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GALLERY: Show Us Your Gear - #1 Guitars

In our inaugural Show Us Your Gear Gallery, we feature the go-to instruments of our readers.

"My #1 guitar is a hand-built Telecaster made from a 160-year-old piece of worm-eaten chestnut taken from a friends house during a renovation. It has rosewood fingerboard, maple neck, cocobolo binding, and Jason Lollar pickups (mini-humbucker and reproduction Supro lapsteel). What makes this my favorite is the clean look and warm tone from the Lollars. - Shane Kramer"

Stevie Van Zandt with ā€œNumber One,ā€ the ’80s reissue Stratocaster—with custom paisley pickguard from luthier Dave Petillo—that he’s been playing for the last quarter century or so.

Photo by Pamela Springsteen

With the E Street Band, he’s served as musical consigliere to Bruce Springsteen for most of his musical life. And although he stands next to the Boss onstage, guitar in hand, he’s remained mostly quiet about his work as a player—until now.

I’m stuck in Stevie Van Zandt’s elevator, and the New York City Fire Department has been summoned. It’s early March, and I am trapped on the top floor of a six-story office building in Greenwich Village. On the other side of this intransigent door is Van Zandt’s recording studio, his guitars, amps, and other instruments, his Wicked Cool Records offices, and his man cave. The latter is filled with so much day-glo baby boomer memorabilia that it’s like being dropped into a Milton Glaser-themed fantasy land—a bright, candy-colored chandelier swings into the room from the skylight.


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Cort Guitars debuts the latest evolution of their X series electric guitars, the Mutility II.

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Think you’ve got what it takes to work on the Acoustic Music Works sales floor?

You’ve gotta have serious chops to toil in a music instrument store—but not the kind you’d think.

We’ve all heard those classic phrases: ā€œDo what you love, and you’ll never work a day in your life!ā€ or Elbert Hubbard’s ā€œWork to become, not to acquire,ā€ which is, I think, more zen than any of us have time to process these days. This column is about that little thing that every single guitarist has asked themselves: What if I worked in a guitar shop?

Here are some tips and insights from the first 13 years of a long career in the instrument game.

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This versatile ramping phaser is distinguished by a fat voice, vibrato section, and practical preamp.

Uncommonly thick phaser voice. Useful range of ramping effects. The practical preamp section can be used independently. Nice vibrato mode.

Visually cluttered design. Some ramping effects can be difficult to dial in with precision.

$249

Beetronics FX
beetronicsfx.com

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The notion behind a ramping phaser predates the phaser pedal by many moons—namely in the form of thetwo-speed Leslie rotating speaker. A Leslie isn’t a phaser in the strictest sense, though the physics behind what the listener perceives are not dissimilar, and as any phaser devotee can tell you, there are many audible similarities between the two. At many phase rates and intensities, a phaser stands in convincingly for a Leslie, and the original king of phasers, theUniVibe was conceived as a portable alternative to rotary speakers.

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