I noticed that you use a Okko Diablo Gain+ quite a bit. Is that what you're using to get those humbuckers under control to squeseze out those nice easy tones? I have a Les Paul Custom Shop with Burst Buckers II and III, and the boys are so hot and bright, it's hard to warm them down. Does the Okko help? Any suggestions?
@rjworks13 ~ Obviously the Okko Diablo has its own unique sound, but If you can't get your hands on one - you can get a very similar easy warm tone from a Boss BD-2 Blues Driver with the Tone control set about 10-11 o'clock & the Gain on 9 o'clock just so that it overdrives the Amp a tad. Works for me!
@rjworks13 - Start with your amp & have your tone controls set on about 5. I'm pretty sure that's where ToneKing Gregor has his amp set to get his huge fat tone. On my Amp (DFRR) that is plenty warm. You could try heavier guage strings too. I use D'Addario Jazz lights .011 - .050 with a wound .022w G-string. Hope this helps. Have fun!
@SongWriterGaRRyC - I took your advice, but the closest I could come to strings locally was D'Addario Bronze 11-52. The overall tone IS noticeably warmer, but the bottom E & B are still too pronounced. This is the first I've played 11s since I switched down to 9 gauge due to medial epicondylitis (golfer's elbow - I do a lot of heavy bending). Your right about the heavier gauge tightening up the tone. Think I'll try stepping down to 10-47s and see how they do. Thanks!
@rjworks13 ~ Remember, what you perceive as "too pronounced" a metre or so from your Amp, is not how it's heard 5, 15, 30 metres away in a live venue, with bodies of noisy people absorbing it. So you need that little bit of top end to getting it out-there & ‘cut thru’ your audience. I know what you mean though, there is a tone we all comfortable playing in confidence with, because we are the hard-listening hearer. Getting it at home is very different to projecting it to the masses...
@SongWriterGaRRyC Pls Understand, I know guitar well, I've just never played Burstbuckers II & III. Check the specs. They are extremely hot and high end - which is great. However, when I want to ease off the volume (even through my vintage Fender Bassman), these pups are encourageable. All I want to do is roll of the volume without sacrificing tone. Right now I'm getting it with the Rivera Blues Shaman OD that's doing the job great, but I'd be lost without that little box.
@rjworks13 Bronze Strings are meant for acoustics, rather than electrics (although some folks use them on an electric) and it is no wonder the E and B stick out opposed to wound E, A, D, and G strings. Greg uses nickel plated 11-49s, and I do, too. Order them online, if you cannot find them in your local store. Greg also uses an unusually heavy pick, a 2mm (!) Dunlop Delrin 500, and a lot of his sound is in his fingers and his attack.
@bluesderek ~ Agreed. Much of Gregor's tone is in his pick attack from his fingers & soul; his vintage amp & off course note-choice. There's a lot to like about him & that's why we're here!! :).
As far as bronze strings go, I don't even like them on my accoustic because they always sound too dull for mine. I prefer Elixer Nanoweb 80/20 bronze which look gold & stay bright-sounding for ages.
@rjworks13 The OKKO sounds somewhat similar to a Fulltone OCD, bright with a slightly slim midrange. Greg's sound IS surprisingly bright, when I play through a similar setup. Part of the warmth comes from Greg's vintage Fender amps, which unlike new amps and reissues do the trick to sound bright YET warm. I recently found a ridicously cheap pedal which comes close to the OKKO and OCD when the gain is set low: The JoYo Ultimate Drive
@bluesderek Hi, how do you found the Joyo ultimate drive? Waiting for my come in the mail. Saw viedos on utube I think sound quite good. The Joyo vintage is also good but for other style. These pedals are deadly cheap on Ebay and sound very good, so why spend hundreds on effects.
That is just amazing...
badgermost 1 month ago 2
I noticed that you use a Okko Diablo Gain+ quite a bit. Is that what you're using to get those humbuckers under control to squeseze out those nice easy tones? I have a Les Paul Custom Shop with Burst Buckers II and III, and the boys are so hot and bright, it's hard to warm them down. Does the Okko help? Any suggestions?
rjworks13 1 month ago
@rjworks13 ~ Obviously the Okko Diablo has its own unique sound, but If you can't get your hands on one - you can get a very similar easy warm tone from a Boss BD-2 Blues Driver with the Tone control set about 10-11 o'clock & the Gain on 9 o'clock just so that it overdrives the Amp a tad. Works for me!
