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Musikmesse 2011: Achtung Babies

Musikmesse 2011: Achtung Babies

"Premier Guitar" hops over the Atlantic to Frankfurt, Germany, to drool over teeming aisles full of attention getting new gear at Musikmesse 2011—the world’s biggest gear show.

Acres upon sprawling acres of instruments and ever-flowing taps of ale (or

bier, as the locals say) aren't all that differentiate Musikmesse from its gear-show counterparts in America and elsewhere.

Of course, the NAMM shows in Anaheim and Nashville have tons

of titillating tone toys, too, but this annual gathering of music manufacturers in Frankfurt,

Germany—which was held this year from April 6–9—is a refreshing opportunity to sample

sonic and design flavors that aren’t quite as common at stateside gear shows.



Here, luthiers like Switzerland’s Claudio Pagelli and Hungary’s Balázs Mihályi, Zoltán

Mihályi, and Zoltán Ughy (from Blasius Guitars) parade eclectic designs while heavyweight

European manufacturers like Warwick, Framus, and Hughes & Kettner host visitors in

huge, bustling, and often loud exhibit spaces. US-based outfits like Fender, Gibson, and

PRS usually take advantage of Musikmesse’s springtime schedule to unleash at least a

couple of new items, too. And then there are promising upstarts like Stark Amps and Nick

Page Guitars turning heads with unique, beautifully built designs.




LEFT: This dashing dandy at the Gewa Bags booth

had us wondering if we weren’t letting our sartorial

standards slip. In the end, we decided our garb was

rock ready but that we could also use a little more sun.

Still, Gewa’s gigbags are pretty nice way to tote your

axe. gewamusic.comRIGHT: Frankfurt’s New.MusicAcademy promoted its

forward-thinking educational efforts by deploying several

young ladies with a portable Vox amp, a Vox Virage

electric, and an iPad stocked with song transcriptions.



LEFT: While we totally dig classic instruments, we also contend there’s not enough envelope pushing

going on when it comes to stringed instrument design. That’s why we were psyched to come

across the ViolaFon, an axe that lets you play standard guitar on frets 1 through 9, and then rip

like Stéphane Grappelli—in wicked fi ddle style—higher up on the neck. We couldn’t help wondering

what Page would have done to “Dazed and Confused” with one of these. violafon.com RIGHT: Bassist Alain Caron (left), drummer Damien Schmitt (behind Caron), and Frank Gambale tear it

up for a big crowd at the plexiglass-enclosed Markbass performance booth. markbassit.com



LEFT: A crowd gathers to watch Hiwatt’s Alfonso Pinzon (back), an unnamed demo player, and PG’s

Charles Saufley (right) and Shawn Hammond (middle) shoot a video demo of the new Hiwatt

Custom 20 and Custom 50 heads (hiwatt.com), which are now being handwired in the US. Watch

this and other Musikmesse demo videos at premierguitar.com.


Premier Guitar perused all this and more as we tirelessly walked the aisles of

Musikmesse to chronicle the newest, most intriguing guitars, amps, and effects we could

find. Actually, “tirelessly” isn’t quite the word—our dogs were barking pretty hard as we

journeyed back and forth from one cavernous hall to the next—but the coolness of it all,

in addition to our steadfast commitment to bring you as many drool-worthy demo videos

as possible from the floor, kept us trudging onward despite the blisters and parched

throats. So be sure to visit premierguitar.com/video to check out our lineup of professionally mic’d HD videos after reading about what we’ve assembled here. Enjoy!



Guitars




Pagelli Andre Archtop and Ekolette Solidbody

Few luthiers design with so little regard to boundaries—real or perceived—as Swiss builder Claudio Pagelli. He builds inspired acoustics,

archtops, and electrics with an irreverent aesthetic that rarely stays on one path very long. The Andre archtop (left) was built to celebrate

his 30th anniversary in business and features a body and neck of Canadian maple, a top crafted from moon-cut Swiss alpine spruce, ebony

binding, Schertler tuners with tagua-nut buttons, and a Häussel pickup. Like so many of Pagelli’s designs, it pulls off the tough act of

being classic and deconstructionist at once.



