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GALLERY: Show Us Your Gear - Unique Instruments

Oddball, one-off, custom, and handmade guitars, amps, and effects

Steve Pfenninger's 2010 PRS McCarty DC245 Private Stock
"Steve's Private Stock McCarty would be a beauty on its own with the flame maple top and Brazilian rosewood fretboard, but what makes it unique is that it's the first PRS guitar with a ziracote neck. The neck was made with two pieces of ziracote with a sapwood skunk stripe."

Have your own unique piece of gear? Send pictures and description to rebecca@premierguitar.com for inclusion in our next gallery!

A scalpel for carving out huge but controlled reverb spaces.

Makes huge reverb blooms possible in tight spaces. Adds ghostly character to metal, shoegaze, psychedelic, and pop riffs and hooks. Fun tool for tightening arrangements.

Controls can feel elusive in early experimentation.

$199

Catalinbread CBX Gated Reverb
catalinbread.com

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For music fans of a certain age, gated reverb can conjure conflicted, even hostile, feelings. Though there are myriad uses, in the 1980s it was employed to drive snare drums to migraine-inducing levels in mixes. But as the Catalinbread CBX proves, gated reverb needn’t be an ice pick or bludgeon. In fact, the CBX works best as a scalpel of sorts—enabling the player to fit big reverb sounds in very confined and specific musical spaces.

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Dark, enveloping, and mysterious tape-echo-style repeats on the cheap in an enclosure that fits in the smallest spaces.

Dark, enveloping repeats that rival more expensive tape-echo emulations and offer an alternative to click-prone BBD echoes. Cool chorus and flanger effects at fastest repeat times.

Small knobs make it tough to take advantage of real-time tweaking.

$137

Electro-Harmonix Pico Rerun
ehx.com

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My most treasured effect is an old Echoplex. Nothing feels like it, and though I’ve tried many top-flight digital emulations, most of which sounded fantastic, nothing sounds quite like it either. If the best digital “tape” delays do one thing well, it’s approximating the darkness and unpredictable variations in tape-echo repeats.

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Tim Commerford digs into his Ernie Ball Music Man StringRay onstage.

The three bassists—whose collective work spans Vulfpeck, D’Angelo, Rage Against the Machine, and much more—cast a wide musical net with their StingRay basses.

The story of the Ernie Ball Music Man StingRay is a deep journey through the history of the electric guitar business, going way back to connections made in Leo Fender’s early days. When the StingRay was introduced in 1976, it changed the electric-bass game, and it’s still the instrument of choice for some of the most cutting-edge bass players around. Here’s what a few of them have to say about their StingRays:

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Our columnist is really passionate about cleaning up his tone.

Our columnist breaks down why Leo’s original designs are still the benchmark for pristine guitar sounds.

It’s time to discuss a favorite topic of mine: the Fender clean tone. I’m a big fan of pristine guitar tones, and I think it might be the reason why I got into Fender amps in the first place. So, in this column, I’ll break down and explain what creates the beautiful, crystalline tone in vintage Fender amps, and share which amps are best for capturing these huge, squeaky-clean sounds.

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