Guitar Players Love Their Pedals
I came upon this awesome, crazy, strangely awe-inspiring yet utterly terrifying
pic on facebook a few months back, and have been waiting to use it in a blog
ever since! Isn’t it amazing how history
cycles?
1. 1940’s - 1950’s: At the dawn of electric instruments in the 1940’s players
simply plugged their instrument (probably a Hawaiian guitar, now commonly known
as a lap steel) into an amp and that was it.
By the 1950’s higher end amps included "effects", we could step on
buttons labeled "reverb" and "tremolo".
The stage was set for the next big thing.
2. 1960’s: Pedals are introduced! The
earliest pedals were various crude forms of overdrive, followed by the variable
filter pedal (wah-wah), and short delay effects (phase-shifters and flangers).
3. The 1970’s: pedal mania ensued.
This is the initial emergence of the "pedal board". The well hung (pedal wise) guitar player now
sported a muff-pie, a wah pedal, a phase 90, and an MXR flanger.
4. The 1980’s: Big racks are getting all the attention! In 1985, a guitar player who wanted to be
taken seriously had to have a rack big enough to warrant a professional cartage
company carting the refrigerator-sized behemoth around. This is the erea in which I cut my
record-producer/engineer teeth; I also look at this as the low-point in modern
pop-music production. What exactly does
a guitar that’s been fed into 20-something sound mangling devices sound like
when it finally emerges out the other end?
The short answer is: crap.
5. The 1990’s: The rage against the (sound mangling) machine begins. Guitarists begin seeking out vintage guitars
and amps and, guess what? They simply
plug them into each other with a cable!
Wow, it’s back to the future!
1950’s technology is now the latest "new" thing!
6. The 2000’s: Pedal love has
returned. We are now repeating cycle #2!
Okay folks, here is the real question:
Have we all forgotten the lesson of the 1980’s? It is said that those who fail to remember
history are doomed to repeat it; will this be the case for us guitarists? Will the next big thing be a golly-gee-wiz
box that takes our guitar’s output, turns it into a stream of ones and zeros, and
then shifts and/or corrects it’s pitch, phase-shifts it, flanges it, EQ’s all
the natural tone out of it, delays it, reverberates it, reproduces a digital
sample of a guitar, excites it, morphs it with an entirely different instrument
and finally spits it out? Holy cow I
hope not! But wait; didn’t I just
describe the typical digital floor “guitar multi-processor”? Crap, it’s too late.
There is light at the end of the tunnel, though. If we keep with this progression, the next
big thing will be a guitar, an amp, and a cable.
email Vaughn About Vaughn Skow
Bye for now, my "outside" blog recommendation this
week “Hot Bottles”, a blog about
tube-based guitar amplifiers, and analog guitar effects check it out:
http://hotbottles.wordpress.com/