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SurfGuitar101 Forums » Gear »

Permalink Who uses a non-traditional surf guitar rig?

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Who uses a non-traditional surf guitar rig?

I am wondering what people out there are using to play surf beyond the ideal "surf rig". I am talking guitars, amps, reverb unit and effects. Just interested to see how people get their own surf sound with out following the standard equation.

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 23, 2009 20:10:10

I use an ES-355 in my non-traditional surf rig. I also play it through the non-traditional Super Reverb with 2 delay pedals, tremolo pedal, tubescreamer, rat, Arbiter fuzz, and a Tuner. I also intonate my guitar which a select bunch do not do. Sometimes I use my D-28 if I want to do an unplugged set at the Rec Hall.

That said, my non-traditional surf rig sucks even though the gear is enough to give a room full of musicians a hard-on. So, I also have a traditional surf rig, or a couple traditional rigs that really gets a much better instrumental sound.

zak
... I use an overdrive in front of my reverb tank.

Before I raised the pups on my SGV-300 I was using a Boss Blues Driver, set clean, just to drive the springs in my tank harder. Is that your goal or is it tone?

If ya listen to those "Strat-a-holic" guys, then I do..................ed

Traditional........speak softly and play through a big blonde amp. Did I mention that I still like big blonde amps?

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 23, 2009 20:10:20

I've been using an early 1980's Garnet Revolution 2 tube amp (with built in reverb, and master volume) for road gigs lately. The sound is very traditional though. But it's not a Fender Very Happy

When I first started, I had a Strat with lace sensors, running through a Roland JC 120, or a Peavey 5150 half stack with a delay pedal (no 'verb)...yikes! Embarassed

I still use that Strat, but it now has lipsticks in it.

Rev

PS: I still use my Brownface Fender Vibrasonic, and reverb tank in town though.

Canadian Surf

http://www.urbansurfkings.com/

surferXmatt
Who uses a non-traditional surf guitar rig?

I am wondering what people out there are using to play surf beyond the ideal "surf rig". I am talking guitars, amps, reverb unit and effects. Just interested to see how people get their own surf sound with out following the standard equation.

What are you really getting at? Are you trying to piece together a rig and save money? Are you trying to figure out a super-flexible rig that also nails surf sounds? See the answer to those about 20 other questions that come to mind when I see your question will result in a different answer.

See most Surf guys don't just want to play Surf music. They want to play Surf music through the "right" guitar, into the "right" effects, and through the "right" amps. So "the best" gear is almost always going to have Fender on the label, and it better be the "right" circuit in the amp and tank Twisted Evil Kinda like asking an Eskimo what they like chew. The answer is going to be whale blubber... Nothing wrong with whale blubber by the way. If that's what you want to chew, and you take pride in it, by all means score a showman and a vintage tank. I'll be quite impressed. I think the stuff is not only amazing sounding but it's beautiful and historically significant too. The value WILL rise...

But those of us who have played other genres know you can get amazing sounds out of other gear. I've played through some tube preamps that sound amazing for a clean "fender" sound, and with a powerful poweramp you have unlimited head room. And they are alot more versatile. That's the direction I would look in if I were you and I'm interpreting your question correctly. Great preamp, power amp combo. Rack gear lacks the cachet of a classic combo or stack, but that doesn't mean it doesn't sound great.

On the cheap side I, and alot of others here have a Crate Powerblock head. You ride the gain control right and you get a great, loud, clean sound AS LONG AS YOU HAVE A REVERB TANK IN FRONT OF IT. Would I want to play jazz through it with no effects? No. But with a tank in front of it they sound great... Tanks in my opinion cover up a multitude of sins, from sloppy picking to solid state circuitry Shocked

Now nobody has, or probably will bring up the evil spirits of modeling technology. It doesn't "suck". It doesn't sound exactly like the real thing, but it doesn't "suck". If heaven to you is chewing whale blubber you have to hate it, but if you are openminded it can be very useful.

