Total Guitar

SCOTT MCKEON

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Scott Mckeon is a guitarist notable for many reasons. He was the child prodigy that became the face of a Fender campaign to recruit younger talent in the 90s, making his debut on British television at just seven years old. For much of the last decade, he’s been busy playing guitar in legendary singer Tom Jones’ band and developing his own line of fuzz pedals – the SM Fuzz, as used by the likes of Gary Clark Jr. and Doyle Bramhall II, and the all-new SM Octave Fuzz. Following an 11-year break from solo material, his third album New Morning witnesses him at the helm of some truly mesmerisin­g modern blues tones...

“For the main bulk I was using my all-original 1962 Strat,” says Mckeon. “I also used my 1965 Jaguar and [producer] Paul Stacey’s ’59 Les Paul, made by Terry Morgan. Jimmy Page actually played it on stage with The Black Crowes at Shepherd’s Bush Empire a few years back! That was fed into a 1964 Vibroverb, a Two-rock Classic Reverb through a custom 2x12 cab made in Japan by String Driver, plus a little Gibson amp I picked up in Philadelph­ia.”

And, of course, there was plenty of SM Fuzz in the mix, too. He made the first incarnatio­n himself at the age of 18 and “after opening a couple of shows for Joe Bonamassa he asked me what the pedal was and if I could make him one, before telling me I should sell them.”

The idea would sit with Mckeon for many years, until he found the right builder to help improve his design. One of the biggest difficulti­es, he says, came with sourcing the right AC128 germanium transistor­s – only half of which manage to pass the rigorous testing prior to assembly. “When the pandemic hit, I started thinking of different ways to survive so we came up with the octave version,” he continues. “It uses silicon instead of germanium, which gives it a slightly different character, but it still cleans up when you roll your guitar volume back. There’s also a bias control for the fuzz which takes it from wide-open to a gated, spitty sound and we’ve also added a ‘Wonder’ switch that rolls the top end of the Octavia side. It’s something I do a lot myself – turn the tone down so you get this keyboard sound that’s a bit like Stevie Wonder’s clavinet, hence the name!”

Naturally, having the right tools of the trade is essential practice for anyone performing on big stages alongside Tom Jones. There’s such a vast catalogue, Mckeon explains, it requires being able to adapt quickly through an array of sounds and styles – from rootsy blues to funk and country. “Tom’s really into his old rock ’n’ roll, so quite often I’ll reference a James Burton solo or a Scotty Moore thing, and he’ll always know exactly what it is.”

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