. If you have a pedal line (doesn’t have to be in a board) for your rig, please email me a photo, bio, description of pedals and routing to pedallineateffectsbaydotcom. Every Friday I’ll showcase a pedal line submission. Make sure you include any links to your band or music page.

Pedal Line Friday - 1/27 - A. BovaraThis is my working board. I used it to record my latest solo album. You can hear it here:
No Place for the Dead

I only route my pedals one way, from beginning to the beginning to the end.

Bass (Shamray Custom or ESP Ltd. F-205) >
ISP Decimator G String >
Behringer BLE100 Bass Limiter Enhancer >
Boss GEB-7 Bass EQ >
EHX Octave Multiplexer >
Delta Fuzz (BYOC Ampeg Scrambler clone) >
EHX Metal Muff w/ Top Boost >
Dunlop Bass CryBaby >
Boss ODB-3 Bass Overdrive >
Morley PBA-2 Dual Bass Wah >
Boss BF-2 Flanger >
Line 6 Echo Park >
Boss LMB-3 Bass Limiter Enhancer >
ISP Decimator G String (again) >
Mark Bass CMD 102-P.

Sitting on an SKB-PS-45

ISP Decimator G String- Bass in. This is my favorite pedal. For all the sounds I get out of everything else, without this pedal all anything would sound like is cosmic microwave background radiation.

Behringer BLE100 Bass Limiter Enhancer- This is the first of my two limiter/enhancer pedals. The enhancer knob might as well be re-titled as, high pitch hiss mix. Other than having flimsy feeling controls it works just as good as the Boss Limiter later on in my line. This Hi-C carton helps keep things even when I switch from deep low end to clangier highs, since both my basses have pretty strong onboard EQ.

Boss GEB-7 Bass EQ- I bought this pedal before I knew what to do with it. I used to hate it. Now that I have learned that sliders, or knobs for that matter, don’t have to maxed out one way or the other, I really like the pedal. EQ is a powerful thing, just a dab’ll do ya.

EHX Octave Multiplexer- I made this as a deaf trade. I never heard it before in my life; I didn’t even check any YouTube demos. I find I am really happy with it. It’s nice for simple harmonies with myself and can thicken up bass very well. It’s part one of a happy accident.

Delta Fuzz (BYOC Ampeg Scrambler clone)- This is part two of the happy accident. I bought this from Build Your Own Clone because it was one of the cheaper kits they had. I wanted it so my wife could do some doodles on it and I would have something from her on my board. She is the one who named it “Delta Fuzz”. I was going to call it, “Octave Up Fuzz Pedal”. It is a fuzz with some subtle octave up change happening. She called it “Delta” because of that subtle change in harmonic pitch. Anyway, I discovered that putting the octave down EHX in front of this octave up fuzz created some of the most terrorizing signal distortion I’ve ever heard. The Multiplexer into the Delta Fuzz is unlike any distortion/pitch switch out there. I contemplated getting a WMD Geiger Counter, then this happened and I’m happy enough.

EHX Metal Muff w/ Top Boost- This is my go to distortion pedal. I usually like to run distortion EQ flat, but since this is high end focused, and I am a bass player, I had to bump up the lows and mids to compensate. When I do want the high end splatter it’s as easy as kicking in the Top Boost.

Dunlop Bass Cry Baby- My first wah pedal. I hate that it is a click to engage pedal, but I do really like its tone. It’s a much…thicker(?)… sound than the Morley. I need to get around to doing the step on to engage mod. It sounds really nice sitting between my two main distortion pedals, the Crybaby acts on the Metal Muff while the ODB-3 acts on the Crybaby. I can make it scream like Dax Riggs in 1994.

Boss ODB-3 Bass Overdrive- This is a love it or hate it bass player standard. It has a smooth overdrive, like a steady static but hearty. It’s nice to be able to blend the distortion with the dry signal here.

Morley PBA-2 Dual Bass Wah- I love that this is an instant engage pedal. It has a much smoother tone sweep than the Crybaby, but isn’t as thick. It does great as an effect filter. When I have the octave and two distortions engaged, my Morley can bring the entire line from dead wood to a raging fire of sonic eruption.

