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1941 Fender Amp and a Nacho Banos Les Paul
rockabilly69 replied to rockabilly69's topic in Amplification and Effects
you'll love it!!! -
wow congrats skydog I saw that email, it said they're only making 40 of them?
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1941 Fender Amp and a Nacho Banos Les Paul
bolero replied to rockabilly69's topic in Amplification and Effects
I just previewed that book on google. A really good read. Will track it down & buy it thx for the headsup -
I was looking for a dedicated performance photo thread and didn't see one (apologies if I missed it!), but wanted to share a few photos since I've been playing the '94 H150 as my primary live guitar lately. Band has had a wave of local gigs lately and hoping to have debut album out August/Sept: https://makingfriendsasadults.bandcamp.com/track/bad-time
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What is 40th anniversary about it?
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Very nice!
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My H150 used a 3/8" wrench when I set it up last weekend.
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Sabeler joined the community
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1941 Fender Amp and a Nacho Banos Les Paul
Genericmusic replied to rockabilly69's topic in Amplification and Effects
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1941 Fender Amp and a Nacho Banos Les Paul
rockabilly69 replied to rockabilly69's topic in Amplification and Effects
Tim, that is one of the best music books that I've ever read. I'm glad you posted it as I hope others get turned on to it! And thanks for the nice words on my playing and listening to the song. -
1941 Fender Amp and a Nacho Banos Les Paul
Gitfiddler replied to rockabilly69's topic in Amplification and Effects
@rockabilly69...Very cool thread and great playing, as usual. You rung out that old rig. Here's another historical reference to Leo Fender (and many other heros of electric guitar and amp fame) that is a great read. https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Birth_of_Loud/VDxqDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&printsec=frontcover - Yesterday
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1941 Fender Amp and a Nacho Banos Les Paul
rockabilly69 replied to rockabilly69's topic in Amplification and Effects
Yeah I've never seen or heard of a Fender amp earlier than this one! And that Nachoburst was pretty cool too! -
1941 Fender Amp and a Nacho Banos Les Paul
bolero replied to rockabilly69's topic in Amplification and Effects
that is pretty kickass!! wow a real piece of history there too - Last week
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1941 Fender Amp and a Nacho Banos Les Paul
rockabilly69 replied to rockabilly69's topic in Amplification and Effects
Thanks DB, I am pretty lucky to know Lynn Wheelwright. When he needs someone one to demo his stuff, he usually calls me, or the other guitar player in our band Vorraro, Ryan Hawthorn. We have goten to play some seriously cool guitars and amps, stuff people dream about, and more than once, Lynn has allowed me to keep guitars/amps overnnight so I can really learn about them. Lynn is a a walking encyclopedia of knowledge when it comes to vintage electric guitar stuff, but when it comes to actually using the gear and making music with it, he loves to get feedback from Ryan and I. Check out Lynn's work on this book... https://pinecasterbook.com/the-authors/ -
1941 Fender Amp and a Nacho Banos Les Paul
DetroitBlues replied to rockabilly69's topic in Amplification and Effects
Very very cool. Getting ahold of something vintage like that is amazing. Having the skill and tools to do it justice is even better! -
I thought this might be a fun thing to talk about. Last night I spent at least 8 hours playing through a really cool historic amp, a 1941 Fender amp, which you could read about here in these two articles... https://reverb.com/news/the-vibro-set-where-fender-really-started https://www.fretboardjournal.com/video/hear-one-of-leo-fenders-first-musical-instruments/ (that's actually me playing the Strat and the ES125 in some of the videos posted) Last night I was recording the tones of the amp with some different guitars than the ones we used last time. All of them belonging to me, except for one (see below). And the owner of the amp, famous guitar historian Lynn Wheelwright, had me test it out with a new speaker that was custom made for the amp by the Jupiter Speaker company. Lynn built an external speaker cabinet for it, which was probably a good idea, because I was playing with the amp at almost wide open volume at times. The amp itself had just gone through a tune-up, so we were checking it out how to see how it was performing. The amp was plugged into a brown box voltage regulator. The amp performed great, and even after 8 hours of being on, there was no sag in tone that I could hear. And it was really a quiet amp compared to many of the vintage amps I've played through (most every model 50's tweed, and 60's blackface amps). Here's a picture of the Vibro amp (only one volume control which works on the mic channel only, no volume for the normal channel) with the external cabinet miked up as it was set up in my studio (brown box to the right)... I had some rhythm tracks recorded before Lynn got there, so I just played the lead fills on each guitar, so we could compare the sounds of each if them through the amp. I played my Strat, my Tele, and my Gretsch G6120T 55VS (DeArmonds) through it. I chose the Strat and Tele guitars because they are partscasters that I built, and both are better than my Fender Custom Shop guitars. They are three of my favorite instruments, which I have played through some great vintage amps, and Lynn really wanted to know how I felt this original '41 amp compared to these amps. We had already tested the amp with vintage guitars a while back (55 Strat, 56 LP Special, and an early sixties ES125). Lynn may have some reproductions of this amp made in the future, so we were doing some research to see how well the amp played with some modern guitars, and how it compared to modern boutique amps. I say if they got the reproduction right, this would be a cool amp to own because it has some really cool tones. Especially for someone like me, that really likes slightly dirty vintage guitar tones. It gets great clean tones with lots of harmonic content, and some pretty great dirt when cranked, but I really loved it with just a bit of hair on it. It just has a unique voice. I ran the amp through it's paces playing from whisper quiet, to rattle the external cabinet loud. And like most amps, it had it's sweet spot were it revealed the qualities of each guitar. There really wasn't a guitar that it didn't like! The only thing we hadn't tested it with was a humbucker guitar. Well Lynn just got a new Nacho Les Paul, and I told him it would be cool to test the humbucker sound with it. He was thinking the same thing, so he went home got his Nacho, and brought it back to my studio. Here it is... And we plugged it in and it sounded great. It sounded very vintage. The body was very resonant, and the pickups had the microphonics that people associate with a good PAF. The action was a little high, but low enough for me to get the job done. I got the takes with the Nacho on the first pass. I really wanted to hear more of the Nacho, but it was getting late, so I asked Lynn if he would leave it and the amp with me, so I could see I could find some really good tones. Only thing, when I was testing out the other guitars, I was going for some fast picking on the Gretsch, which had on some heavier .012 flatwounds, and I developed a blood blister on my fingerpicking hand (I rarely use a pick). So I was mainly looking to play less aggressive with the guitar while testing for tones. I thought it would be cool to find some tones that would be unique to that guitar and amp combo. While I was twiddling the volume knob on the amp, I heard this really cool acoustic like tone out of the middle position of the Nacho, very Stones like, so I wrote a little slide guitar song around it. There are three tracks, the first rhythm on the middle position, slide guitar with the bridge pickup, and a little solo with the bridge pickup for the third track. BTW I was plugged straight into the amp, no pedals here As a matter of fact if you listen closely, you can hear those Nacho pickups getting some cool compression and double tones. And the amp was just turned up enough to get a litte hair. This is what I came up with...
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Blackout joined the community
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Zekianin joined the community
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I think it's the same as G uses, most music stores should have a truss rod wrench that fits
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Gibson PAF Pickups History: Five Watt World
bolero replied to HANGAR18's topic in Amplification and Effects
hey that is a pretty great idea! And I finally watched that PAF vid, it was good! I must have just landed on that earlier quote by chance, when I previewed it -
Gibson PAF Pickups History: Five Watt World
rockabilly69 replied to HANGAR18's topic in Amplification and Effects
That's why Page tried to make his Les Paul so much like his Tele Frankly though, I kind of do the same thing. I wired my humbucker Zemaitis guitars with a high pass filter so I can make the humbuckers sound like singles when I need to. I got that idea from the PTB (Passive Treble Bass) cicuit that's in my G&L Legacy. And my Teye guitar has what's called a mood control that does the same thing. I think Page moved to the Les Paul because he preferred the way the his Paul could conjure up the heavy tones with his stage amps, and when he backed up the volumes, the PAFs could get into the Tele zone. -
Gibson PAF Pickups History: Five Watt World
bolero replied to HANGAR18's topic in Amplification and Effects
haha!! yes, there's that too -
Gibson PAF Pickups History: Five Watt World
bolero replied to HANGAR18's topic in Amplification and Effects
well, a humbucker is a single coil pickup on steroids... granted I didn't watch the whole vid, just happened to catch that bit. I'm sure he put a lot of work into it I'll check it out sometime I think I am aware of most of the PAF history though. I'm bringing a shovel to PSP so I can dig around where Pete Moreno dumped that truckload of them in the landfill back in the day -
Gibson PAF Pickups History: Five Watt World
TalismanRich replied to HANGAR18's topic in Amplification and Effects
That's exactly why people work so hard to make their LP sound just like Page's Tele on the first LZ album. They're really the same, just different! -
Gibson PAF Pickups History: Five Watt World
skydog52 replied to HANGAR18's topic in Amplification and Effects
Just pony up for one or both of these. 1959 Humbucker Collector’s Edition Series 1, | Gibson 1959 Humbucker Collector’s Edition Series 2, | Gibson -
Because the Ox population is dwindling.....