As for the Ekolette (right), it seems to be a blend of the extroverted stylings of Italian electrics from Bartolini, Eko, and Gimelli. Its

name, says Pagelli, is a mix of Eko and Echolette—a German amp company from the ’60s and ’70s—and the shape is based on a bass

design from years ago. “We always thought it would be a great shape for an electric guitar.” Specs include a mahogany body and neck,

a maple top, an Indian rosewood fretboard, Q-tuner neodymium pickups, Gotoh bridge, and Kluson-style tuners. “The back and sides

match the color of the pickups,” Pagelli explains, “but the rest is covered with vintage-stock Italian mother-of-toilet-seat [pearloid]. The

sound is very open and clear—almost acoustic—but with lots of sustain.”

pagelli.com






(LEFT) Gibson Les Paul

Studio Baritone

Fans of growling baritones channeled

via brawny 496R (neck)

and 500T (bridge) humbuckers

have cause to celebrate at the sight

of this 28"-scale beauty with a

“’50s Rounded” neck profile and

Grover tuners. Finished in pretty

honeyburst, this thump machine

looked bossy just hanging there.

gibson.com



(RIGHT) Lâg Imperator

I3000 Master

Michel Lâg Chavaria brought his

guitars to the US just two years

ago, but they’ve been something

of a fixture in Europe for decades.

The new Imperator I3000 Master

has a mahogany body with a

spalted, quilted, or flamed maple

top, a choice of hardware finishes

(“black satin,” nickel, or “antique

gold”), and DiMarzio, Seymour

Duncan, or EMG pickups.

lagguitars.com






PRS Bernie Marsden SE

Hardworking former Whitesnake guitarist Bernie Marsden has been

honored with a signature PRS this year. This SE has a 24 1/2" scale,

PRS SE 245 humbuckers in the bridge and neck positions, and a Wide

Fat neck.

prsguitars.com






Nick Page Guitars Strich-II

Berlin-based Nick Page had some of the most stylish guitars

on the Musikmesse floor this year. Though some of his designs

pay subtle homage to classics from Supro, Zemaitis, and

Rickenbacker, they’re dressed up with custom hardware and

Page’s unique slotted headstock. The Strich-II shown here has a

fiberglass body, vintage 1960s Filter’Tron pickups, a 3-way selector,

Volume and Tone knobs, a Bigsby-style vibrato, and a maple

neck with a rosewood fretboard and Dunlop 6105 fretwire.

nickpageguitars.com






Nik Huber Krautster II

When we visited Nik Huber at his workshop in Rodgau,

Germany, after Musikmesse (keep an eye out for the forthcoming

video tour on premierguitar.com), he told us the back-to-basics

Krautser models (the one-pickup Krautster I and two-pickup

Krautster II) have become his most successful designs.

So it only made sense that he update the line a bit. Both

versions are now available with an optional veneer of thin, oxidized

silver (left and middle).

nikhuber-guitars.com






Duesenberg Rezobro

Perhaps the single most innovative guitar development at Musikmesse came from the folks at

Duesenberg. The Rezobro features a semi-hollow mahogany body with a spruce top, and it

enables you to blend remarkably realistic resonator tones with the electric tones from its bridge-position

humbucker and neck-position P-90. While some in this day and age might expect this

feat to be accomplished with digital processing or modeling, the Rezobro does it mechanically: A

metal plate attached to the stop tailpiece extends up to the one-piece bridge, and two piezo pickups

under the plate transmit the vibrations between it and the bridge. For more tonal variety, the

metal plate also has adjustment screws for a tighter or looser resonator sound. Controls for the

electronics include Master Volume, magnetic-pickup Volume, dual piezo Volumes, and a Master

Tone knob, as well as a piezo toggle, and a 3-way magnetic-pickup selector. Other cool features

include Duesenberg Z tuners and a nut with height screws for easily setting up slide-friendly

action. The Vintage White version shown here was custom-built for Keb Mo.

duesenberg.de






(LEFT) Blasius Guitars

Hungary’s Blasius Guitars—which has primarily offered basses until this year’s

Musikmesse—unveiled a new line of ornate custom solidbodies with deeply carved bodies

and highly figured woods. The guitars shown here feature Sublime pickups (with matching

wood covers in the left two models), and the guitars on the left and right feature a

Schaller Hannes bridge.

blasiusguitars.com



(RIGHT) ESP

ESP had a bazillion guitars on the show floor.

