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| The Stomp Box Effects pedals and their effect on your playing. |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Pacific NW
Age: 53
Posts: 3,106
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Beatles Fuzz
Moe than likley, they used a Maestro Fuzz ( like Keith Richards on Satisfaction ) for the Revolution fuzz part. Music Yo carries the re-po unit. Have not heard it, so I don't know how close to the original it is. You could probably get a similar tone from a Tech 21 XXL, Double Drive or American Women pedal or a good Fuzz pedal. I believe John played that part with his Epiphone Casino.
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#4 (permalink) |
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Tele-Afflicted
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Los Angeles, CA, USA
Posts: 1,015
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As far as the recorded version of Revolution goes, that was not a stompbox, and it wasn't an amp. The guitar signal [pretty sure it was a Strat] went directly into the mixing board, where the engineer turned the signal up so it overdrove [is that a word] the board. Any stompbox you use will be an approximation [since the sound wasn't made with a stompbox, you can't use the "right" one], so just use one that sounds good to you, or just turn your amp way up. A dimed AC30 will sound nice and dirty. To my ears, any really distorted sound, whether from an overdriven amp or from a fuzzbox, works fine for that song.
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#5 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: They don't call it the Bluff City for nothin'
Posts: 424
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Actually, the tech boys at Abbey Road made a controlled distortion device(i.e. a fuzzbox) for the guitar in Revolution, but there was no amp involved. The guitar went straight from the newly created fuzzbox, into an EMI console.
As for live, the Maestro would be a good starting point. The older and cheaper the better. A Jordan Bosstone might be a good start as well. |
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