Okay...It was Friday February 6, 2009, when we moved the gear from Burbank. My last post was Adam Day (former Slash guitar tech) George and I packing up the truck and moving everything from the Burbank rehearsal studio and driving it across town to the recording studio in Van Nuys. It was raining like hellfire that night and the wind made the hard rain hit us sideways while we tried effortlessly to load the truck. What should have been a 10 min. drive down three freeways took about an hour. Arriving at Sound City studios in Van Nuys had us unloading the truck into Studio A.
Bringing in the gear down a hallway, there was a lot of history shown on the walls, one of the most prominent was the Fleetwood Mac platinum plaque for the "Rumors" album. While working on hauling George's gear in, I mentioned that I could feel ghosts in there and an intern that was receiving us agreed. Elvis had been in there and I could feel it...kind of a creepy feeling over my shoulder, y'know?
Drums began the next day, Saturday with Scott Coogan while Marco and George played rhythm scratch tracks. On Monday, George and Marco laid down the basic guitar tracks and bass. At the helm was Bob Kulick and Brett Chasson. They recorded for three days, completing this part of the task on Tuesday Feb. 10th, 2009. I wasn't there after having delivered George and his gear from the previous Friday, but amp wizard and former Groove Tube sensei Jimmy Wigle acted as Lynch tech on Monday and Adam Day did Tuesday. And as always in my absense, George had me on the phone at various points during the recording on those days. Videographer Matt Hughes captured some of this recording process as much of this was taking place. We will be editing the footage and placing it online as a Dojo exclusive. During all of this, surprisingly, the ESP Super V was the primary guitar used in this stage of the recording.
On Weds. Feb. 11th 2009, George and I rented a truck and went back to Sound City studios to pack the gear and move it all to Bob and Brett's production studio a few blocks away also in Van Nuys. It was a cloudy day and much of the day was spent sorting out the mess that had gone on in Sound City. Upon arrival at the other studio, we placed the gear where we had always put it whenever we are there (Souls Of We, "Little Drummer Boy" Xmas recording, various other projects, etc.). All the amp heads were stacked into three groups of 3-4, forming a wall-o-amp heads and were plugged into my magic amp switching box that I sold to Brett last year. The speaker cabinets were placed in the live room. Guitars in two boats were as follows:
-Original Tiger guitar
-ESP Haji
-ESP Super V
-ESP Vintage S Plus
-ESP/LTD Viper 400 Baritone (the one with all the Coop devil chick stickers and "Furious George" sticker)
-ESP 12-string acoustic
-ESP Kamikaze 20th Anniversary
-1959 Fender Esquire (the battered Tele with the pickup petrified into the wood with Billy Gibbons' mojo
-Linhof Tele
-Washburn Lynch signature acoustic
Amps that we hauled in there were more than what we brought into Sound City:
-Two Randall Lynch Box 100-watt amp heads (Grail and Scary modules primary, one in each)
-Marshall 1968 100-watt Super Lead (yeah, the same magic one)
-Soldano SLO-100 (6th one ever to be made...has the snakeskin tolex...got rid of the red ostrich skin clone that smelled like feet)
-Mesa Boogie Roadstar Dual Rectumfriar 100-watt
-Randall Lynch Box 4x12
-Hiwatt SE4123 4x12 (we call it the "Loose" cabinet because of the marking on the grille cloth) with four original Fane 50-watt speakers
-Marshall 1971 angled "Basketweave" 4x12 with two 75-watt Celestion Anniversary series speakers and two 20-watt British-made greenback Celestions
-Marshall 1973 straight "Salt & Pepper" 4x12 with two 25-watt Chinese-made Celestions and two 20-watt British-made greenback Celestions
-Hiwatt SE4123 4x12 with two Fane 50-watt speakers and two Celestion 20-watt greenback Celestions
-WEM Dominator combo
-1965 Fender Super Reverb
-Quindley 30-watt w/ 2x12 cabinet
Bringing in the gear down a hallway, there was a lot of history shown on the walls, one of the most prominent was the Fleetwood Mac platinum plaque for the "Rumors" album. While working on hauling George's gear in, I mentioned that I could feel ghosts in there and an intern that was receiving us agreed. Elvis had been in there and I could feel it...kind of a creepy feeling over my shoulder, y'know?
Drums began the next day, Saturday with Scott Coogan while Marco and George played rhythm scratch tracks. On Monday, George and Marco laid down the basic guitar tracks and bass. At the helm was Bob Kulick and Brett Chasson. They recorded for three days, completing this part of the task on Tuesday Feb. 10th, 2009. I wasn't there after having delivered George and his gear from the previous Friday, but amp wizard and former Groove Tube sensei Jimmy Wigle acted as Lynch tech on Monday and Adam Day did Tuesday. And as always in my absense, George had me on the phone at various points during the recording on those days. Videographer Matt Hughes captured some of this recording process as much of this was taking place. We will be editing the footage and placing it online as a Dojo exclusive. During all of this, surprisingly, the ESP Super V was the primary guitar used in this stage of the recording.
On Weds. Feb. 11th 2009, George and I rented a truck and went back to Sound City studios to pack the gear and move it all to Bob and Brett's production studio a few blocks away also in Van Nuys. It was a cloudy day and much of the day was spent sorting out the mess that had gone on in Sound City. Upon arrival at the other studio, we placed the gear where we had always put it whenever we are there (Souls Of We, "Little Drummer Boy" Xmas recording, various other projects, etc.). All the amp heads were stacked into three groups of 3-4, forming a wall-o-amp heads and were plugged into my magic amp switching box that I sold to Brett last year. The speaker cabinets were placed in the live room. Guitars in two boats were as follows:
-Original Tiger guitar
-ESP Haji
-ESP Super V
-ESP Vintage S Plus
-ESP/LTD Viper 400 Baritone (the one with all the Coop devil chick stickers and "Furious George" sticker)
-ESP 12-string acoustic
-ESP Kamikaze 20th Anniversary
-1959 Fender Esquire (the battered Tele with the pickup petrified into the wood with Billy Gibbons' mojo
-Linhof Tele
-Washburn Lynch signature acoustic
Amps that we hauled in there were more than what we brought into Sound City:
-Two Randall Lynch Box 100-watt amp heads (Grail and Scary modules primary, one in each)
-Marshall 1968 100-watt Super Lead (yeah, the same magic one)
-Soldano SLO-100 (6th one ever to be made...has the snakeskin tolex...got rid of the red ostrich skin clone that smelled like feet)
-Mesa Boogie Roadstar Dual Rectumfriar 100-watt
-Randall Lynch Box 4x12
-Hiwatt SE4123 4x12 (we call it the "Loose" cabinet because of the marking on the grille cloth) with four original Fane 50-watt speakers
-Marshall 1971 angled "Basketweave" 4x12 with two 75-watt Celestion Anniversary series speakers and two 20-watt British-made greenback Celestions
-Marshall 1973 straight "Salt & Pepper" 4x12 with two 25-watt Chinese-made Celestions and two 20-watt British-made greenback Celestions
-Hiwatt SE4123 4x12 with two Fane 50-watt speakers and two Celestion 20-watt greenback Celestions
-WEM Dominator combo
-1965 Fender Super Reverb
-Quindley 30-watt w/ 2x12 cabinet
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