A circa-’82 original TS9 Tube Screamer.
Photo courtesy of Ibanez
9. Stevie Ray Vaughan's Ibanez TS9 Tube Screamer
Almost right out of the gate, Stevie Ray
Vaughan was touted as the heir apparent to
Hendrix—a challenge he took on with disarming
reverence, even as it became clear he
was mapping out a style all his own. Being
steeped in Texas blues had a lot to do with
it, but SRV was also a tireless tone hound,
and when he sniffed out the first version
of the Ibanez Tube Screamer (the TS808),
he knew he’d found the midrange bite he’d
been looking for. He soon moved on to the
grittier TS9, which seemed to shimmer a
bit more in the higher registers.

“I use it because of the tone knob,” he
told Frank Joseph in 1983. “That way you
can vary the distortion and tonal range. You
can turn it on slightly to get a Guitar Slim
tone, which is how I use it, or wide open so
your guitar sounds like it should jump up
and bite you.” SRV and Double Trouble’s
Texas Flood sports a few notable examples,
including the title track, the classic hit “Pride
and Joy,” and the instrumental blues boogie
“Testify”—all testament not only to his versatility
as a player, but to his incomparable
ear for crafting a lead tone that perfectly fit
the mood of a song. By the time he got to
1984’s Couldn’t Stand the Weather, everyone
knew an SRV solo when they heard it.
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