The Henna T is a gig-worthy, affordable Tele-style with unique aesthetics
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Clips recorded through Matchless Avalon 35 1x12 combo with Vovox cable and Rode NT1 and Sennheiser e609 mics. Clips by Pat Smith. |
They’re versatile as guitars can be, going from smooth and sweet to razor sharp and nasty within seconds. You can make them purr and caress your ears with honey, or you can make them quack, cluck, bark, and beat you up. They are wonderfully easy for an acoustic player to adjust to as well, especially with slightly heavier strings (I like a minimum of .010s, and .011s are even better). So when Luna Guitars sent their Henna Paisley T with the Vicki Genfan acoustic I reviewed in the May issue, I was more than happy to snag it.
First Impressions
On the surface, Luna’s Henna Paisley T in black is a very cool looking guitar. It features Luna’s distinctive “henna tattoo” pickguard, a laser etching process on cedar wood, on a mahogany body painted a very warm black. The look is hard to resist—something in me wants this guitar just because of the look. The maple neck is a wonderful complement, outfitted with Luna’s signature moon-phase position markers that are just cool. Telecasters and T-style guitars are not typically the prettiest, sexiest looking guitars around, but the Luna manages both pretty and sexy while giving the player a true T-style experience.
The guitar is equipped with the American Series chromed six-saddle bridge, which is wonderful because you can get downright obsessive-compulsive about action and intonation. All the hardware is chrome, including the Grover tuners, and seems very solid. I like the smooth roll of the volume and tone knobs.
The action right out of the box was quite good, and I didn’t encounter dead frets or any setup blunders whatsoever—a nice surprise at this price point. The neck is extremely comfortable and playable, with a very traditional Telecaster feel. At 7.2 pounds, it is right in the middle of the target weight range for this style of guitar.
The only reservation I have with this particular guitar is that the input jack doesn’t feel solid and the cable came loose once or twice. That’s not tough to fix, and although it was slightly annoying, the connection didn’t cut out or make any noise while it was plugged in.
Plugging In
The neck pickup has a compelling, rich dark-chocolate tone. It’s a single-coil Tele-style reverse wound pickup, while the bridge pickup is a Tele-style single-coil with ceramic magnets, and it’s bright and spanky sounding. The two together in the middle position sound great—really warm and yet lively, too.
The pickups are hot—in fact, they’re a lot hotter than my standard MIM Fender Telecaster. But they’re also a bit noisier. That’s nice when you’re making this guitar growl, which it does admirably. I plugged into a Tube Screamer and got some terrifically musical grit by turning the Drive up to 7 and the Tone down to 3; in the middle pickup position the Henna T got gratifyingly dark with no mud.
The neck pickup’s melted chocolate tone is really quite lovely all by itself. I backed the Luna’s tone down to around 8.5 and brought the volume down about the same amount and was treated to a very full and fat jazzy tone that was, if anything, almost too bassy. For a solo player, it’d be outstandingly full, but with a bass player and drummer it might get a little lost.
The bridge pickup on its own is pure Tele snark, from chicken-pickin’ to car horns. If you turn the volume down a little there’s some sugar, and if you crank it there’s plenty of bite. Stomping again on the Tube Screamer made my back teeth hurt, but in a good way. It’ll go from sweet and sassy country to obnoxious rock ’n’ roll madness with the roll of a knob, which is exactly why the Telecaster, and the legion of T-style guitars it has inspired, is the king of guitars.
The middle position rules on the Henna T, especially if your playing leans into blues territory. I have focused my electric playing on the backbone rhythm side of things, and in this position it’s dark and creamy with a little bite, sort of like the aural equivalent of Bailey’s Irish Cream. In a foundation role in an ensemble it offers fullness while letting the riffs that make it rock shine through.
The Final Mojo
Because Luna is a woman-owned guitar shop, a lot of people seem to think these are guitars for girls. To them I will state emphatically that Luna makes an entirely gig-worthy instrument that is made in a responsible shop with a strong commitment to fair wages and environmentally sound practices. The price is extremely right, too.
Buy if...
you want a sexier looking Tele experience and love it when they growl.
Skip if...
your ego needs the Fender logo.
Rating...
Street $499 - Luna Guitars - lunaguitars.com |
Nineties-style high-gain heaviness that can be surgically tailored with a powerful EQ.
Excellent variations on high-gain modern distortion tones. Powerful EQ.
Not many low- or mid-gain sounds here.
