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Les Paul – DON'T SPOOK THE HORSE https://www.dontspookthehorse.co.uk The Neil Young Tribute Band Tue, 15 Mar 2011 20:54:57 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://www.dontspookthehorse.co.uk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/cropped-DSTH-32x32.jpg Les Paul – DON'T SPOOK THE HORSE https://www.dontspookthehorse.co.uk 32 32 Getting The Right Spirit For The Road – Mark Fawcett https://www.dontspookthehorse.co.uk/gigs/getting-the-right-spirit-for-the-road/ https://www.dontspookthehorse.co.uk/gigs/getting-the-right-spirit-for-the-road/#respond Tue, 02 Jun 2009 15:03:41 +0000 http://www.dontspookthehorse.co.uk/?p=179 As you will see from Brian’s ‘searching for a tone of gold’ articles part 1 and 2, he is the one doing the trail blazing! I was getting pretty left behind still playing my Lowden F32, and PRS/Mesa Boogie MKIV combination. It’s not just a question of sound, but the way the instruments respond. The voodoo of the gear was wrong.

It has been a pleasure of mine for the last couple of years to pop in to see Seamus Brady at vintageguitar.co.uk, based in Norwich (you might remember him from the old days when The Acoustic Centre first set up in Wapping?). I was in there one day chatting chatting, when on the wall I spied a Martin HD28. It’s only 12 years old, but it’s seen some use! And it had some Johnny Magic about it. I could hear Bob, and I could hear Neil, and to be perfectly honest I could hear myself.

I took it home to see how I got on with it (Seamus is a nice bloke), and rocked my kitchen, and Bad Fogged my music room. I played it to Brian and he said ‘If you don’t buy it, I will’. I really try not to be competitive, especially with my best mate Brian, but that was the point I had to buy it!!! I haven’t played my Lowden since. I love the head room of the Martin, and I love the fact it just works.

Mark Fawcett's Old Black Customised Gibson Les Paul

Mark's Guitar

So the worm was turning.

I have always fancied an Old Black replica, I mean who reading this hasn’t? One morning I popped into town and there hanging on the wall (damn those walls) was a Les Paul Classic reissue 1960 in Ebony. Okay I know this isn’t the real deal, but it is black. The chambered body makes it light and the tone really vibrant. And I liked the neck straight away. Actually it’s not much like other Les Pauls I’ve played at all. More like a tele, if you’ll believe me. So after a little business it became mine to vandalise.

Truth be known, it was too shiny and new to vandalise!!! I couldn’t do it. It will become Old with use. The changes I did make where:

  1. Replace neck pickup with Bareknuckles Mississippi Queen P90
  2. Replace bridge pickup with Seymour Duncan antiquities II firebird
  3. Replace pick guard and trussrod cover with custom made chrome versions
  4. Fit Bigsby (well I watched Brian do this for me!!!)
  5. Replace machine heads with Grover Locking rotomatics
  6. Fit the Wilkinson roller bridge – ouch, I know purists, I just want it stay in tune as much as possible!
  7. Fit mini switch to facilitate the ‘firebird straight to the jack’ mod. Ice pick.
Mark's 1959 Fender Tweed Deluxe

Mark's Amp

So then there was the amp issue. I had started messing with a Fender reissue tube reverb unit, a Fender Super Champ and a Rodenberg Overdrive Pedal (in fact this is what I used on the Harbour Room live recordings, check out Like A Hurricane particularly), and I reckon I was starting to get a good sound, but by comparison with Brian’s vintage and home made amps the Super Champ sounds so small. I was just thinking this when Brian tipped me off about an original 1959 Tweed Deluxe for sale in London. so I had no choice 😉 This amp is amazing. It is simply the best and most musical sounding amp I’ve ever used. And it certainly looks 50 years old.

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Searching for that Tone of Gold by Brian Eade https://www.dontspookthehorse.co.uk/gigs/searching-for-that-tone-of-gold-by-brian-eade/ https://www.dontspookthehorse.co.uk/gigs/searching-for-that-tone-of-gold-by-brian-eade/#respond Fri, 25 Jul 2008 08:17:16 +0000 http://www.dontspookthehorse.co.uk/wp/?p=42 When the Neil Young Tribute Band first started, my only electric guitar was a Music Man EVH, just about the most un-“Neil Young” guitar there is ! Not able to afford a ’53 Les Paul or a Gretsch White Falcon, I set out looking for a cheap alternative that could look and sound the part, I like a challenge!

East coast Music sold me a De-Armond M75, after letting me play all 15 they had in stock, the one I chose was black with a Bigsby style trem and De-Armond pickups, I couldn’t believe the value for money at £175.

The first modifications were purely cosmetic,I made a brass pickguard and control plates,then fitted them with a Les Paul Rhythm Treble switch plate. This guitar was then simply plugged into my existing setup, a Galien Kreuger 250ML amp (providing distortion and feedback only) into a Fender ’63 re-issue Reverb and finally my regular amp, a 1959 Teed Fender Tremolux.

As the shows got bigger, I added an ancient Dod Octave pedal,which is noisy and unreliable, it doesn’t bypass properly and often gets the notes it’s supposed to be octaving wrong! I’m sure “Neil” would love it like I do, I’ve re wired it a couple of times when it’s fallen apart ! Next I added a Boss Flanger, which I always use when I’m playing rhythm on “Like a Hurricane”.

Sometimes my little amp has trouble keeping up with Mark’s Boogie, so I have an A/B/Y box, which splits the signal into a second amp, usually a 1969 Marshall combo, or occasionally my 1972 Hiwatt 100.

After roadtesting the guitar, I decided it sounded a little thin,so I changed the single coil pickups, first the rear one, for a Brandoni Firebird, (incredible quality for £40!). This so impressed me, that I later changed the front pickup for a Brandoni Filtertron. They’ve been in there ever since as they sound great. I later changed the bridge (the original,I thought was too high-tech, with roller saddles, not at all “Neil”), the replacement is a solid cast Bigsby, which seems to add tone, I also changed the trem for an original US Bigsby which, although no better, looks more the part! All the changes cost around £150.

My amp, I later found out, is pretty close to Neils, his being a 1959 Tweed Delux. Some friends and I built copies of it to try and preserve the original; they’re called “Half Breades”!  They sound pretty close but even louder,I often use my old amp for smaller venues though. The main output valves are Westinghouse 6V6 and the pre-amp valves, good old Mullards.

Brian's Reverb and Tremolux clones

Brian's Reverb and Tremolux clones

I’m constantly fiddling with the setup, I’ve recently built a valve reverb unit, (Mark now has the Fender re-issue).  The output valve is an Adzam 6K6, which I’ve discovered makes a BIG difference. The GK 250ML has now been replaced with a home made pedal board, containing, in this order, the Dod Octaver (for “Hey Hey, My My”), a home made valve pre-amp (on all the time!), a Marshall Guv’nor II, Boss NS2 (needed with all these valves!), Boss Flanger and an Ernie Ball Volume pedal. The reverb is always first in the chain, before the pedals, to get that authentic,”Live Rust” sound. The GK 250ML is always still around as backup, however.

If you ever catch me playing with my other band, Colour Radio, I’ll be playing one of two Telecasters, a Fender ’52 re-issue, or a home made one with a rosewood fingerboard, my first guitar was a Tele, so I keep going back to them.

That’s it so far, the other stuff never changes, a 1972 Matin D18 acoustic, 1917 Savana Banjo mandolin (£5 from a car boot sale, in bits, so I re-built it!), Marine Band harmonicas and Herco Flex50 picks.

BEE.

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