"Touradas Em Madrid " - Carmen Miranda
"Touradas Em Madrid " - Carmen Miranda
devil dogs- once around the block
not sure why. I don't have a specific song to listen to on Monday morning, but that was one I wanted to hear recently on a Monday morning, and it worked well.
"Down To You" - Real Kids. Wish I had a copy in High School.
Nice!
Trace Hull said:
If it's raining - Rainy Monday by The Rifles
I'm the same way, now. Music in the morning just sounds painful.... for me anyway
John Battles said:
....I don't usually listen to music in the morning , anymore , got out of the habit. When I was in High School , I had a little Radio Shack tape player , so I could play music while taking a shower , and not electrocute myself.....My favorite song to start the day was "Strange Boutique" by The Monochrome Set , which I had on a tape of DJ George Gimarc's show. I did'nt know who it was by , and the chorus is not in the title . It took 31 years for me to find a copy. It's still more "Garage" than much of what passes for Garage , today.
Afte rthat , pretty much anything by The RAMONES WOULD BE MY DAY STARTER.
http://youtu.be/qju3FEcKTrw
This is the monday morning song.
It's About Time - The Alarm Clocks!!!
I'm still waiting to recieve it by mail...I also have a normal rat pedal but I can't use it well because with my '78 Telecaster I got problems with tones and if I try a distortion like rat without close all my guitar tones, the amplifier starts to whistle without control.
I know that this version of the pedal is a half way between a classic fuzz and a Rat distortion...I will tell you my test in a few days ;-)
Bernh
I'm not hip to this pedal. I do have an old ProCo Rat (which is a great pedal, by the way) that I have had for twenty years or so. How does the Dirty Rat differ from to regular Rat?
No, tell me about it.
Hey James,
The original run of Maestros (the 3 volt and 3 transistor FZ-1) was from 62-65 where Gibson made roughly about 5000 of them. They didn't sell as Gibson had anticipated until Keef recorded 'satisfaction' with one after which they became highly sought after by guitarists and studios of the time so they then released the updated FZ-1A which runs on a 1.5V power supply and has different transistors (3 x 2N2613 or 2N2614). They made roughly in the region of 35,000 of these. The FZ-1 is therefore harder to find but recognisable by it's lower serial number and 2 x pencil battery holder. Prices for the occasional ones that come up on ebay would be in the region of $650-$1000. FZ-1A boxes (which very many of the garage punk/psyche kids would have used from '65-'68 ish) come up reasonably frequently on ebay and would usually cost around $350-$600 depending on condition. Problem is that so many of these originals have been butchered to 'improve' them as short sustain became a problem for the newer generation of blues rock wailers. As long as they have their original transistors that still function they can be restored to their original glory but if the trannies have been replaced you're in trouble! Originals are a gamble for sure, and even perfectly functioning ones can sound quite different as consistency was not easily acheivable in those days. The early noughties reissues were apparently pretty good but they actually sell for in the region of $170-$250!
A modern day, accurate (original NOS transistors) clone of an FZ-1A that will be both reliable and sound pretty much bang on would be the Creepyfingers 'fuzznugget' which I believe would be in the region of $250, and Jerms builds a frighteningly accurate FZ-1 clone for about $350 or thereabouts (if he agrees to make one!) Of the various clones I have using non-spec transistors I would recommend the Ghost Effects FZ-1 clone which costs approx £120 - it captures the 'feel' of a maestro really well. But for the cheapest cheerfullest yet pretty decent FZ-1A clone then the North Effects Primitive. Only £75 which is honestly as cheap as you'll ever get to come reasonably close to an original.
As far as other fuzzes go to try to acheive the Maestro sound, I suppose something that has a voltage starve, bias or gating type of control will help get in the ballpark of that short sustain grindy buzz, which could be helped along if you can drastically cut bass frequencies. You'd be struggling with a fuzz factory as it often gets too synthy sounding on the gated settings, and most other fuzzes based around other classic circuits (perhaps with the exception of the MkI tonebender...) just aren't really going to get you into the right territory. The MI audio 'neofuzz' has a bias knob that helps get close to the right sort of feel and I'm sure that with a bit of tweaking you may be able to get a rough approximation with many other modern designs (Basic Audio does some pretty cool sounding buzzy fuzzes at a very reasonable price, unfortunately I don't have any of his boxes).