But none were quite as arresting as this touch

of evil.

espguitars.com



Guitars




Pagelli Andre Archtop and Ekolette Solidbody

Few luthiers design with so little regard to boundaries—real or perceived—as Swiss builder Claudio Pagelli. He builds inspired acoustics,

archtops, and electrics with an irreverent aesthetic that rarely stays on one path very long. The Andre archtop (left) was built to celebrate

his 30th anniversary in business and features a body and neck of Canadian maple, a top crafted from moon-cut Swiss alpine spruce, ebony

binding, Schertler tuners with tagua-nut buttons, and a Häussel pickup. Like so many of Pagelli’s designs, it pulls off the tough act of

being classic and deconstructionist at once.



As for the Ekolette (right), it seems to be a blend of the extroverted stylings of Italian electrics from Bartolini, Eko, and Gimelli. Its

name, says Pagelli, is a mix of Eko and Echolette—a German amp company from the ’60s and ’70s—and the shape is based on a bass

design from years ago. “We always thought it would be a great shape for an electric guitar.” Specs include a mahogany body and neck,

a maple top, an Indian rosewood fretboard, Q-tuner neodymium pickups, Gotoh bridge, and Kluson-style tuners. “The back and sides

match the color of the pickups,” Pagelli explains, “but the rest is covered with vintage-stock Italian mother-of-toilet-seat [pearloid]. The

sound is very open and clear—almost acoustic—but with lots of sustain.”

pagelli.com






(LEFT) Gibson Les Paul

Studio Baritone

Fans of growling baritones channeled

via brawny 496R (neck)

and 500T (bridge) humbuckers

have cause to celebrate at the sight

of this 28"-scale beauty with a

“’50s Rounded” neck profile and

Grover tuners. Finished in pretty

honeyburst, this thump machine

looked bossy just hanging there.

gibson.com



(RIGHT) Lâg Imperator

I3000 Master

Michel Lâg Chavaria brought his

guitars to the US just two years

ago, but they’ve been something

of a fixture in Europe for decades.

The new Imperator I3000 Master

has a mahogany body with a

spalted, quilted, or flamed maple

top, a choice of hardware finishes

(“black satin,” nickel, or “antique

gold”), and DiMarzio, Seymour

Duncan, or EMG pickups.

lagguitars.com






PRS Bernie Marsden SE

Hardworking former Whitesnake guitarist Bernie Marsden has been

honored with a signature PRS this year. This SE has a 24 1/2" scale,

PRS SE 245 humbuckers in the bridge and neck positions, and a Wide

Fat neck.

prsguitars.com






Nick Page Guitars Strich-II

Berlin-based Nick Page had some of the most stylish guitars

on the Musikmesse floor this year. Though some of his designs

pay subtle homage to classics from Supro, Zemaitis, and

Rickenbacker, they’re dressed up with custom hardware and

Page’s unique slotted headstock. The Strich-II shown here has a

fiberglass body, vintage 1960s Filter’Tron pickups, a 3-way selector,

Volume and Tone knobs, a Bigsby-style vibrato, and a maple

neck with a rosewood fretboard and Dunlop 6105 fretwire.

nickpageguitars.com






Nik Huber Krautster II

When we visited Nik Huber at his workshop in Rodgau,

Germany, after Musikmesse (keep an eye out for the forthcoming

video tour on premierguitar.com), he told us the back-to-basics

Krautser models (the one-pickup Krautster I and two-pickup

Krautster II) have become his most successful designs.

So it only made sense that he update the line a bit. Both

versions are now available with an optional veneer of thin, oxidized

silver (left and middle).

nikhuber-guitars.com






Duesenberg Rezobro

Perhaps the single most innovative guitar development at Musikmesse came from the folks at

Duesenberg. The Rezobro features a semi-hollow mahogany body with a spruce top, and it

enables you to blend remarkably realistic resonator tones with the electric tones from its bridge-position

humbucker and neck-position P-90. While some in this day and age might expect this

feat to be accomplished with digital processing or modeling, the Rezobro does it mechanically: A

metal plate attached to the stop tailpiece extends up to the one-piece bridge, and two piezo pickups

under the plate transmit the vibrations between it and the bridge. For more tonal variety, the

metal plate also has adjustment screws for a tighter or looser resonator sound. Controls for the

electronics include Master Volume, magnetic-pickup Volume, dual piezo Volumes, and a Master

