PRS upgrade: BK Nantucket soundclip.

Mr Grumpy

Ambassador of Comings and Goings
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The PRS has just been upgraded with a Bare Knuckle Nantucket.

PRS_nantucket.jpeg

No complexity here, just functionality.

Here's a clip of how she sounds now:
https://soundcloud.com/user-680211663/prs-clip1

Not me playing, a colleague who has been guitarless for a few weeks, so I lent him the PRS to mess around with, and he put the Nantucket in and set her up for me. He reckons that the BK Nantucket sounds great.

Let me know your thoughts...

Edit to add: that clip was just a phone recording of the guitar being played out of a Blackstar Fly BASS amp! I will try to do a Focusrite/Audacity recording and post that.
 
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Leslie West

Leslie who?

1408707891037_wps_2_Actor_Leslie_Phillips_lar.jpg
 
Crank that thing up and see what she sounds like.

These were my exact thoughts. Usually the thing folks love about a P-90 isn't so much it's clean tone but how it spanks the front end (pre-amp tubes) in a Tube Amp sending things into that notorious Rock'n Overdrive that drives us Rockerz notoriously frik'n crazy!

Now crank that $#it in one of Weazie's many fine classic tube amps & play that classic & iconic 'Mississippi Queen' riff that P-90 pups are known for! C'mon now!

Crank Crank Crank dat $#it & Rock Bruddah!
 
I might need to practice a bit, I'll get back to you...

Well just in case you don't think you're 'there yet' & able to copy Leslie West, read what he had to say about himself as a guitar player back in the early days!

Gibson: “Mississippi Queen” has one of rock and roll’s all-time great guitar riffs. Do you think writing great riffs is a dying art?

LW: I don’t know. I can only talk about my own style. I play the guitar with only my first and fourth fingers, on my left hand. I never learned to use all my fingers, like you would playing a scale. What I try to do is play to my strengths. I can’t play fast, so I try to play slow and melodic. I focused on my vibrato and my tone. I used to work every day on the tone of the guitar. I wanted [his guitar] to sound like Pavarotti. I wanted that tremolo, that vibrato.”I remember someone telling me that “less is more.” In Alfred Hitchcock films the music is really intense, but then there will be this dead silence. You don’t know what’s going to happen, but that silence is deafening. I try to play around with dynamics in a similar way.

Gotta love Leslie.

Of course, Leslie’s axe of choice back in the day was a Les Paul Junior, TV models first. In a House of Blues interview, he said: “To me a Les Paul Junior is a tree with a microphone.” And “there’s a hum to it [because of the P-90 pickup], but I managed to hide the hum.”

So that was it: Les Paul Junior (mahogany + P-90), cord, Sunn Coliseum head, Marshall cabs. No fuzz, no effects of any sort.

And fingers. Fingers full of attitude and conviction.

If your looking for "THAT'' sound, you need this too.

View attachment 4194

Yes it was a shear stroke pf luck that Leslie copped that sound & even ended up using a Sunn Coliseum PA head!

Gibson: Mountain made its performance debut in 1969, at Fillmore West. Do you remember much about that?

LW: Yes, I do. I remember that Albert King’s amplifiers blew, and he had to use my amps. It was funny. I was supposed to get these Marshall amps, and they didn’t arrive, so Sunn had sent me some amps. I was pissed off when I got them because it was actually a Coliseum PA head they sent me. I thought, “poop, what am going to do with this?” I had no choice but to use them, but it turned out that they gave me the signature sound that I used for years. [Coliseum PA heads] had four microphone inputs and a master volume, which sort of turned into what amps are now. You could get a particular distortion by plugging in the microphones and turning up the master volume. It was a mistake that proved to be great. Nobody else knew how I was getting that sound.

Anyway....
Here's Mississippi Queen from the original studio album.

 
Yeah man! Mississippi Queen blew my Rock 'n Roll mind back when I first heard it some years after it was first released & hit #21 on Billboards Top 100 way back in 1970!

My first exposure to this Mountainous song wasn't until around 1975 while on a camping trip with my parents on the juke box inside the Rec Center at some campground just outside of Cooperstown! I played that song over, 'n over, 'n over everyday for the week we were there. Hey, it was too short man & addicting as hell too!

If anybody is interested in more of that story on Leslie & that Sunn PA, here is some insightful info that's a great read.
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Sunn introduced its powerful Coliseum PA system ca. 1965 and it gained favor with bands for its high-fidelity, full-frequency reproduction. The speaker system [had JBL woofers, drivers and tweeters but] the head is most important to this story, as guitarists and bassists shunned the expensive and inappropriate full-range speakers….

“[This] was the powerful stock Coliseum head Jimi Hendrix used early-on (early ’68) in place of Sunn’s suggested 60-watt 100S head, with the company supplying 4×12 cabinets to suit his preference. These heads were designed to be high-fidelity but like any tube amp, especially one designed to accept low-output microphones, they would break up when pushed.

“The Coliseum used four KT88 power tubes in a push/pull ultralinear circuit. The transformers were from the large Dynaco mono blocks. It’s interesting the amps were only rated at 120 watts RMS, because everyone else claimed 200 watts from the same arrangement. It’s probable the transformers weren’t large enough to develop the extremely high plate voltage necessary for full power, or that the ratings were on the conservative side.

“The individual volume controls for each of the four channels were coupled to a master volume control, although the people using these as guitar heads probably put both on 10. Having a separate preamp tube for each channel would have allowed players to jump channels and get a fuller sound at lower volumes [one story has Leslie doing this and cluing Pete Townshend in on the trick].

“A total of three twin-triode 12AX7s handled the four input stages, leaving two stages for additional gain. A 6AN8 acted as the phase inverter and a pair of 5AR4 rectifiers supplied the juice. Separate bass and treble controls rounded out the features. The
price for the entire system in early ’68 was a whopping $3,695, without covers. By April 1970, the JBL 075 bullet tweeter and its crossover network were gone and the price dropped to $3,495.”

[Note: It depends on whom you ask, but generally KT-88 power tubes are supposed to be somewhat similar-sounding to 6550s, which were used in Marshalls for a bit. Compared to the standard EL-34s, both 6550s and KT-88s are supposed to sound less midrangey and less warm but clearer. KT-88s might be a hair “stiffer” than 6550s, but all of these power tubes can sound good.]
 
You fellas are stretching a phone sound clip of a Blackstar Fly Bass amp, and turning it into a $5000 100w cranked tube amp! :alien:
 
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It sounds nice and crisp. I love BK pickups. As long as we are sort of on the topic, the BKP Mississippi Queen pickup is incredible!!! It is an HB sized P90.
 
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I like Leslie's playing very much. I am not as much a fan of his singing. I also wish he had not done so many covers because I have trouble listening to them due to his singing as he does not do them justice.
 
Ya maybe a little Anarchy in the UK huh ?

Or even some 2 note power chord Fat String Rock 'n Roll with a little energy & attitude thrown on top. Just think & yell GRRRRRRR! over 'n over in your mind while playing on 10!
That'll do.
 
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