$199
JHS Hard Drive
jhspedals.com
JHS makes many great and varied overdrive stomps. Their Pack Rat is a staple on one of my boards, and I can personally attest to the quality of their builds. The new Hard Drive has been in the works since as far back as 2016, when Josh Scott and his staff were finishing off workdays by jamming on ’90s hard rock riffs.
During these sessions, Scott’s go-to pedal was the Ibanez SM7 Smash Box. He realized that JHS had never offered anything along those lines, conferred with his then lead engineer, Cliff Smith, and the wheels were set in motion. Over several years of design, the Hard Drive evolved from an SM7 homage to a unique, original circuit.
JHS’ Hardest to Date
The Hard Drive’s control panel is streamlined, consisting of knobs for volume, mid frequency, drive, bass, middle, and treble. Driven by cascading gain stages, the Hard Drive can cop a wide range of modern distorted tones. Even at the lowest drive settings, the Hard Drive simmers, delivering massive bottom end on muted power chords. Nudging the drive up very slightly transforms the Hard Drive into a roaring Marshall JCM 900. And if you bring the drive all the way up, you’re in for all out chaos. Even with an amp set just louder than bedroom levels, the Hard Drive, with its volume at just 11 o’clock, is very loud and in-your-face. You don’t have to work hard to imagine how this could sound and feel like multiple stacks raging at Madison Square Garden in the context of a recorded track.
Even at the lowest drive settings, the Hard Drive simmers, delivering massive bottom end.
Zoning the Frequencies
Unlike some heavy pedals that concern themselves with mega-gain and little else, the Hard Drive’s EQ controls are very effective and powerful. Moving the treble knob from 11 o’clock to 1 o’clock changes the pedal’s tone and response characteristics completely, opening up and transforming the naturally relatively dark sound of my Fender Super Sonic amp. Turning the treble knob all the way off with the bass and mid knobs at noon gives me a vocal lead tone that’s creamy, warm, and still immediate and responsive.
The middle and mid frequency controls work in tandem. The mid control itself works as a cut or boost. The mid frequency control, however, lets you choose the specific frequency you cut or boost. I found these controls invaluable for sculpting tones that could leverage the copious gain without being abrasive. Meanwhile, adding more high midrange lends clarity to complex chords.
The Verdict
The Hard Drive is an unapologetically heavy pedal—if you’re looking for a dirt box that can double as a clean boost, well, the Hard Drive is not that. It’s meant to slay with gain, and it performs this task well and with a vengeance. There are countless dirt boxes on the market that deliver hot rodded, ’80s-style brown sound. Fewer cater to the subsequent generations of high-gain players that used the ’80s as a mere jumping-off point. The Hard Drive is very much voiced for this strain of heavy music. If that’s your jam, the Hard Drive is hard to beat.
Voltage Cable Company's new Voltage Vintage Coil 30-foot guitar cable is now protected with ISO-COAT technology to provide unsurpassed reliability.
The new coiled cables are available in four eye-grabbing retro colors – Surf Green, Electric Blue, Orange and Caramel – as well as three standard colors: Black, White and Red. There is also a CME exclusive “Chicago Cream” color on the way.
Guitarists can choose between three different connector configurations: straight/straight plugs, right angle/straight and right angle/right angle options.
The Voltage Vintage Coil offers superior sound quality and durability thanks to ISO-COAT treatment, a patent-pending hermetic seal applied to solder terminations. This first-of-its-kind airtight seal prevents corrosion and oxidization, a known factor in cable failure and degradation. ISO-COAT protected cables are for guitarists who value genuine lifetime durability and consistent tone throughout their career on stage and in the studio.
Voltage cables are hand made by qualified technical engineers using the finest components available and come with a lifetime warranty.
Voltage Vintage Coil features include:
- Lifetime guarantee, 1000+ gig durability
- ISO-COAT treatment - corrosion & oxidization resistant cable internals
- Strengthened structural integrity of solder terminations
Voltage Vintage Coils carry $89.00 USD pricing each and are available online at voltagecableco.com, as well as in select guitar stores in North America, Australia, Thailand, UK, Belgium and China.
About Voltage Cable: Established in 2021, Voltage Cable Co. is a family owned and operated guitar cable company based in Sydney, Australia. All their cables are designed to be played, and built for a lifetime. The company’s ISO-COAT is a patent pending hermetic seal applied to solder terminations.