Tone knob, as well as a piezo toggle, and a 3-way magnetic-pickup selector. Other cool features

include Duesenberg Z tuners and a nut with height screws for easily setting up slide-friendly

action. The Vintage White version shown here was custom-built for Keb Mo.

duesenberg.de






(LEFT) Blasius Guitars

Hungary’s Blasius Guitars—which has primarily offered basses until this year’s

Musikmesse—unveiled a new line of ornate custom solidbodies with deeply carved bodies

and highly figured woods. The guitars shown here feature Sublime pickups (with matching

wood covers in the left two models), and the guitars on the left and right feature a

Schaller Hannes bridge.

blasiusguitars.com



(RIGHT) ESP

ESP had a bazillion guitars on the show floor.

But none were quite as arresting as this touch

of evil.

espguitars.com



Guitar Amps


Palmer Drei

Perhaps best known for their speaker simulators, Palmer has a knack for amplifier innovation, too. The Drei enables you to combine the

outputs from three types of GZ34/5AR4-rectified power tubes—an EL84, a 6V6, and a 6L6—via the Eins, Zwei, and Drei (One, Two, and

Three). By varying those knobs, in addition to the preamp’s Klang (Tone), Normal Sättigung (Low-Frequency “muddy” overdrive), and Höhen

Sättigung (high-frequency “tight” overdrive) controls, you can create numerous unique amalgams of Brit and Yank tones.

palmer-germany.com






Hughes & Kettner TubeMeister 18

Powered by twin EL84s, the TubeMeister features twin channels, each with Master and Gain knobs, a shared 3-band EQ, and Lead

Boost and Channel Select buttons. Around back, there’s a four-step power soak for cranked-tube dynamics at whisper volume, in

addition to built-in Red Box circuitry for silent recording with the company’s famous cabinet simulation.

hughes-and-kettner.com






Orange Dark Terror

The Terror just keeps getting more terrifying. A stroll by the bright and

sizable Orange booth found us ducking a barrage of gain-charged riffery

from the new Dark Terror. Like its blockbuster predecessor, the featherlight

head doles out 15 class-A watts (switchable to 7) via two EL84s, but its

tone stack—which is controlled by Volume, Shape, and Gain knobs—has

morphed in a way that enables insanely dynamic switches between all-out

Norwegian black metal evilness and cleaned-up bluesy wailing.

orangeamps.com






Stark Amps Stark 1

This handsome little point-to-point-wired head features

a delectable textured-grid covering and knobs for Gain,

Drive, Treble, Middle, Bass, Presence, and Master. It can

run off EL34 or 6L6 power tubes for 20, 35, or 50 watts

of class AB power, and its single-channel design is made

more versatile by a boost feature that’s activated via the

front-panel toggle or a footswitch. Rear-panel features

include an XLR direct out and a serial effects loop.

stark-amps.com






Koch Jupiter and Startrooper

Koch Amps’ two new hybrid amps—the Jupiter and

Startrooper—pair a 12AX7-driven preamp with a solidstate

power section. Each has two EQ-sharing channels

and a boost function. The Jupiter summons biting cleans

and brawny blues-rock distortion via a 12" Jensen with

a neodymium magnet, while the Startrooper uses a Koch

12" speaker that’s voiced like a Celestion Vintage 30 to

prime the storm trooper in you for higher-gain applications.

koch-amps.com






Laney Ironheart

You couldn’t miss

the IronHeart barking,

purring, and

roaring from Laney’s

impressive demo

stage at Musikmesse.

But despite its raw

power and intimidating

moniker, it’s

an amp of many

personalities, thanks

to its three flexibly

voiced channels and

a continuously variable

1-120-watt output

knob that helped

it sound sweet

when purring low

or screaming like a

banshee at full force.

laney.co.uk






Fender Super-Sonic Twin


Fender’s Super-Sonic line has always offered Jekyll-and-Hyde vintage and modern voicings

wrapped in classic Fender livery. The 100-watt, 6L6-driven Super-Sonic Twin (lower left;

at upper right the new Super-Sonic 100 head sits atop Super-Sonic 100 4x12 cabs, and

the Super-Sonic 60 combo is at lower right) has a 25-watt Club mode, can be switched

between Twin and Bassman voices, and has an exceedingly nasty Burn section that covers

major sonic territory.