Costs a lot of money to sound this cheap!
How easy are these coveted FZ1 pedals to find? I know the reissues have been discontinued and the originals are out of my price range. What currently available pedal gets you close to the Maestro FZ1 or FZ1A?
waveclipper said:
A lot of the Sonics sound was acheived by pushing the amps and red-lining the mixing desk I believe. That Outsiders track (and most of the fuzz sounds on the BFTG series) is almost certainly a Gibson Maestro Fuzz-Tone (probably an FZ-1A), judging both by the sound and the year ('66). The Seeds used a Maestro fuzz-tone. The Mosrite fuzzrite is a really fantastic fuzz but is more along the lines of Dave Allan and the Arrows, the Ventures and of course Iron Butterfly. The Ashbass clone is a pretty good and great value clone but I reckon the Mahoney fuzzrite clone, Jerms, DAM stuff is better, although it will cost more. The Boss FZ-5 maestro patch is to an original maestro as a mobile phone photograph of a Van Gogh is to the original painting, imo. It will give you a flavour of the maestro and the way it changes your approach to playing but has some ugly background digital artefacts, gates absolutely and abrubtly (unlike an original) and has no depth of character to the sound - a 2D rendering of a sculpture perhaps?! As far as FZ-1/FZ-1A clones go, the best I have heard use the original transistors and that would really be Jerms or Creepyfingers. Ghost effects makes a very good FZ-1 clone using non-original transistors and is consequently much cheaper. A Big Muff was really a late 60s/early 70s fuzz after Hendrix convinced the guitarists of the world that they needed loads of wailing sustain and I don't personally feel it will get you anywhere close to the tones you are describing. The best resource regarding the early fuzzboxes that I have found would be the DAM forum, frightening amount of knowledge held within those pages!
Conclusion? Maestro Fuzz-Tone FZ-1A or FZ-1. Good luck with your quest anyways!
Just remembered - North Effects based in London does a pretty decent FZ-1A clone (he calls a 'Primitive') for only about £70 or so. It has no fancy paint job, just a good sounding box using non original trannies but powered by a single pencil battery just like the originals. He's a great guy to deal with (I'm not affiliated) and it destroys the Boss facsimilie of a maestro...
I'm currently digging the Diamond Rugs, Cheap Time (Wallpaper Music) & Fidlar (Don't Try...EP). I had never heard of them and they opened for The Hives. I really liked it! Very bouncy. Following in the tradition of old L.A. punk.
At this moment I really like listening to Death Letters. Two young guys, guitar and drums, and they rock! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXXhcqlt-6Q But ask me again tomorrow...
Cool Beltones tune, sounds like a punk version of the Pogues in that song.
Chaz
Jason Feldmann said:
Everyone should know, love, appreciate and emmulate the Beltones. Their On Deaf Ears EP collects all their early 7 inches onto a CD. Only 20 minutes. But 20 minutes is all you need to have your life turned upside down!! I love this goddamn band.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=eS3mtb...
Whoa - the cover alone looks amazingly badass, almost have to buy it just based on that! I found some clips on amazon, sound pretty damn Hawt!
Thanks for sharing Kopper
Chaz
kopper said:
Here's one you probably don't have, but is an amazing live recording from a Minneapolis band who was around in the late '70s playing wild & raucous garage trash when no one else was! It's insanely good...
The Cramps: File Under Sacred Music Early Singles 1978–1981
MFC Chicken. This album is insanely catchy.
When I made the original post last year, I said my radio shows were not archived.
Well, now a few of them are, on Mixcloud. I've got a grand total three up at the moment, but they all are doozies.
You can find them all at http://www.mixcloud.com/steveterrell
Bookmark that page. I'll be adding more when the spirit says "Upload."
I just uploaded the first half of the Sound World show where I interviewed Wheeler Dixon and Michael Downey of Figures of Light.
There's also one from May with my pal Scott Gullett co-hosting.
And there's my Santa Fe Opry from January, when I celebrated New Mexico's 100th birthday
Amazing turnaround on the volumes. Amazing it is up to Volume 8. What can I say more than "thanks" to Kopper for the conception, organisation, orchestration, etc., and thanks to all the bands who make their music available.
Playlist for 6/25/12
Harbor Freeway Blues/Feelings Are Meant To Be Hurt - Off!
