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My main guitar is a Manzer "Cowpoke", built by Toronto Luthier Linda Manzer (thank you Linda!). ). This guitar is a fairly large, deep bodied 6 string with a gentle cutaway and a German spruce top inlaid with abalone and boxwood at the sound hole. I love this guitar, it has a huge dynamic range, tone and character to spare, and is supremely road worthy. I have tried many different brands of strings and finally settled on John Pearse Phosphor Bronze medium gauge strings. I like the colour that they add to the Manzers's sound and find that they are generally hardy and durable. The pickup system in the Cowpoke is a strange hodgepodge of over the counter and customised electronics which is ever changing as boredom or new products dictate.

Recently, the acoustic guitar has gone through a number of modifications in design and materials, but none more so than in the amplification department. Not too long ago the acoustic was treated like the electric guitar's younger sibling when it came to gear. As acoustic players we were always forced to wear the technological hand me downs of the electric players, the amps, effects, mics. and assorted gear that was designed for solid body instruments, keyboards and PA.s, but rarely anything designed specifically for the big resonating box that is the acoustic guitar. Nowadays things are very different as changing trends continue to keep the acoustic guitar in the spotlight, and the folks who design and produce black boxes are forever coming up with yet another gizmo to fill the demand for all things unplugged. However I still vividly recall early visits to my local music shop where I would pull a guitar off the rack and trudge across the shop floor to the amp department. Plugging an Ovation into a large Marshall head always seemed like anarchy and usually resulted in ugly blasts of feedback and threatening glares from the owners.

Over the last few years, I've worked with my buddy John Sharples (a.k.a. "The Guitar Doc") on a system that would give me a lot of gain before feedback and somehow capture or recreate an acceptable approximation of the huge warmth and vigor of my Manzer. Many's the long night we've spent installing different pickups, trying out pre-amps and hunting down ground hums in search of the elusive tone. It's a very frustrating endeavor as you probably already know, made even more impossible by the plain fact that what sounds good in somebody else's guitar might sound like shit in yours. Bearing this in mind and for what it's worth I've included my stage setup here for those who are true "tech-nerds" like myself. Be warned this is extremely boring stuff unless you are the sort of person who enjoys reading gear advertisements and making up your own cables. Do not drive or operate heavy machinery immediately after reading this.

stage equipment

My current amplification rig is a dual pickup/internal microphone setup. The pickup is a Takamine piezo bridge pickup (individual piezo crystals set in ceramic) which is still one of the best pickups out there if you can find one that's not attached to a Tak. guitar. The microphone is an Audio Technica ATM35 , which is internally mounted against the back of the guitar under and facing away from the sound hole. In the past I've used a simple RadioShack "tie clip" mic and also a Countryman Isomax Omnidirectional, they've all worked well more or less, but the Audio Technica seems to have more gain before feedback (this is crucial for those who refuse to stuff their guitar with foam) and can handle the sound pressure levels inside an acoustic guitar with more grace than either of the other two. The pickup is pre-amped through a customised Countryman type 85 direct box module (which is basically the guts of a Countryman D.I. mounted with Velcro to the neck block of the guitar). Both the D.I. (pre-amp) and the mic. take phantom power (no 9-volt batteries to deal with!) which is fed to each individual unit via two 3-pin XLR cables (common mic. cables). The XLR cables work well in that each signal is individually shielded and balanced. Also, mic. cables "lock" and will not pull out of your guitar if stepped on (unlike standard quarter inch guitar cables), plus they are usually easier to find at a gig if you leave yours at home.

The Mic./Pickup signals are then fed into input strips 1 and 2 of a Mackie Microseries 1202 mixer (the first four input strips of a Mackie 1202 have excellent mic. pre-amps, balanced inputs and can supply phantom power). At this point the two signals are run through one side each of a Rane ME15 (dual fifteen band equalizer) and then through a Beringer Feedback Destroyer (dual 12 band parametric eq/anti feedback filters) via the Mackie's insert points. Unfortunately the Mackie's on board eq'ing is very limited (bass and treble only) so this means that an external eq. is essential, especially for the internal mic. which is prone to feedback and requires a fair bit of shaping at the best of times. The Beringer was added to the chain fairly recently, to deal with the problem frequencies that are not covered by the graphic eq.