fender.com



Guitar Amps


Palmer Drei

Perhaps best known for their speaker simulators, Palmer has a knack for amplifier innovation, too. The Drei enables you to combine the

outputs from three types of GZ34/5AR4-rectified power tubes—an EL84, a 6V6, and a 6L6—via the Eins, Zwei, and Drei (One, Two, and

Three). By varying those knobs, in addition to the preamp’s Klang (Tone), Normal Sättigung (Low-Frequency “muddy” overdrive), and Höhen

Sättigung (high-frequency “tight” overdrive) controls, you can create numerous unique amalgams of Brit and Yank tones.

palmer-germany.com






Hughes & Kettner TubeMeister 18

Powered by twin EL84s, the TubeMeister features twin channels, each with Master and Gain knobs, a shared 3-band EQ, and Lead

Boost and Channel Select buttons. Around back, there’s a four-step power soak for cranked-tube dynamics at whisper volume, in

addition to built-in Red Box circuitry for silent recording with the company’s famous cabinet simulation.

hughes-and-kettner.com






Orange Dark Terror

The Terror just keeps getting more terrifying. A stroll by the bright and

sizable Orange booth found us ducking a barrage of gain-charged riffery

from the new Dark Terror. Like its blockbuster predecessor, the featherlight

head doles out 15 class-A watts (switchable to 7) via two EL84s, but its

tone stack—which is controlled by Volume, Shape, and Gain knobs—has

morphed in a way that enables insanely dynamic switches between all-out

Norwegian black metal evilness and cleaned-up bluesy wailing.

orangeamps.com






Stark Amps Stark 1

This handsome little point-to-point-wired head features

a delectable textured-grid covering and knobs for Gain,

Drive, Treble, Middle, Bass, Presence, and Master. It can

run off EL34 or 6L6 power tubes for 20, 35, or 50 watts

of class AB power, and its single-channel design is made

more versatile by a boost feature that’s activated via the

front-panel toggle or a footswitch. Rear-panel features

include an XLR direct out and a serial effects loop.

stark-amps.com






Koch Jupiter and Startrooper

Koch Amps’ two new hybrid amps—the Jupiter and

Startrooper—pair a 12AX7-driven preamp with a solidstate

power section. Each has two EQ-sharing channels

and a boost function. The Jupiter summons biting cleans

and brawny blues-rock distortion via a 12" Jensen with

a neodymium magnet, while the Startrooper uses a Koch

12" speaker that’s voiced like a Celestion Vintage 30 to

prime the storm trooper in you for higher-gain applications.

koch-amps.com






Laney Ironheart

You couldn’t miss

the IronHeart barking,

purring, and

roaring from Laney’s

impressive demo

stage at Musikmesse.

But despite its raw

power and intimidating

moniker, it’s

an amp of many

personalities, thanks

to its three flexibly

voiced channels and

a continuously variable

1-120-watt output

knob that helped

it sound sweet

when purring low

or screaming like a

banshee at full force.

laney.co.uk






Fender Super-Sonic Twin


Fender’s Super-Sonic line has always offered Jekyll-and-Hyde vintage and modern voicings

wrapped in classic Fender livery. The 100-watt, 6L6-driven Super-Sonic Twin (lower left;

at upper right the new Super-Sonic 100 head sits atop Super-Sonic 100 4x12 cabs, and

the Super-Sonic 60 combo is at lower right) has a 25-watt Club mode, can be switched

between Twin and Bassman voices, and has an exceedingly nasty Burn section that covers

major sonic territory.

fender.com



Guitar Effects



Vibesware Guitar Resonator GR-1 Sustainer

It was always a pleasure to walk by the Vibesware booth and get an earful of

the odd and ethereal sounds created by the Vibesware Guitar Resonator GR-1

infinite sustainer. The mic-stand-mounted unit can sustain multiple strings

simultaneously and, most importantly, frees your picking hand to engage in

picking or vibrato-arm manipulation.