Boss BF-2 Flanger- I really like this flanger.

Line 6 Echo Park- The Echo Park is pretty versatile, but that’s mostly lost on me as I only use it for two different things. I use the normal delay, quarter note type, with tap delay timing. It’s cool to get a delay/echo just how you like it while playing, instead of tooling around with knobs while you should be plucking strings. This pedal does not work with the G-String on. I guess the G-string picks the echo up as noise and filters it out; so, I have to be careful to have the G-String off when I use this. Except, that is, when I use the “Swell” setting. The swell setting combined with the filtering of the G-string make an interesting volume rise sound, similar to what the Boss Slow Gear did (but better).

Boss LMB-3 Bass Limiter Enhancer- My second limiter in the series. With all my gain stages (EQ, Delta Fuzz, Metal Muff, ODB-3, Morley Wah) this guy helps me even everything out. It is especially important when I use the Delta Fuzz, as it doesn’t have a volume output control and bumps up the volume a little. The Delta Fuzz isn’t too bad when it’s on by itself, but when combined with either other dirt pedal the volume jumps can get pretty bad. This limiter takes care of these problems.

ISP Decimator G String- (again)- effects return.

Pedal Line Friday - 1/27 - A. Bovara
This smaller board is my DOD board, Screem for Bleed (Feat. Gouge, Twist, Crank, and Harm)
This is my tribute to all the pedals I wanted, but couldn’t afford, when I started playing bass in the mid-90′s. It is my prize collection of the craziest, cult followingist, hard to find, unnecessarily expensive DOD pedals.

The route is:
Bass (Shamray Custom or ESP Ltd. F-205)>
DOD FX32 Meat Box
DOD FX13 Gonkulator Modulator
DOD FX76 Punkifier
DOD FX33 Buzz Box
Mark Bass CMD 102-P.

Tied with some twine to an old board I tore off an abandoned barn.

I also gave each pedal a name, to be in line with the crazy DOD knob names. I think the names are somewhat reflective of what the pedal does, to either your signal or your ears.

DOD FX32 Meat Box, aka Gouge- This pedal digs deep into the low end frequency range, almost sub-sonic, and boosts the 30 Hz and 60 Hz frequencies. The low end you can pump out of this slab will tear your flesh down through your bone.

DOD FX13 Gonkulator Modulator, aka Twist- Right up front, the Gonk is a simple toned ring modulator with a built in distortion circuit. However, if you play it just right, this pedal sounds like it can twist your pitches around. For instance when playing three notes close in pitch, the note that is highest in pitch on your neck will come out as the lowest pitch from the Gonk. Crazy.

DOD FX76 Punkifier, aka Crank- Some good ol’ screamin’ demon distortion. It’s pretty simple, this box can crank up your signal so that it sounds like you’ve been slapped in the ear with a pan of hot oil.

DOD FX33 Buzz Box, aka Harm- This pedal has no consideration for the feelings or emotions of any signal coming into it. It’ll break your sound down to something akin to a jar full of M-80′s and chainsaws. If you’ve ever wanted to turn you ax into a dirt bike simulator, this is your pedal. If you’ve ever wanted the sound of broken speakers without breaking your speakers, this is your box. If you’ve ever wanted to harm the hearing of those around you, this is a good place to start.

I play with this board every once in a while just to tool around. It’s pretty fun, although I sometime worry about my amp, speakers, and windows. Totally brootuhlz.

-
A. Bovara

Popularity: 9%

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Jan 20 2012

Pedal Line Friday – 1/20 – Michael Stettes

Today’s pedal line is from Michael Stettes. If you have a pedal line (doesn’t have to be in a board) for your rig, please email me a photo, bio, description of pedals and routing to pedallineateffectsbaydotcom. Every Friday I’ll showcase a pedal line submission. Make sure you include any links to your band or music page.

