Total Guitar

ROB CAGGIANO

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JACKSON ROB CAGGIANO SIGNATURE PROTOTYPE

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Rob: “Way back in the day, before ESP, I was playing this quirky guitar called the Outcaster, which was made by Jackson for literally one year, in the early to mid-90s. They were doing a guitar called the Surfcaster, so it’s that kinda thing. It’s just an offset body. It has an alder body, maple neck, ebony fingerboar­d. The bridge pickup is my signature

Dimarzio that I developed with those guys back in [pauses] 2011? I guess. I was using the Tone Zone for many years. In the neck, I am not totally sure. [“I think it’s an Air Norton” – Jerry Carillo, Rob’s tech]. I don’t really use the neck pickup live. I just use it in the studio. I’ll mess with the tone knob in the studio and I’ll mess with the pickup selector but not live. I don’t know what the neck pickup is because I told Larry to send me something new to try out. But it’s working really good in this guitar, whatever it is.”

GRETSCH G6136T PLAYERS EDITION FALCON

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Rob: “We have a Gretsch electro-acoustic. Like I said before, on the new album there are a few songs where the sounds are a little bit different, and yeah, I think the Gretsch hollow-body, the Black Falcon kinda vibe, suits a couple of the songs really well, and obviously the acoustics. We got through a whole bunch of songs into the setlist, and what we found was that,a lot of the older songs were tuned a wholestep down and the whole new record is in standard tuning. So the way we had the setlist on the first night, there were just way too many guitar changes and it just messed up the flow of the show, we felt.”

SPACEMAN EFFECTS APHELION HARMONIC OVERDRIVE

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Rob: “I wouldn’t say it is transparen­t. It is a very unique overdrive pedal. It has a very distinct sound and it is very fat sounding, which is why I like it. It’s very juicy sounding. I would say that 98 per cent of my sound is the amp, which is a Fryette Sig:x, so that is the meat and potatoes of my sound. For my solos, I kick on something interestin­g. I use the lead channel on the amp for the rhythm sound and I use

the rhythm channel of the amp with the gain dialled back for the lead sound and I use a pedal in front of it. Just to kick it in.”

DAREDEVIL PEDALS PROTOTYPE OVERDRIVE/ DISTORTION

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Rob: “It definitely is a hot-rodded Tube Screamer type of vibe. I don’t know what it’s called. We are kicking it around. We have had it here out on the road with us and putting it through its paces but we are not totally sure yet. There is something that I like about it but I still think they need to tweak it a little bit. I’m not totally sure. Yeah, it does one thing really, really well, and I just wish it did more stuff. That one is quite hot.”

STRYMON FLINT TREMOLO AND REVERB

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Rob: “We have a Strymon reverb. A Flint. That is only for certain parts. We literally haven’t even used it yet. [To Jerry] We used it last night!? Oh, we are still dialling it in. Not the tremolo, though. No. We use the reverb side. We have some new songs on this album that have a lot of the tremolo effects so that is why we got this pedal.”

ALEXANDER PEDALS OBLIVION VINTAGE DELAY

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Rob: “We started playing those new songs, literally, two days ago! We are still working out the patches and the presets and all that stuff. Jerry will be controllin­g the timing of all that stuff, the tremolo, and also the delay. That pedal is amazing.

I am really diggin’ that delay pedal. But Jerry times it out.”

FRYETTE SIG:X G100SX GUITAR AMPLIFIER

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Rob: “Basically it’s the same company as [VHT]. The only difference is the faceplate, the logo. I have been using the

Pittbull Ultraleads since ’97 maybe. With Anthrax, on tour I was using Marshall 2000s, the DSLS, just because they were really easy to find anywhere in the world, and they are a really solid, consistent amp, but in the studio it was always the Pittbull Ultraleads for me. When we did the Big Four Tour with Anthrax, Steve [Fryette] sent me his new amp called the Sig:x. At the time it was his latest. And that became my amp for that tour and I have been with it ever since. I love it. I think it’s great. It is a more versatile amp. The Pittbull is a three-channel amp also but the clean channel is unusable – for me at least. The clean channel on the Sig:x is a lot more versatile. And the gain, it has all the crunch I need. It’s got that big, classic Vht/steve Fryette sound. On the Sig:x it’s KT88S [valves].”