vibesware.com






T-Rex Gull Wah

The multivoiced Gull features auto-inspired aesthetics and

a unique magnet-equipped treadle—which means there’s

no wah potentiometer to wear out, even after years of

lead-footed wailing. You can also select between three wah

sounds, including a “yoy-yoy” setting that lends a heavily

rounded, vowel-ish sound. It also has a Boost knob

for when you want to get a little more aggressive, a Slope

control for tailoring the EQ range, and a pot that enables

you to dial in variable settings for the pedal’s action.

t-rex-effects.com






Elmwood Amps Woodpecker

Best known for its tube amplifiers, Elmwood Amps from

Tanumshede, Sweden, offered a sneak peek of the JFETtransistor-

based Woodpecker overdrive prototype. It’ll be in

stores this summer, and it uses Gain, Shape, and Output

controls to serve up serious boost power and extreme tone-shaping

capabilities.

elmwoodamps.com






Line 6 POD HD

The desktop POD has been a mainstay studio asset for

pros and hobbyists alike for years now. This latest version

incorporates Line 6’s HD modeling technology to not

only improve the authenticity of amp and effect models,

but also to increase touch sensitivity and dynamics. It also

includes more than 100 effects for nearly limitless tone

combinations.

line6.com






Carl Martin HeadRoom

Fans of wet and whacked-out spring reverb will no doubt dig Carl Martin’s new HeadRoom, which uses an Accutronics spring reverb

apparatus in a compact stompbox that can also be switched remotely if you want to place the unit out of range from stage vibrations—

although listening to this thing rattle after a kick to the enclosure is a blast!

carlmartin.com






Duesenberg Effects

The always-on-the-move folks at Deusenberg unveiled updated versions of the Red Echo, White Drive, and Green Comp, as well as three

all-new effects—the Blue Move chorus, Violet Trem tremolo, and Gold Boost booster—all are handwired and feature true-bypass circuitry.

duesenberg.de



Guitar Effects



Vibesware Guitar Resonator GR-1 Sustainer

It was always a pleasure to walk by the Vibesware booth and get an earful of

the odd and ethereal sounds created by the Vibesware Guitar Resonator GR-1

infinite sustainer. The mic-stand-mounted unit can sustain multiple strings

simultaneously and, most importantly, frees your picking hand to engage in

picking or vibrato-arm manipulation.

vibesware.com






T-Rex Gull Wah

The multivoiced Gull features auto-inspired aesthetics and

a unique magnet-equipped treadle—which means there’s

no wah potentiometer to wear out, even after years of

lead-footed wailing. You can also select between three wah

sounds, including a “yoy-yoy” setting that lends a heavily

rounded, vowel-ish sound. It also has a Boost knob

for when you want to get a little more aggressive, a Slope

control for tailoring the EQ range, and a pot that enables

you to dial in variable settings for the pedal’s action.

t-rex-effects.com






Elmwood Amps Woodpecker

Best known for its tube amplifiers, Elmwood Amps from

Tanumshede, Sweden, offered a sneak peek of the JFETtransistor-

based Woodpecker overdrive prototype. It’ll be in

stores this summer, and it uses Gain, Shape, and Output

controls to serve up serious boost power and extreme tone-shaping

capabilities.

elmwoodamps.com






Line 6 POD HD

The desktop POD has been a mainstay studio asset for

pros and hobbyists alike for years now. This latest version

incorporates Line 6’s HD modeling technology to not

only improve the authenticity of amp and effect models,

but also to increase touch sensitivity and dynamics. It also

includes more than 100 effects for nearly limitless tone

combinations.

line6.com






Carl Martin HeadRoom

Fans of wet and whacked-out spring reverb will no doubt dig Carl Martin’s new HeadRoom, which uses an Accutronics spring reverb

apparatus in a compact stompbox that can also be switched remotely if you want to place the unit out of range from stage vibrations—

although listening to this thing rattle after a kick to the enclosure is a blast!

carlmartin.com






Duesenberg Effects

The always-on-the-move folks at Deusenberg unveiled updated versions of the Red Echo, White Drive, and Green Comp, as well as three

all-new effects—the Blue Move chorus, Violet Trem tremolo, and Gold Boost booster—all are handwired and feature true-bypass circuitry.

duesenberg.de



Bass Gear



Fernandes Jeff Walker Triturador (“Grinder”) Signature Bass

The Carcass bassist’s new 34"-scale namesake features a bound mahogany body and set

neck, an ebony fretboard with inlays taken from the band’s 1992 Tools of the Trade EP, and a

lightning-bolt soundhole. The EMG 35DC humbuckers are controlled by Volume, Blend,

and Tone knobs, while a Gain knob and On/Off toggle govern the EBS overdrive circuit.

fernandesguitars.com






Palmer Deepressor,

Uebertreiber, and

Bazz Pedals

Palmer had a trio of new

bass effects at Musikmesse.

