Frank Zappa
One of the greatest musicians of the 20th century was also a damn  good guitar player, he stands alone as a composer, instrumentalist and  satirist beyond compare. His name was Frank Zappa. Frank is still IMHO  the most underrated musician in the rock and roll era.
Frank was a master at the use of wahwah (check out his early wah solo  on Orange County Lumber Truck from the album Weasels Ripped My Flesh),  one of his techniques was using the wah as an EQ boost. His feel for the  wah was so good he could feel the notch in the pedals throw that would  give him (for most part) that growling round sound that Frank was known  for during the 70′s. Try it yourself plug in your SG (or any humbucking  solidbody guitar) and get your favorite distortion sound. Now go to the  neck pickup crank it up but do not roll off the treble as you would if  you were trying to cop the Clapton ‘Woman tone’, leave it up full and  roll off the highs using the wah. This will give the wah a full spectrum  signal for it to work with.
Another Zappa secret was his uncanny ability to combine exotic scales  with the pentatonic blues scale. If you watch any videos of Frank  playing you will notice he is not in the “normal guitar boxes”. Viva la  Frank!!!
Speaking of Frank Zappa, it is well documented that growing up two of  his favorite guitarists were Guitar Slim and Johnny Guitar Watson.  Frank in a Guitar Player magazine interview said that his favorite  guitar solo of all time was Guitar Slims Story of my life. This solo has  a tone and approach that is very Zappaesque.
Guitar Slim
One of the secrets of Guitar Slims sound was the fact that he  preferred to plug his guitar into a PA amp as opposed to a guitar amp.  This was probably a Bogen or Premier. What Slim liked about these amps I  am sure was the loudness (I have seen p.a. amps from the early 40′s  using 2 6L6′s way before Fender used these tubes for his amps) their  high end, and most important their reaction to the signal of his guitar  (Slim was reported to be using a Strat and a 52 Les Paul) which gave out  more signal than the microphones of that era. End result? Distortion  mmmm yummy yummy!!!
Jimmy Page with his Fender Telecaster
How come I don’t sound like Jimmy Page when I play the intro to  Heartbreaker when I use my Les Paul? Is it because I don’t own a 59  Burst? What can I do to make my Les Paul sound like Jimmy’s? Well first  of all you would have to transform it into a Telecaster. That’s right a  Telecaster. Now let me explain how this happened.
A young Jimmy Page was the protégé of British studio legend Big Jim  Sullivan. Jim was a member of an elite group of cats who like their  American counterparts the “Wrecking Crew” played on most of the hit  records of the 60′s recorded in England. The fact is that 95% of the  records we grew up listening to in the 60′s were made by the same two  dozen or so musicians. The truth is no producer (the music industries  version of a movies director) would put his reputation on the line using  some prettyboys who were signed because of the haircuts or their  trousers. (Rutles 101). This fact by itself is what separates the  Beatles, the Stones from everyone else, they were the first truly self  contained band.
Now back to Sully, Page and the Tele. Sullivan could be seen weekly  in the UK and US as a featured player on the Tom Jones Show. Sullivan  was known for his swarthy good looks and his White Telecaster. Being a  studio player Jim knew the merits of the Tele, how it cut through the  mix and was a safe bet at sessions as far as its versatility. (A side  note; there was a guitarist across the pond making ground breaking  records with his Telecaster, his name was Joe Messina one of the house  guitarists of Motown’s Funk brothers).
When Jimmy took his formidable talent and studio experience to the  studio to produce the first Led Zeppelin record Jimmy had an early 60′s  rosewood board white Tele in tow just like Big Jims.
Jimmy had already toured with the Yardbirds using the Tele as well as  the first go round with Zeppelin in the UK (check out Zep on the DVD  Supershow). But Page felt that the Tele was not fat enough sounding for a  power trio setup, Jimmy soon switched to the Les Paul for good.
Jimi Hendrix in Studio
Jimi’s tone using the Fuzz boxes of the 60′s. We all know how thin  sounding the fuzz boxes of the 60′s were. Whether it’s a Big Muff, an  Octavia,or a Tonebender, they were all pretty thin sounding. Jimi  Hendrix used all of these at one time or another, yet his tone was  mostly pretty fat and round sounding (unless he was looking for a  special effect) This leads us to Jimi’s secret tone maneuver.
It’s a really simple one. We all know now that Jimi used Marshall’s  most of his career and we also know that Jimi made use of the channel  jumper cable (as seen in many of Jimi’s live video’s) Jimi’s trick was  to boost the bass sounding channel to even out the thin sound of the  fuzz box. This gave Jimi the desired fat tone he was accustomed to when  he came up using Fenders and Ampegs. The other benefit was that when  Jimi would simply turn down his volume for his rhythm sound it was still  quite big sounding. Rarely in the videos I have seen (many) did Jimi  ever step on a fuzztone for a lead, when you have seen him go to a pedal  for a lead it was to a wah for the tone boost.
Surf guys outboard reverb unit trick. Boy did the surf records of the  early to mid 60′s blow my mind. Imagine guitar records with no singing,  simple melodies that almost everyone could cop, and tons of self  important guitar slinger attitude. I ran into a surf guitar legend years  ago and I asked him how he ran his reverb, because I could see that he  had something funky going on there as I saw that his guitar was plugged  directly into the amp.
He smiled and told me that he and some of the other cats of that era  were using a primitive effects loop so to speak. Here’s how they did it.
He ran the guitar into input one of his Showman and then ran a cable  from input two to the input of his Fender reverb unit and ran the output  of the reverb to the input of channel two (or normal channel). This way  he could not only tailor the sound of the unit with the onboard  controls he could also utilize the second channels volume and tone  controls.
 One benefit he did not realize too, was that the guitar running  direct into the first channel did not have its dry input signal colored  by the reverb unit! This setup is also called the poor mans effects loop
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