Pedal Line Friday - 1/20 - Michael StettesI play bass (and do some light synth work) in Sam Cooper & The Sleepwalkers, a Wilco-ish, Sun Kil Moon-y sort of band that I love dearly. We just did a winter EP called “Snow” and you can download the three songs off it for FREE at http://samcoopersolo.bandcamp.com/releases. It includes an original as well as two covers. So if you wanna hear some slackers put their own spin on “Kiss From a Rose” as well as the Christmas classic, “Walking in the Air,” boom, do it. I mean, it’s friggin’ Seal, man. Get some.

Pedal Line Friday - 1/20 - Michael Stettes BassThe Bass: I’m only using one bass guitar right now–a MIM Fender P-bass that’s been completely gutted, sanded down, and rebuilt to emulate a 60′s P-bass in every way. Electronics have been replaced, frets have been sanded, and it’s been repainted with a nitrocellulose laquer (ReRanch Sonic Blue) with the headstock matched. The coat has started to become a little seafoamy with time, but that’s just fine. Here are a few pics, one with me in it from a gig a little while ago. The pic with the driftwood came from the luthier who sold it to me, and he didn’t include the tugbar, but I wouldn’t have used it anyway. I also put a sizable nick in the headstock that I’m irked about, but like the luthier told me to do when I bought it from him, I’ve been “playing the hell out of it.”

The Board: I use a modified Pedal Pad AXSII. It’s really heavy but it’s super durable. I loved the board but since I bought it used, the carpet wasn’t in the best condition. I ripped it off, painted the bare wood black, and drilled some 12″x12″ aluminum sheets into it. They’re lightweight, and good for adhesive strips of velcro. I’m thinking of modding it further by drilling a handle between the wooden flaps so I can lift both up at once.

The Power: I use a Voodoo Labs Pedal Power 2 and have a Visual Sound 1-Spot plugged into the PP2′s outlet. The only thing I don’t like about the PP2 is the fact that because the barrel connectors are straight, it’s hard to fit them in tight spaces, like on pedals with 9v jacks on the side right next to the jacks. That’s where the 1-spot’s angled connectors come in. I have the PP2 attached with velcro to the underside of one of the flaps, reinforced by super glue. Super-glue is awesome. I’ve noticed some minor noise that I think is likely ground-loop related and cuased by the daisy chain, so I’ll likely get a Voodoo Lab ISO-5 at some point to supplement MAH POWAH.

The Cables: Most of the connections on the board are made using Planet Waves Solderless Pedal Board Cables. I strongly recommend them. Easy to make and use. I have a couple of DiMarzio Patch Cables, an Armor Gold one, and a few cheapies of origins unknown. I use a Monster Rock cable from the guitar to the board. People say Monster is overrated, and that’s probably true, but their Rock cables coil extremely well, look good, and have never given me an issue. From the board to the amp, I use an Armor Gold cable.

Pedal Line Friday - 1/20 - Michael Stettes 2Korg Pitchblack Tuner: Nice and bright. Does its job and does it well. The footswitch has gotten a little glitchy over the years and I might repair it soon. I’d prolly get another if I had to replace it.

Boss DF-2 Super Feedbacker & Distortion: Many reviews knock the dirt of this pedal, but I actually dig it. However, I don’t use this as a dirt pedal live. I solely use it for its feedback function in combination with my other pedals to create cool, droney soundscapin’, which is why I don’t mind it being in front of the compressor. I’ve toyed with the idea of getting the new Boss FB-2 Feedbacker/Booster as a replacement, and storing the SF-2 for safekeeping since it’s discontinued. Oh, and I had a guy put a purple LED in mine, because fuck red.

Ashdown Dual Band Compressor: A buddy of mine had this sitting around his house and just gave it to me. I had never messed with a bass compressor pedal before. I was definitely missing out. I almost always leave it on now. It’s got a pretty big footprint, but I love the sound it gives me. Plus, the EQ on it is really powerful.

Fender Sub-Lime Bass Fuzz: What a cool pedal in both looks and sounds. Rockin’ ballsy vintage bass fuzz. Comes with a price though: learning curve, weighs a bit, and some of the controls are under the pedal. I’ve thought about having it rehoused by Walrus Audio and renaming it the “Sub-lemon-al Bass Fuzz” (see what I did there?). Still, I love it. This is my go-to pedal for dirt live. I stack it with the El Oso if I need even more.

