Markedman said:Did you look in your fingers? That's where Kirk gets his tone.
Markedman said:Surely you jest. Kirk Hammett will sound like Kirk Hammett on any amp, you know that.
Ted Nugent, Eddie Van Halen. Ted thought Ed had a black box after he played Ed's rig so Ed went over to Ted's rig, turned a few knobs and blasted Ted. Ted tells the story better. Tone's in the man.
Markedman said:"Whats your point exactly?" Tone is in the fingers!
The Ted/Ed story is well documented. Type it into the web for yourself.
Markedman said:"Absolutely. Van Halen, it was their first tour; it was '78, '77-'78, it was the biggest tour on planet Earth. I was a bad ************ in 1978, and I heard all about this Eddie Van Halen guy.
"And they're out there doing a soundcheck - we want them to have a good checking of their sound, and I'm listening to the guys and, of course, they're just world-class musicians, Alex [Van Halen, drums] and Michael [Anthony, bass] and Eddie and David [Lee Roth, vocals], and they're out there with this brand new thing called Van Halen, and it was a monster.
"And I'm listening to this screamy high end - he [Eddie] had a little bit of phaser going on, he had some kind of electronic warfare going through his amplifier that he completely tore apart and rebuilt - he's just an electronic maniac.
"And I listen, and I'm going, 'God ****, what kind of an instrument and an amp does that son of a ***** use?!'
"I went out to watch those guys and they went to talk about the tour, the music, the inspirations, and the tone, and he goes, 'How did you get that Byrdland to sound like that?'
"And I saw my Byrdland right there, and I said, 'Well, here, plug this son of a ***** in, we'll keep it in my Fender amps.' And of course, my Byrdland feeds into that low volume, the Byrdland wants to eat your phase.
"So, Eddie's playing, but once he got out of the feedback - there's a feedback that will literally eat the notes you're trying to play. The feedback is so strong, you could go for a scale in the key of B, but the feedback is resonating in the key of D and there's not a **** thing you can do about it.
"So he repositioned himself, he started pulling these mystical licks, and it sounded just like him, but out of my rig.
"And I grabbed his Strat - his mutilated, bastardized Strat - and I started playing 'Dog Eat Dog' or 'Cat Scratch [Fever]' or something, and it sounded just like me.
"If music is anything, it's not only the universal language, not just the universal communication for people anywhere in the world at any time, but it's also a personal execution of the musician's sonic vision.
"And when you practice your balls off, when you dedicate yourself to be the very best you can be, which describes every musician that you and I love...
"It's you, not even the Fenders or the Gibsons. It's you coming through your musical vision and attack of the instrument. You could have an amp and a guitar, don't change any of the settings and put 10 of your favorite guitar players on that set and it will sound just like each individual.
"So it is a mystical Samurai adventure of self-expression, and going right back to my opening statement with you many years ago, 'We love the f%&# music.' If you love it with all your heart and soul, you're gonna put all your heart and soul into making your music, and that's why it's so contagious and universal."
Markedman said:You're right, you win. If you could just get Kirk to tell you his settings, you will sound just like Kirk. Rock on! 8)
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