SongWriterGaRRyC 1 month ago 7
@SongWriterGaRRyC - Thanks for the tip. I definitely need something to warm up the tone for some applications.
rjworks13 1 month ago
@rjworks13 - Start with your amp & have your tone controls set on about 5. I'm pretty sure that's where ToneKing Gregor has his amp set to get his huge fat tone. On my Amp (DFRR) that is plenty warm. You could try heavier guage strings too. I use D'Addario Jazz lights .011 - .050 with a wound .022w G-string. Hope this helps. Have fun!
SongWriterGaRRyC 1 month ago 10
@SongWriterGaRRyC - I took your advice, but the closest I could come to strings locally was D'Addario Bronze 11-52. The overall tone IS noticeably warmer, but the bottom E & B are still too pronounced. This is the first I've played 11s since I switched down to 9 gauge due to medial epicondylitis (golfer's elbow - I do a lot of heavy bending). Your right about the heavier gauge tightening up the tone. Think I'll try stepping down to 10-47s and see how they do. Thanks!
rjworks13 1 month ago
@rjworks13 ~ Remember, what you perceive as "too pronounced" a metre or so from your Amp, is not how it's heard 5, 15, 30 metres away in a live venue, with bodies of noisy people absorbing it. So you need that little bit of top end to getting it out-there & ‘cut thru’ your audience. I know what you mean though, there is a tone we all comfortable playing in confidence with, because we are the hard-listening hearer. Getting it at home is very different to projecting it to the masses...
SongWriterGaRRyC 1 month ago 10
Comment removed
rjworks13 1 month ago
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@SongWriterGaRRyC Pls Understand, I know guitar well, I've just never played Burstbuckers II & III. Check the specs. They are extremely hot and high end - which is great. However, when I want to ease off the volume (even through my vintage Fender Bassman), these pups are encourageable. All I want to do is roll of the volume without sacrificing tone. Right now I'm getting it with the Rivera Blues Shaman OD that's doing the job great, but I'd be lost without that little box.
rjworks13 1 month ago
@rjworks13 Bronze Strings are meant for acoustics, rather than electrics (although some folks use them on an electric) and it is no wonder the E and B stick out opposed to wound E, A, D, and G strings. Greg uses nickel plated 11-49s, and I do, too. Order them online, if you cannot find them in your local store. Greg also uses an unusually heavy pick, a 2mm (!) Dunlop Delrin 500, and a lot of his sound is in his fingers and his attack.
bluesderek 1 month ago
@bluesderek ~ Agreed. Much of Gregor's tone is in his pick attack from his fingers & soul; his vintage amp & off course note-choice. There's a lot to like about him & that's why we're here!! :).
As far as bronze strings go, I don't even like them on my accoustic because they always sound too dull for mine. I prefer Elixer Nanoweb 80/20 bronze which look gold & stay bright-sounding for ages.
SongWriterGaRRyC 1 month ago in playlist Favorite videos 9
@SongWriterGaRRyC I use the same strings on my acoustic, too :-D Check your YT inbox, I sent you a longer message about equipment and stuff
bluesderek 1 month ago
@rjworks13 The OKKO sounds somewhat similar to a Fulltone OCD, bright with a slightly slim midrange. Greg's sound IS surprisingly bright, when I play through a similar setup. Part of the warmth comes from Greg's vintage Fender amps, which unlike new amps and reissues do the trick to sound bright YET warm. I recently found a ridicously cheap pedal which comes close to the OKKO and OCD when the gain is set low: The JoYo Ultimate Drive
bluesderek 1 month ago
@bluesderek Hi, how do you found the Joyo ultimate drive? Waiting for my come in the mail. Saw viedos on utube I think sound quite good. The Joyo vintage is also good but for other style. These pedals are deadly cheap on Ebay and sound very good, so why spend hundreds on effects.
teza75 1 month ago
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"I'd rather go blind" (Etta James) oder "I Shall Be Released" (Bob Dylan)? In jedem Fall wunderschön. Die Gitarre übrigens auch :-D
bluesderek 1 month ago
Comment removed
bluesderek 1 month ago
Mesmerising!
SongWriterGaRRyC 1 month ago 10
Sweet intro played with some soul up to 1:15 then we go of the tracks. The intro proves most of tone is in you hands.
music2me23 1 month ago 3
@music2me23 I don't think that at all.
OneFifthNative 1 month ago
könnt ich 24 h lang gucken!
bennip192 1 month ago
Wow.
Bravissimo.
strandwolf 1 month ago
hi greg. what is the price of this guitar? :O
bluesboydude 1 month ago
@bluesboydude 3290€
BluesOnAStick 1 month ago
@BluesOnAStick thanks O:
bluesboydude 1 month ago