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NAMM 2024 Editors' Picks: Day 2

NAMM 2024 Editors' Picks: Day 2

The PG editors pick their favorite gear of NAMM day 2.


Ted Drozdowski - Editorial Director

Carr Bel-Ray

Although Steve Carr wasn’t at NAMM 2024, his latest amp, the Carr Bel-Ray, was—at the Reverend booth. This one’s in a handsome emerald green, and sounds killer. Like all Carr amps, it’s hand-wired. What else? Custom U.S.-made transformers, Solen Fast Capacitors, carbon composition resistors, and Jupiter signal caps. Output is 16 watts, with two 12AX7s, one EF86, one EL84, and one EZ81 rectifier tube. The control set—with its distinctive hot-rod display—is level, 3-band EQ, tremolo speed and depth, and a power attenuator, down to 2 watts. The speaker is a Fane F25. It weighs in at 34 pounds and streets at $3,340.

Nick Millevoi - Senior Editor

Iris/Circle Strings Guitars

The Iris/Circle Strings booth had lots to offer. Built for the discerning working musician’s taste and price range, their acoustic line covers a range of options and the DF slope-shouldered dreadnought is a standout at $2,350. They also brought a pair of Paul Languedoc builds that Trey Anastasio fans were busy bugging out about!

Eastman Henry James Signature Juliet

Over at Eastman, guitarist Henry James dr used his signature model. His version of the popular Juliet is a solidbody beast with Goldo vibrato, Seymour Duncan Vintage Mini-Humbockers, and a reverse headstock. They’re coming spring 2024 at $2,099

Red Panda Radius

Red Panda’s new Radius pedal has loads of deep tones to discover. Ostensibly a ring mod/frequency shifter, its unique controls will allow you to head to the outer limits with phase-shifting, tremolo sounds, and much, much more! Priced at $349, they’re available now.

Jason Shadrick - Associate Editor

Santa Cruz Vault Series

Santa Cruz’s Vault Series is built upon the idea of using very old reclaimed wood that master luthier Richard Hoover has been saving for decades. This D-style model uses Brazilian Rosewood from the Bryn Athena Cathedral for the back and sides and master grade Fort Ross Chapel redwood for the top. Nearly every part of this build is immaculate and the craftsmanship pushes the limits of modern lutherie. The price? $70,000.

Victory Amps MK Clean

Victory Amps brought two new models to the show. The MK Clean is a monster clean machine with loads of headroom, spring reverb, bright switch, and selectable EQ voicings. On the other side, the MK Overdrive is a 3-channel setup with independent gain controls, switchable volume levels, presence, and more. Production begins in March and they will go for around $5k.

Jamiroquai's Rob Harris: Favorite Gear, Studio vs. Stage, and More
- YouTube

PG's Nikos Arvanitis talks to the funk-guitar master about his musical influences, go-to gear choices, the pros of teaching, working in the studio versus the stage, and future plans for Jamiroquai.

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Bryan in a presidential pose before some of the boards at Blackbird Studio.

Photo by Kate Koenig

Take it from English cyclist Sir Dave Brailsford: With an all-encompassing approach to improving the marginal aspects of your methods, you can get quite the payoff on the quality of your endeavors. And that goes for recording, too.

Technology is a strange bedfellow in the arts. We’re either dazzled or disenchanted, love it or hate it, and the drive behind it all is a relentless need to gain a slight competitive edge on our own creativity—at least that’s how I think of it. Last month I wrote about the benefits of using a modeling microphone on a single source. This month, I want to expand that to a larger format.

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In this promotional photo of the Waikiki Trio, the standing guitarist is playing a Martin 0-42, and the seated guitarist is playing a Martin 0-18K.

Photo courtesy of the C.F. Martin & Co., Inc. Archive

Pacific Island pluckers had a hand in developing the beloved dreadnought acoustics, and changed the course of American guitar music.

In 1906, a devastating earthquake and three days of raging fires leveled 80 percent of San Francisco. Nine years later, to honor the opening of the Panama Canal and signal that San Francisco was back, the city held the Panama-Pacific International Exposition.

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The tiniest TS on Earth has loads of practical upside and sounds that keep pace with esteemed overdrive company.

Solid Tube Screamer tones in a microscopic machine. Light and easy to affix to anything.

Small enough to lose easily! Vulnerable in the presence of heavy steppers?

$99


Olinthus Cicada

olinthus.com

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The Olinthus Cicada’s Tube Screamer-on-a-postage-stamp concept is a captivating one. But contemplating the engineering impetus behind it begs questions: How much area does the pedal and mandatory/included TRRS breakout cable actually conserve? Where do you situate it in relation to other pedals so you can actually tap the bypass—which is the pedal enclosure itself! Would my neighbor’s cat eat it? As it turns out, there’s many good reasons for the Cicada to be.

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