CUSTOM RACK AND SWITCHING UNIT BUILT BY TECH JERRY CARILLO, SHURE

“I’M A PRODUCER, SO I HAVE A CERTAIN THING THAT I DO WITH GUITARS THAT I HAVE ALWAYS DREAMED ABOUT DOING LIVE” ROB CAGGIANO

AXIENT WIRELESS GUITAR SYSTEM, DUNLOP CRY BABY RACK MODULE REMOTE WAH

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Rob: “There is no audio onstage. No pedals. I mean there is a remote wah running the Dunlop wahs but there is no actual overdrive pedals or anything. The rig has been a dream of mine for a long time. I’m a studio guy. I’m a record producer, so I have a certain thing that I do with guitars that I have always dreamed about implementi­ng into the live show, and finally we were able to do that. I wanted to have a cabinet off to the side, mic’d up, going through a Neve 1073-style mic preamp, so there will be like a 57/421 on one speaker, and in the same cabinet in another speaker there will be another [Shure SM]57 for the solo sound also going into a 1073 Neve, that goes also into an 1176-style compressor. A Neve 1073 is the de facto rock ’n’ roll mic preamp. It is my go-to. That’s what I always wanted to do live, because running the mics into the digital console you lose a lot. Obviously we are using a wireless system, the Shure Axient, and that goes into the spaceship over there.”

MICHAEL POULSEN

GIBSON SG GT

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Michael: “I have had my main guitar for many years, which was a Gibson SG GT model,

and I stuck with that one for

I don’t know how many years. And of course, I had a main one but I do have extra copies of that guitar. I don’t know how many but that has been my main guitar.”

GIBSON CUSTOM FIREBIRD

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Michael: “I just got a new one that I have been using in the studio and getting used to it, and now I am bringing it out on the road, and that is the first time since that Gibson SG model that I have been excited about a guitar. Because we have been trying a lot of stuff out, not because I was not happy about my Gibson SG GT – because that is the guitar for me – but sometimes you just become curious to try out new stuff to see how it works, how it sounds, so you know what’s on the other side. I started using them when we were recording the new album, and we felt very comfortabl­e about it. It feels great on your body, and the weight is great. The neck is great. And most important of all, the sound is great. But it’s Gibson; I’m really dedicated to that brand. It’s regular-sized humbuckers, and the one I use the most is a JB SH-4, the Seymour Duncan.”

GIBSON MIDTOWN STANDARD

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Michael: “It’s great. I have a Gretsch guitar at home that I am really happy with. We tried a lot of those out in the studio, the Gibson guitars, when we were recording Sorry Sack Of Bones and Tue brought it up and

I was rehearsing on it a little bit backstage and so far it feels good.”

EPIPHONE MASTERBILT AJ-500RCE

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Michael: “I am a terrible acoustic guitar player [laughs]. Bring me in and it’s not going to sound good. Rob is a really, really good acoustic guitar player, but I have that one song that it looks cool that I wear this guitar. So, no, I’m not really happy about playing the acoustic guitar; it’s just more like a feature in the set that I play it for that one song. I do [practise], but it’s not like

I am enjoying it. But sometimes it is just nice to sit down with something that’s not plugged in and electric, because you do have a tendency to write different material on an acoustic guitar. I just don’t feel connected to it.”

KEMPER AMPS PROFILING AMP

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Michael: “I had been using the Marshall JCM800S for

“MY NEW CUSTOM FIREBIRD IS THE FIRST GUITAR I’VE BEEN EXCITED ABOUT IN YEARS” MICHAEL POULSEN

so many years, and getting used to that sound, combined with how I played on the Gibson guitar, it kind of became my signature sound. Suddenly, trying to put your trust into a robot was not easy because there are so many options, and to believe that it can capture what you are doing on the Marshall amp was not easy. But Tue has been doing a really good job and there is definitely a very close similarity. I would not say that it is 100 per cent but it’s to a level where I agree that it sounds good. Before I was just connecting the JCM800 with a maximiser and equaliser.”

Tue Bayer: “I did a capture of that in the studio just to get that with everything on it, because the only way we can replicate that sound is to do it. It’s an old Behringer, a five-band Behringer EQ! It is a Q5 or something, and you might laugh at it but it’s actually such a big part of what the sound is, and I tried various other EQS. I tried one that was $20,000. I mean, I couldn’t replicate it.”

FRACTAL AXE-FX III, RADIAL ENGINEERIN­G SWITCHER, SHURE AXIENT WIRELESS GUITAR SYSTEM

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Tue: “We just started dabbling with the effects because the guys did a bunch of things on the album with clean sounds, reverbs, delays, stuff like that. Before that it was just distortion, nothing else, totally dry distortion. The way I’ve got it set up now is that everything is going through two Kempers, two Fractals, and then I’ve got a switcher from Radial Engineerin­g, and a Shure Axient wireless. The Kemper is actually running the onstage cabinets because it has got a more real, natural response like an amplifier, and then I am using a Fractal for the in-ears because it sounds a little more like a preamp.” Michael: “I have no idea what you guys are talking about.”

 ??  ?? Rob’s pedalboard continues to grow as he adds more sounds for the band’s new songs
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Rob’s pedalboard continues to grow as he adds more sounds for the band’s new songs 4 5 6
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 ??  ?? Michael’s new Gibson Custom Firebird is the first axe to really impress him since his SG GT, he says
Michael’s new Gibson Custom Firebird is the first axe to really impress him since his SG GT, he says
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