Rdodson
Well-known member
Ahh, last time I talked to Val was when she personally fired me from the VH camp.
Ahh, last time I talked to Val was when she personally fired me from the VH camp.
She's really fat now anyways.Ahh, last time I talked to Val was when she personally fired me from the VH camp.
I think some guys are WAY overthinking this, and letting speculative fine details get in the way of the important stuff.
I'm not saying this is perfect VH tone replica material, but it took maybe 10 mins total. I didn't reference the original, little care was taken - and still it's close enough for rock n' roll. More time messing about, post-EQ, dialling in the reverb etc would get it closer but whatever, it's just not important.
IMO here are the 'secret' ingredients to getting 90% of the way there (that we've all known since the 80's) -
1. A nice NMV Marshall type amp cranked up. This is our 69 Super Lead, but any quality clone can get you there.
2. G12M in a decent 412 miked with an SM57. This is a blackback, but earlier (or later) greenbacks work just fine.
3. A humbucker equipped guitar in Eb. Super strat, Gibson, whatever.
4. An appropriate riff played by someone with decent technique (I just qualify).
5. Don't be shy with the plate reverb.
Using 6CA7's, a variac, the right magic plckup, a JBL etc. may get you closer, but practicing an extra 10mins a day would probably make more difference in the long run.
In fact I think that a great player using this exact tone in a kickin' VH cover band would absolutely crush it. Happy to hear counter-arguments, but if someone could explain why this 'mystery' still needs solving I'll be impressed.
I think some guys are WAY overthinking this, and letting speculative fine details get in the way of the important stuff.
I'm not saying this is perfect VH tone replica material, but it took maybe 10 mins total. I didn't reference the original, little care was taken - and still it's close enough for rock n' roll. More time messing about, post-EQ, dialling in the reverb etc would get it closer but whatever, it's just not important.
IMO here are the 'secret' ingredients to getting 90% of the way there (that we've all known since the 80's) -
1. A nice NMV Marshall type amp cranked up. This is our 69 Super Lead, but any quality clone can get you there.
2. G12M in a decent 412 miked with an SM57. This is a blackback, but earlier (or later) greenbacks work just fine.
3. A humbucker equipped guitar in Eb. Super strat, Gibson, whatever.
4. An appropriate riff played by someone with decent technique (I just qualify).
5. Don't be shy with the plate reverb.
Using 6CA7's, a variac, the right magic plckup, a JBL etc. may get you closer, but practicing an extra 10mins a day would probably make more difference in the long run.
In fact I think that a great player using this exact tone in a kickin' VH cover band would absolutely crush it. Happy to hear counter-arguments, but if someone could explain why this 'mystery' still needs solving I'll be impressed.
Uhh that’s a story I’d like to hearAhh, last time I talked to Val was when she personally fired me from the VH camp.
I suspect amp_chaser is just trolling all the “oh no! Another EVH thread!” folks while at the same time trolling all the ‘EVH is king’ folks. And is so damn good at it he/she pulled Dave fucking Friedman out of RT retirement.
But I still wonder who the alt account is? I know some people are thinking ‘who smelt it, dealt it’ but I swear it’s not me. I’m not creative enough.
Then clarify what you mean. Most of us when we hear 5150 we associate that with the Peavey amps. The Fender versions I think most associate with EVH's or 5153's.i didn't mean the peavey 5150 the evh ones haha
Jose was VH’s guitar tech for a period of time. Alex states this in his book. Crazy how no one ever mentions this.José didn't made the same mods for everyone. There are multiple josé mods and a we don't know most of them. The most common were parallel extra gain stages that's what most josé amp builders do. however he apparently also did some cascaded gain stages. There is also the voltacontrol that no one except dave and those who owned the amp know about. there is also those little things :
View attachment 379340
View attachment 379343
those special thanks to josé arredondo being the first name when van halen was beginning to get famous is quite weird if he didn't mod ed's amp at all...
I think you'd go deaf first lolI've never heard anyone with a Peavey 5150II sound like Ed did on VHIII tour
I think some guys are WAY overthinking this, and letting speculative fine details get in the way of the important stuff.
I'm not saying this is perfect VH tone replica material, but it took maybe 10 mins total. I didn't reference the original, little care was taken - and still it's close enough for rock n' roll. More time messing about, post-EQ, dialling in the reverb etc would get it closer but whatever, it's just not important.
IMO here are the 'secret' ingredients to getting 90% of the way there (that we've all known since the 80's) -
1. A nice NMV Marshall type amp cranked up. This is our 69 Super Lead, but any quality clone can get you there.
2. G12M in a decent 412 miked with an SM57. This is a blackback, but earlier (or later) greenbacks work just fine.
3. A humbucker equipped guitar in Eb. Super strat, Gibson, whatever.
4. An appropriate riff played by someone with decent technique (I just qualify).
5. Don't be shy with the plate reverb.
Using 6CA7's, a variac, the right magic plckup, a JBL etc. may get you closer, but practicing an extra 10mins a day would probably make more difference in the long run.
In fact I think that a great player using this exact tone in a kickin' VH cover band would absolutely crush it. Happy to hear counter-arguments, but if someone could explain why this 'mystery' still needs solving I'll be impressed.
Based on your clip I disagree - but it doesn't matter. If you dig a modded SV20 for your VH tones that's cool, there's plenty of ways to get there. I mean if someone can't get ballpark with an 800 or DSL then it's not the amp at fault.this is a sv20h with a josé mod that i sold and i believe it's way closer than most super leads out there.
this is a sv20h with a josé mod that i sold and i believe it's way closer than most super leads out there.
I was a demo guitarist for Ed (got hooked up with his crew by Kimbo Davis who was close with Hartley and who'd reached out on behalf of Ed's business manager Barbara Page). That ended getting me hooked into working (this was all on the side, I was/am a fund manager IRL) on the brand new VH website on the "Equipment" section. I wrote up Ed's equipment history, and would interview people critical to that history. Wayne Charvel, Lynn Ellsworth, Steve Blucher, etc. Anyway, I got the idea to interview someone but (I won't share the details) was concerned about some situations therein. I emailed the guy running the website sharing my concerns and asking whether it was worth pursuing, but Val got hold of it and tore me a new one. That was fun.Uhh that’s a story I’d like to hear
I don't think the variac and the 6ca7 do a difference. Eddie used era el34 german tubes in 1978 he switched to 6ca7 because the bias was turned very hot and those tubes were better at whistanding critical temps. For the variac it was just the easiest way to atenuate the plexi.
this is a sv20h with a josé mod that i sold and i believe it's way closer than most super leads out there.
That's what almost everyone, minus one here thinks. And no, you can't convince him other wise.Your amp sounds good but if I'm honest, ZEN's amp above sounds closer and really good / better as well.
I don't think he ran the bias that hot for very long.Your amp sounds good but if I'm honest, ZEN's amp above sounds closer and really good / better as well.
I don't think he ran the bias that hot for very long.
A major part of the "sound" he stayed loyal to was the cold-bias crossover distortion.