Devi Ever U.S. Fuzz: Gated, sputtery doom. Lacks a little low end, but I can adjust the amp for that and it’s good for smooth, synthy, saw-like fuzz. It’s actually off my board now (I had stolen it from my guitarist and he wanted it back, d’oh!) I now have a clone of the U.S. Fuzz that Noisekick FX did for me called the “DEUS,” which means “GOD” in Latin, but also pays tribute to the original: Devi Ever US. The clone has an an additional toggle switch for more low end. I combine it with the Hummingbird for cool pulse sounds.

Heavy Electronics El Oso Bass Distortion: Use this when I want a mostly clean tone with a background of sizzle. Thank you Blend knob! Sayer, the proprietor of Heavy Electronics, is an awesome chappie, and you really can’t go wrong with his pedals. Ever.

Earthquaker Devices Hummingbird: This is essentially a tremolo, but Earthquaker refers to it as a repeat percussion pedal, which is probably more accurate. It’s all chop, can get really fast, and its depth goes all the way to silence. Exceptional pedal.

Danelectro Cool Cat Chorus: While this can definitely add some thickness to the dirt and the drones, this is strictly a placeholder pedal. I will soon be replacing this with the Source Audio Soundblox Bass Envelope Filter. And yes, I’m getting the Hot Hands to go with it. I’m torn on whether or not I should get the “Pro” version of it. If I get a bigger board though, I’ll keep the Cool Cat because I like the spund of chorus on bass, but in that instance, I may replace it with the Tech 21 Bass Boost Chorus.

MXR Carbon Copy Analog Delay: You see this bad boy everywhere for a reason. Solid, dark, analog delay. I’ve tweaked the internal controls for more modulation.

Line 6 Verbzilla: There are two main things I use this reverb for. The first is the Octo setting for thickening the feedbacker drones and for other shimmery things. The second is the Ducking verb, which is really ideal for bass guitar. It responds to your playing dynamics. The louder you play, the less reverb you hear, so your signal isn’t muddied, and when a note rings out, the verb fades back in. Plus, the Verbzilla has a trails switch that I think is ideal for delay/reverb pedals.

The Amp: Nothing fancy. Just a little Ampeg BA115 Combo.

Thanks for reading! i know I probably included a lot of details you don’t care about, but I personally like reading that kind of stuff, and thought others might as well! Again! Free songs! Seal! http://samcoopersolo.bandcamp.com/releases

Popularity: 8%

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Jan 13 2012

Pedal Line Friday – 1/13 – Adam Parker

Today’s pedal line is from Adam Parker. If you have a pedal line (doesn’t have to be in a board) for your rig, please email me a photo, bio, description of pedals and routing to pedallineateffectsbaydotcom. Every Friday I’ll showcase a pedal line submission. Make sure you include any links to your band or music page.

Pedal Line Friday - 1/13 - Adam ParkerHey there, I love your site and keep up with you guys daily through Facebook.

I wanted to submit my pedal line to you before the year ended, because it’s a collection that started just under 12 months ago in January. Everything shown in the picture attached has been acquired since then. I sold some unused gear of mine, and the simple want for a nice tremolo pedal quickly turned into a mild obsession of the ever growing world of boutique guitar effects and their builders.

My current group, Honest Engine, is a recording only project- so I keep my pedals un-mounted and unwired which I feel encourages me to constantly experiment with various combinations and order.  Also, while recording I typically only run my signal just through the pedals that I am using for that particular part.  I feel that this practice helps keep down excess noise.