The Deepressor is a dedicated

bass compressor with

Sustain, Attack, and Level

knobs. The Uebertreiber

goes from clean boost to

overdrive and features

Clean, Gain, Tone, and

Level knobs that let you

also create an articulate

mix of both. The Bazz

bass fuzz has Fuzz, Tone,

and Volume knobs, as well

as a Mid Boost switch to

emphasize the nastiest fuzz

frequencies.

palmer-germany.com






Warwick Steve Bailey Signature 6-String Fretless

Steve Bailey’s list of collaborations is about 10 miles long, and it got that

way because he can do just about anything on a bass. His new signature

Warwick looked very much like an instrument that could keep up, too.

With a snakewood fretboard, asymmetric neck radius, and cool electronic

features like a harmonic enhancer that boosts high-mid content, it’s an

endless well of tone.

warwickbass.com






AER Amp Three

The newest addition to AER’s Bottom Line series pumps 200 watts

through two 8" speakers. Tone controls include a 3-band EQ, a Bass

Boost function for +10 dB of kick at 55 Hz, a Colour knob that cuts

mids and boosts treble, a Tone Balance control, and Ratio and Threshold

controls for the compression circuit.

aer-amps.com






Hartke Kilo

Hartke's potent new head kicks out 1000 watts of bridged mono power that can be split into 500 watts of stereo power. It has a tube

preamp, and front-panel controls include Overdrive, Compressor, Gain, Shape, Bass, Mid, and Treble knobs, in addition to a 10-band

graphic EQ and Active, O.D., Mute, Brite, Shape, Deep, EFX, and GEO buttons.

hartke.com


Bass Gear



Fernandes Jeff Walker Triturador (“Grinder”) Signature Bass

The Carcass bassist’s new 34"-scale namesake features a bound mahogany body and set

neck, an ebony fretboard with inlays taken from the band’s 1992 Tools of the Trade EP, and a

lightning-bolt soundhole. The EMG 35DC humbuckers are controlled by Volume, Blend,

and Tone knobs, while a Gain knob and On/Off toggle govern the EBS overdrive circuit.

fernandesguitars.com






Palmer Deepressor,

Uebertreiber, and

Bazz Pedals

Palmer had a trio of new

bass effects at Musikmesse.

The Deepressor is a dedicated

bass compressor with

Sustain, Attack, and Level

knobs. The Uebertreiber

goes from clean boost to

overdrive and features

Clean, Gain, Tone, and

Level knobs that let you

also create an articulate

mix of both. The Bazz

bass fuzz has Fuzz, Tone,

and Volume knobs, as well

as a Mid Boost switch to

emphasize the nastiest fuzz

frequencies.

palmer-germany.com






Warwick Steve Bailey Signature 6-String Fretless

Steve Bailey’s list of collaborations is about 10 miles long, and it got that

way because he can do just about anything on a bass. His new signature

Warwick looked very much like an instrument that could keep up, too.

With a snakewood fretboard, asymmetric neck radius, and cool electronic

features like a harmonic enhancer that boosts high-mid content, it’s an

endless well of tone.

warwickbass.com






AER Amp Three

The newest addition to AER’s Bottom Line series pumps 200 watts

through two 8" speakers. Tone controls include a 3-band EQ, a Bass

Boost function for +10 dB of kick at 55 Hz, a Colour knob that cuts

mids and boosts treble, a Tone Balance control, and Ratio and Threshold

controls for the compression circuit.

aer-amps.com






Hartke Kilo

Hartke's potent new head kicks out 1000 watts of bridged mono power that can be split into 500 watts of stereo power. It has a tube

preamp, and front-panel controls include Overdrive, Compressor, Gain, Shape, Bass, Mid, and Treble knobs, in addition to a 10-band

graphic EQ and Active, O.D., Mute, Brite, Shape, Deep, EFX, and GEO buttons.

hartke.com