Homework - Screaming Urge
Pogo Pogo - The Registrators
Treasure Hunt - The Electric Vomit
Jezebel - The Hex Tremors
Taped Up - The Spivs
The Kids From Boyle Heights/Sick of You - Loli & the Chones
Intelligence - Partman Parthorse
Thistle Boy - The Real McKenzies
Emergency Cases - The Undertones
Anybody Out There - The Mean Jeans
Try - The Swindlers
All This & More - Dead Boys
Nuke 'Em All - Super Aids
House of Shame - Toe Tag
Rip Off - Sham 69
Neon Lights - Revenge 88
Youth Against Facism - Sonic Youth
Go Mental - The Ramones
More Suicides Please - Thought Criminals
Demolition Boys - Girlschool
Born To Rock n Roll - Columbian Neckties
So Sad, Well? - Western Dark
Upgrade Me - MHz
New Race - Radio Birdman
Stand By Your Man - Wendy O. Williams & Lemmy Kilmister
The Wait - Pierced Arrows
Blast Off - The Birthday Party
Jet Satisfaction - Guitar Wolf
LOCAL SIZZLER: The Road - Rust Belt Demons
Roll The Dice - The Dragons
Hey Ugly - Headache City
The Habit - Motocaster
Black Mold - Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Wig Wam Bam - The Sirens
Do The Robot - The Saints
Fat Lip - Rocket From The Crypt
Drambuie - 1313 Mockingbird Lane
Radar Eyes - The Godz
Soul Search - The Repeaters
Ankle Breaker - The Vulcaneers
Shake It - The Groundhogs
This Game Called Girl - The Fuzztones
All Of Your Love - Thee Mighty Caesars
Bo Bo Boogaloo - Kid Congo & the Pink Monkeybirds
Love at a Psychedelic Velocity - The Human Expression
Charge It - The Playboys
The Track - Girl Trouble
I Once Was a Man - The Tundra F***s
The Red Monkey - The Mants
Action Woman - The Litter
Plate In My Head - The Oblivians
Everything Goes - The Cramps
Complicated - Dr. Explosion
Crawdaddy Simone - The Syndicats
Bond Girl - The 5.6.7.8.'s
Playlist for 7/2/12
Cherry Pop - The Spastics
Just What I Need - Nikki & the Corvettes
Just A Little Sign - Dogbreath
Cretin Hop - The Ramones
I Owe It To The Girls - Jeannie & the Tits
Youngblood In The River - The Hex Dispensers
Okay - The Shoes
Ichiban - New Luck Toy
Life Is Gross - Overnight Lows
I Wanna Be Rich - Cold Cock
Doin' The Banana Split - Young Fresh Fellows
Mis Au Pas - TV Killers
Uh Oh - The Limit
My Machine - The Humpers
New Rose - The Damned
Can't Win Your Heart/SOS/Guys Like That - Midnight Snaxxx
Automatic Boy - Chinese Millionaires
Horizontal Action - Psycho Surgeons
Get Stuffed - Teengenerate
Under My Hood - Gluecifer
Can The Can - Suzi Quatro
Action Satisfaction - New Wave Hookers
Shine On Me - The Chronics
Swampland - The Scientists
Funtime - Iggy Pop
Self Destructo Blues - Turbonegro
LOCAL SIZZLER: High Heel Sneakers - Girls Take Over
City Slang - Sonic's Rendezvous Band
Tell Me That You Love Me - Jon Spencer Blues Explosion
Nights in Venice - The Saints
20th Century Boy - T.Rex
Gimme Gimme Gimme R&R - The Plungers
Deuces Wild - Link Wray
Hindu Gods of Love - Lipstick Killers
Land of Alohas - Les Chefs
Here Come The Girls - Royal Beat Conspiracy
Mud In Your Eye - The Insomniacs
13 Women - The Renegades
Scum City - Roy Loney & the Phantom Movers
Je New Suis Pas Tres Drogue - The Liminanas
No More Lies - The Gruesomes
Married For The Weekend - Demolition Doll Rods
Clever Way To Crawl - Persian Claws
Screamin' Skull - The Fleshtones
Addicted To Fuzz - The Crusaders
Beat Party - Ritchie & the Squires
Corned Beef & Whiskey - Chum
Hot Generation - The Pandoras
Womp Womp - Freddie & the Heartaches
Get Out of My House - Supercharger
Ready To Ride - Bleed