Speaking of weird, I played through one of the new Eddie Van Halen amps last week again. The clean channel has some charm to it. Too expensive compared to what you can get the "right" amp for, and I wouldn't even know what to do with the "gain" channel, but the point is if you look around you might be surprised by an amp that doesn't have Fender on the label.

badash
Speaking of weird, I played through one of the new Eddie Van Halen amps last week again. The clean channel has some charm to it. the point is if you look around you might be surprised by an amp that doesn't have Fender on the label.

EVH amps are made by Fender.

Laughing

Ivan
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IvanP

badash
Speaking of weird, I played through one of the new Eddie Van Halen amps last week again. The clean channel has some charm to it. the point is if you look around you might be surprised by an amp that doesn't have Fender on the label.

EVH amps are made by Fender.

Laughing

I'll see your Laughing and raise you ROTFL

I use a brandless Strato through a Peavey Studio Pro 110 (for reverb) and that linked to a bass amp Peavey Studio TKO 80.

Sounds great to me, really loud. Although if I'd had the money I would buy Fender stuff (guitar, reverb tank & amp). I've tried'em and I like them more than anything. But what I have it's what I can afford right now.

Guitar Player in Nahuelaizers
http://nahuelaizers.bandcamp.com

maybe you could get a great surf rig without any Fender label on it with this:

image

image

image

image

I remember that I read in a guitar player mag that "pipeline" was recorded with no fender guitars

El Papu & los Fantasticos Reverberantes

cooool i like that silvertone guitar, looks pretty cool.

-Zanti

Instagram:

My IG

Combo Tezeta IG

This post has been removed by the author.

Last edited: Sep 23, 2009 20:10:41

Is that a Matchless reverb unit??

El Bluesky
El Ray
El Ray on Bandcamp
El Twang on YouTube

Well, my question is not to piece together a cheap setup. The reason I asked is to see how people got their own unique surf tone. I am mainly trying to see who does not use the typical Fender equipment. Not necessarily the traditional surf tone.

I'm working surf tunes into other types of music too, so no dedicated surf rig as yet. A Dipinto Galaxie 4 getting set up now; that will be one of several guitars used for instrumentals. Some other current favorites:

old strat
partscaster tele with Don Mare p/us
Dearmond M75T
old ES-335

Generally running into tweed type amps, also Magnatone and Ampeg, through outboard reverb and digital delay, some clean boost too.

It may not be an orthodox setup, but the 335 (bridge p/u) or Dearmond (both p/us) sound surfy as hell through a Twilighter (Magnatone) 260 with vibrato on. Same goes into the Ampeg Gemini II.

I use Peavey amps and always have - their after sales service is so good in the Uk that coupled with the 3 year guarantee it makes it a no-brainer. Fender, on the other hand, don't seem to give a toss here (I'm still waiting for them to come up with a replacement power transformer for the other tank under my bed - getting on for two years now!)

I use a particular Peavey for surf, a Valveking 100w combo, and for other gigs I use either a Delta Blues Combo or a Classic 30 head through 2x G12H cab. We do occasional Surf numbers in that band too and this rig sounds pretty good for it too.

I do use a Jag (or SGV) and a tank for Surf gigs though - so that part is pretty traditional. The Delta Blues makes a pretty good surf amp for recording or smaller gigs - has that 'edgy' surf sound. Oh, and I'm another Crate Powerblock owner too - they are great for what they are - although I personally miss the compression when not using a tube amp.

http://www.myspace.com/thepashuns

Youth and enthusiasm are no match for age and treachery.

IMO when you imagine surf tone, you imagine Fender tone: guitars, amps, reverb, the works. Hell, probably even picks. Been that way since 1963. But it's 2008, after all. Time to break the rules? Sure, why not. Go for it.

For the record, some of the tastiest guitar sounds I have ever gotten came out of my Bigsby-equipped 1956 Magnatone Mark V thru an old Ampeg Reverberocket. It could surf all day. And more.

SSIV

Last edited: Oct 06, 2008 08:57:52

I've always been of the opinion that you can play whatever you like as long as the music is good. I think a lot of stuff gets a bad rap because either the band is not very good, or because we can't hear the band and they look like total goons in hawaiian shirts and with some Jay Turser and Crate.

So, good music will out.

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