Featuring dual-engine processing, dynamic room modeling, and classic mic/speaker pairings, this pedal delivers complete album-ready tones for rock and metal players.
Built on powerful dual‑engine processing and world‑class UAD modeling, ANTI 1992 High Gain Amp gives guitarists the unmistakable sound of an original "block letter" Peavey 5150 amplifier* – the notorious 120‑watt tube amp monster that fueled more than three decades of modern metal music, from Thrash and Death Metal, to Grunge, Black Metal, and more.
"With UAFX Dream, Ruby, Woodrow, and Lion amp emulators, we recreated four of the most famous guitar amps ever made," says UA Sr. Product Manager Tore Mogensen. "Now with ANTI, we're giving rock and metal players an authentic emulation of this punishing high gain amp – with the exact mic/speaker pairings and boost/noise gate effects that were responsible for some of the most groundbreaking modern metal tones ever captured."
Key Features:
- A complete emulation of the early '90s 120‑watt tone monster that defined new genres of modern metal
- Powerful UAFX dual-engine delivers the most authentic emulation of the amp ever placed in a stompbox
- Complete album‑ready sounds with built‑in noise gate, TS‑style overdrive, and TC‑style preamp boost
- Groundbreaking Dynamic Room Modeling derived from UA's award-winning OX Amp Top Box
- Six classic mic/speaker pairings used on decades of iconic metal and hard rock records
- Professional presets designed by the guitarists of Tetrarch, Jeff Loomis, and The Black Dahlia Murder
- UAFX mobile app lets you access hidden amp tweaks and mods, choose overdrive/boost, tweak noise gate, recall and archive your presets, download artist presets, and more
- Timeless UA design and craftsmanship, built to last decades
For more information, please visit uaudio.com.
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The Memphis-born avant-funk bassist keeps it simple on the road with a signature 5-string, a tried-and-true stack, and just four stomps.
MonoNeon, aka Dywane Thomas Jr., came up learning the bass from his father in Memphis, Tennessee, but for some reason, he decided to flip his dad’s 4-string bass around and play it with the string order inverted—E string closest to the ground and the G on top. That’s how MonoNeon still plays today, coming up through a rich, inspiring gauntlet of family and community traditions. “I guess my whole style came from just being around my grandma at an early age,” says Thomas.His path has led him to collaborate with dozens of artists, including Nas, Ne-Yo, Mac Miller, and even Prince, and MonoNeon’s solo output is dizzying—trying to count up his solo releases isn’t an easy feat. Premier Guitar’s Chris Kies caught up with the bassist before his show at Nashville’s Exit/In, where he got the scoop on his signature 5-string, Ampeg rig, and simple stomp layout, as well as some choice stories about influences, his brain-melting playing style, and how Prince changed his rig.
Brought to you by D’Addario.
Orange You Glad to See Me?
This Fender MonoNeon Jazz Bass V was created after a rep messaged Thomas on Instagram to set up the signature model, over which Thomas had complete creative control. Naturally, the bass is finished in neon yellow urethane with a neon orange headstock and pickguard, and the roasted maple neck has a 10"–14" compound radius. It’s loaded with custom-wound Fireball 5-string Bass humbuckers and an active, 18V preamp complete with 3-band EQ controls. Thomas’ own has been spruced up with some custom tape jobs, too. All of MonoNeon's connections are handled by Sorry Cables.
Fade to Black
MonoNeon’s Ampeg SVT stack isn’t a choice of passion. “That’s what they had for me, so I just plugged in,” he says. “That’s what I have on my rider. As long as it has good headroom and the cones don’t break up, I’m cool.”
Box Art
MonoNeon’s bass isn’t the only piece of kit treated to custom color jobs. Almost all of his stomps have been zhuzhed up with his eye-popping palette.
Thomas had used a pitch-shifting DigiTech Whammy for a while, but after working with Paisley Park royalty, the pedal became a bigger part of his playing. “When I started playing with Prince, he put the Whammy on my pedalboard,” Thomas explains. “After he passed, I realized how special that moment was.”
Alongside the Whammy, MonoNeon runs a Fairfield Circuitry Randy’s Revenge (for any time he wants to “feel weird”), a literal Fart Pedal (in case the ring mod isn’t weird enough, we guess), and a JAM Pedals Red Muck covers fuzz and dirt needs. A CIOKS SOL powers the whole affair.
Shop MonoNeon's Rig
Fender MonoNeon Jazz Bass V
Ampeg SVT
DigiTech Whammy
CIOKS SOL