The Takamine pickup signal is then sent via the Mackie's aux. 1sent to an Ernie Ball Volume Pedal (on the floor beside my vocal mic. stand) then back to an Alesis Quadraverb (four separate effects in one rack mount unit), where the signal has chorus, reverb, delay etc.. added in greater or lesser amounts. The signal leaves the Quadraverb in stereo and comes back into the Mackie board via two different input strips. By bringing the processed pickup signal back to the Mackie through new input strips rather than through aux. 1 return, I can further shape the signal by eq'ing the effects. I can also take advantage of the Quadraverb's stereo effects through the Mackie's pan controls. At this point the two unprocessed signals (internal mic. and pickup) and the two processed signals (stereo outs from the Quadraverb) are mixed down to stereo left and right and sent via the patch bay atthe back of my rack to the front of house soundboard (the patch bay has ground lift switches which can save the day in ancient halls with old wiring and a cranky sound tech). Many years ago I realised that a monitor which is eq'd for the human voice does not necessarily make sonic sense for an acousitc guitar (if the voice sounds bright and present, the guitar sounds thin - if the guitar sounds full and deep, the voice sounds muddy) so it never really made sense to have my guitar and voice coming back at me through the same set of monitor wedges. Since many folk clubs will laugh out loud at you if you request two monitor mixes and four monitors for one performer, I decided to take matters into my own hands and travel with my own power amp (a Carver PT1250 which is a good amp backed up by excellent customer service and speedy repair shop work when necessary) and monitors (2 x 12 inch coaxial Radians which I've had for 8 trouble-free years) dedicated to the guitar only, the club provides the vocal monitors. This method works out really well, with the only drawback being the inevitable "I thought we'd hired an acoustic performer not Eddie Van Halen hahahah ha" (they usually stop snickering when you plug all the shit in and deliver a huge warm acoustic sound - provided all the gear works of course! ahem) At this point I have done all I can, and my precious guitar signal is out of my hands as far as the audience is concerned. OK so this is quite excessive, we'd all agree on that, however I justify it with the following philosophy - Tone is the king and if your guitar sound sucks then you will probably play accordingly... nothing bums me out more than a lousy guitar sound, it's as bad as losing your voice... electric guitarists have known this for years, but for some reason many acoustic players seem content with thin, reedy, piezo pickup-and-a-DI-box sound. As a solo-singer/songwriter, you've only got a few tools to work with, might as well make them all as good as possible no?

The only other pieces of gear I currently use on stage for my acoustic guitar, are a Boss Midi Pedal, a Boss TU12 tuner and a boss Tremolo/Pan PN2 pedal. The midi pedal is connected to the Quadraverb and is for shifting between effect presets on the fly. The tuner is connected to an extra output jack I had wired into my volume pedal. The tremolo is one of those "use sparingly to great effect" pedals. I try not to use batteries for any of my gear as they have a habit of draining during a show, I also try to keep everything as compact as possible. Right now all my gear fits into a few modest aluminum road cases which are just under the wire for airline weight restrictions (I'm happy to pay excess baggage, but overweight is a killer on the wallet). My guitars travel in their Calton Cases as built by Al Williams and his crew in Calgary, Alberta. These cases are tough and quite light due to the fiberglass exterior shell. The insides are made with crushed velvet and high density foam rubber which is contoured to the exact shape of your guitar providing excellent support and cushioning.

OK, so there you have it. There are so many other ways to achieve "a sound" with more, less, or different gear, but so far this is what works for me. Are you asleep yet? No? Read on!

other guitars

Guild D35

My 21 year old dreadnought with new neck built by Linda Manzer. This was my main guitar for 10 years or so until the old neck fell apart. It's a lovely old thing that has taken a fair bit of abuse in its day and now deserves to be played more often than it is.

Morgan "Resophonic"

A wooden bodied, resonator style acoustic, with a cutaway. Built by David Iannoni, this is his first resonator style guitar and I am lucky to own it. It has a unique warm Dobro-like sound and plays beautifully.

Harmony (rocket?)

This electric guitar is a bit of a mystery as I'm still not quite sure what model it is. I bought it at Eddy Music in Nelson BC where it was hanging in the Not For Sale rack. I managed to talk my way out of the store with it after another customer declared it to be the ugliest guitar he'd ever seen. HA! It is the epitome of late sixties italianesque cool and it plays like a dark little olive/khaki coloured dream. I have it strung with medium strings (too heavy for most elec. players, but perfect for my ham fisted technique).

The Hammertone (Copy of the Vox Mandotar)

A truly wonderful hybrid of a mandolin and a 12 string Telecaster! This electric guitar has a version of the classic rounded Vox body shape, two Tele. style pickups and twelve strings. What makes it really stand out is that it is strung a full octave above the standard guitar tuning, putting it in the mandolin range. It shimmers and chimes, is lovely for volume swells, cuts through the murk of even the loudest Blackie and The Rodeo Kings gig and is built for fighting off hordes of angry folkies. As it says on the little instruction sheet "This is not a toy". The Hammertone is built at the Guitar Clinic in Hamilton Ontario.

Harmony Monterey

I was just given this acoustic arch top by my pal Brian denHertog (thanks Brian). It's in great shape for it's age - early sixties (?) and was,I gather, the top of the line for Harmony arch tops. A red sunburst on the machine carved top a lovely headstock logo and ingenious adjustable saddle make this a very striking guitar. The neck feels good and not as baseball bat-like as you'd think. I'm probably going to mount an old deArmond pickup right up by the neck and see how it sounds plugged in.

odds & sods

I've managed to figure a way to make my electric guitars sound decent coming through my acoustic rig, (which is basically just a glorified small PA system) by running them through a Hughes & Kettner "Tubeman" one of many tube pre-amps on the market for just such a purpose. Being in Blackie and The Rodeo Kings means playing onstage with one of the finest electric guitarists in the kingdom - Mr. Colin Linden. Colin has a truly superb grasp of tone and the kind of soul one can coax out of vintage electric gear... my job is to come up with a sound that will complement without having to carry two separate rigs for my acoustic and electric playing (even I have my gear limits), The Tubeman is a good compromise for a real amp. andif I run my electrics through an old MXR Dynacomp (compression pedal) it works even better. Other things to consider include an E-Bow and a willingness to experiment with the Quadraverb... (When in doubt, play a dark chord and wiggle the neck).

W
hen I snap my fingers, you will awaken... you will go directly to your basement and dig out that old Echoplex you've been hanging onto... you will offer to sell me the Echoplex for $100 and a rare hard to find copy of The Yellow Tape...

SNAP*