Please visit my Facebook or ReverbNation page to hear some of the Honest Engine material, or to just say hello:
http://www.facebook.com/honestenginemusic
http://www.reverbnation.com/honestengine

Pedals listed by builder/brand:

VFE Effects:
Alpha Dog – Vintage distortion, capable of achieving some really dirty old combo amp sounds (and more). [info]

Blueprint Delay – Great all around analog voiced delay.  Extremely versatile for subtle effect to intense modulation. [info]

Enterprise – Great phaser, very thick and warm. [info]

Catalinbread:
Manx Loaghtan Fuzz - A Ram’s head Big Muff Clone.  This pedal is a beast. [info]

Montavillian Echo – Digitally voiced delay to mimic old echo tube effects.  Great for long, long delays. The self-oscillation is unreal, this is very unique sounding delay in my opinion. [info]

Dr. Scientist:
The Tremolessence – Simply put, one of (if not the) best sounding most revered tremolo pedals available today.

http://www.drscientist.ca/pedals/trem

EarthQuaker Devices:
Sea Machine – An extremely non-traditional sounding and operating chorus pedal.  It’s an analog/digital hybrid (so they say), and it very easily and quickly turns from a slight chorus to extreme modulation of tone. Basically using anything more than the Depth and Rate knobs on this pedal will take your tone into territory outside of a traditional chorus effect. That being said, it’s probably not a great substitute for a simple analog chorus, it’s definitely best when used for effects that other chorus pedals cannot achieve. [info]

Menatone:
Das Boost – A great sounding transparent, signal boost pedal. [info]

Sonic Research:
Turbo Tuner Model ST-200 – Extremely accurate, solid as a brick, easy to tune up with and the strobe is a great visual.  True bypass. [info]

Thanks
-Adam

Popularity: 5%

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Jan 6 2012

Pedal Line Friday – 1/6 – Mod Gun

Today’s pedal line is from Jon and Paul from Mod Gun. If you have a pedal line (doesn’t have to be in a board) for your rig, please email me a photo, bio, description of pedals and routing to pedallineateffectsbaydotcom. Every Friday I’ll showcase a pedal line submission. Make sure you include any links to your band or music page.

Love your site and would love to be featured on Pedal Line Friday!

Here are the pedal boards we use in the band Mod Gun. We are from the Boston area and gig regularly. Our music is available for free download at modgun.bandcamp.com. Please take it!

The first board is home made from ply wood and carpet. The red boss master switch toggles all of the modulations and time based effects on the second row on and off. I run into a dynacomp before my gain stages on the first row, and there is a second dynacomp outside of the switch’s loop at the end of my signal chain. I run my board through a 77 bassman 100 head with a 2×12 avatar cab loaded with eminence swamp thangs. For guitars I use a Gibson Les Paul 40th Anniversary model and a De Armond Starfire.

Pedal Line Friday - 1/6 - Mod Gun - Paul
The signal chain goes like this
MXR Dynacomp
Guyatone SV-2 Slow Volume
MXR M-109 6 Band Graphic EQ
MXR M-104 Distortion +
MXR M-103 Blue Box
EHX Big Muff
Fulltone Octafuzz
Dunlop Fuzz Face
Boss PSM-5 Power Supply & Master Switch

Out from the switch into:
EHX Deluxe Electric Mistress
EHX Small Clone
MXR M-101 Phase 90
Guyatone MD-3 Micro Digital Delay
Boss DD-6 Digital Delay
Boss DD-3 Digital Delay
Boss TR-2 Tremolo
Boss TU-3 Chromatic Tuner

Back into the switch:
MXR Dynacomp

The second board is our lead guitarist’s Pedal Train Pro. That’s his Fender Custom Shop 1960 Stratocaster. He also uses various other Strats. He runs his board through an Orange Rockerverb 100 into a 4×12. The following pedals run through the front of his amp:

Pedal Line Friday - 1/6 - Mod Gun - Jon
Vox V847 Wah
Xotic EP Booster
Catalinbread Ottava Magus
EHX Pog 2

The rest run through his effects loop:
EHX Little Big Muff
Zvex Fuzz Probe
EHX LPB1
Fulltone Mini Deja Vibe
Boss PH-3 Phase Shifter
Boss TR-2 Tremolo
EHX Memory Toy
EHX Freeze
Boss TU-2 Chromatic Tuner

Popularity: 9%

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