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By Barry Cleveland on
1/18/2013 1:32 PM
... or at least the Fourth Movement. Longtime GP
readers may remember Joe Gore from when he worked at the magazine as an
editor. Those same folks, and others, may also know him from his work
with Tom Waits, PJ Harvey, Jon Hassell, Lisa Germano, Tracy Chapman, and
many more great artists—or his current duo with drummer Dawn
Richardson, Mental 99. But Joe also blogs at tonefiend.com, where he posted Meet the REAL Spiders From Mars! Bartók on Electric Guitar.
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By Art Thompson on
1/11/2013 9:14 AM
Based on Jim Weider’s original design, the Big-T ($125 street) is designed to enhance the sound of your Tele’s neck-pickup setting. Hand-wound by Lindy Fralin, the Big-T is highly specialized pickup that delivers a rich, beefy tone with clear, well-detailed highs, and enough output to balance well with hot bridge pickups. I installed one in a G&L ASAT Classic, and the Big-T proved more useful for rhythm and lead playing than other neck pickups I’ve tried in this guitar.
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by Jimmy Leslie
By Kevin Owens on
1/7/2013 1:45 PM
I admit I never wanted to see an over-the-hill Zeppelin because prime
Zeppelin always meant so much to me. I kept afar of any footage from the
2007 reunion show with John Bonham’s son Jason filling in on drums, but
now it’s out on film and in all sorts of take-home formats including
the 2DVD/2CD package I just had to check out. I’m so happy I did. The
main thing going for Celebration Day is the sound. Led Zeppelin may not
look like the rock gods of yore, but they sound amazing, and the sound
of these discs is clear, deep, and punchy. Zep Fan’s main reason not to
be interested in Celebration Day is Zeppelin’s 2003 double live CD set
How the West Was Won and the associated eponymous dual-DVD that
immediately became the definitive video document of the band during its
1970s glory decade. But nothing on either is sonically close to
Celebration Day’s state-of-the art sparkle. These audio CDs...
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By Art Thompson on
1/4/2013 12:15 PM
 The 5E3 “narrow panel” Fender Deluxe is one of the most sought after vintage combos due to its proven performance as a blues/roots-rock amp par excellence. Victoria’s recreation of this 14-watt tweed classic is the model 20112 ($2,095 retail), which features the original-style circuit using two Russian made Tung-Sol 6V6GT power tubes. The cathode-biasing scheme also allows you to change tubes without having to readjust the bias (handy from a maintenance standpoint), and the other tubes are a NOS CBS-made 5Y3WGTA rectifier, a NOS GE 12AY7 in the preamp (an E-H Gold 12AY7 comes stock), and a TAD 12AX7 phase inverter. The beautifully crafted combo shows superb attention to detail in all areas, including the tidy handwired circuit on a vintage-style fiber board, which sports high-grade Sprague Atom electrolytics, custom “orange drop” audio caps, and carbon-comp resistors....
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By Art Thompson on
1/1/2013 7:51 PM
 Delay...
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