
Oliver Ackermann of A Place to Bury Strangers joins us in discussing the players we'd pick to portray if we got our chance on the big screen. Plus: musical obsessions!
Question:Ā If you could play the role of any guitarist in a biopic, who would it be and why?
Oliver Ackermann ā A Place to Bury Strangers
Photo by Tyler Barclay
A: If I could play anyone in a biopic it would be Kurt Cobain. I definitely don't qualify as the most obsessed fan of all time. That perhaps goes to the runaway I drove around in my '89 Caprice constantly requesting to rewind back to "Drain You" over and over again.
Kurt Cobain interviewed on Boston's WFNX radio, September 1991.
Photo by Julie Kramer
But Kurt for sure gave me the confidence that I could write a song and I just dove in and never looked back. I also think I could figure out those guitar parts, so there would be no weird miming to some complex solos. The real reason to do this, though, would be one of my favorite pastimes: jumping into drum sets.
Nirvana - Drain You (Live at Reading 1992) (Official Music Video)
Oliver Ackermann'sĀ Current Obsession:
Beyond-destroyed sounds. I guess that's always been my obsession, so it's more of a lifestyle. There's a little constant fight that goes on in my head where I think "this is just too messed upāwhat about pure fat sine waves, distinguishable rhythms, beautiful harmonies, and dreamy melodies?" And then when it comes down to it, it's just more exciting to swing a strobe light over your head and play a little AC interference. The other thing that's important is there ain't no faking. I better be drilling into my pickup or throwing my amp through the air. More high definition than surround sound 182 kHz is standing right next to me when I rip the strings off my guitar.
Sarah Gutierrez ā Reader of the Month
A: Nancy Wilson. How could I miss the '70s and '80sāthat's why!!! I grew up listening to Heart and being in a female fronted group would be a dream. I really loved her work on the movie Vanilla Sky. I remember frantically searching for who played, "Elevator Beat" in a movie that moved me. It certainly pulled at the heart strings.
Elevator Beat - Nancy Wilson
Sarah Gutierrez'sĀ Current Obsession:
Royal Blood having Josh Homme as a producer for "Boilermaker" on Typhoons blew me away, along with Mike Kerr's riffs. Hometown & young self-produced "Drown." I love the drums! These boys from Gen Z really are the future of music. Des Rocs made my cry about following your dream when I saw them live in October. I love to turn up Cleopatrick as loudly and often as possible. Recently discovering Nothing but Thieves' self-titled album (heavily influenced by Jeff Buckley) gave me lifeāI'm thrilled to see them in Chicago next year.
Royal Blood - Boilermaker (Official Video)
Tessa Jeffers ā Managing Editor
A: Kim Gordon. I'm not much into Sonic Youth, but I love Kim's solo stuff. She's a great bass player, and her guitar playing is raw and powerful (just like her voice).
Years ago, I read her biography, Girl in a Band, and it's a wildly interesting look into an artful life. She's a bold creator who rose out of the shadows of men to claim her own space, and I'm here for that.
Tessa Jeffers'Ā Current Obsession:
French music. Recently I came across a rad song by Les Artisans called "Theoreme," and it prompted me to seek out other French artists. I knew Edith Piaf and Savages well, but new ones for me include La Femme, Christine and the Queens, and Serge Gainsbourg, who's apparently the "Elvis of France." J'adore!
Theoreme - Les Artisans (audio)
Joe Gore ā Contributing Writer
A: Hector Berlioz, the great 19th century French composer. Unlike nearly all classical composers, he didn't compose at a keyboard. He wrote everything on guitar and a little whistleāincluding his revolutionary Symphonie Fantastique and the massive opera Les Troyens. Despite his humble tools, he's considered one of the greatest orchestrators ever. (Sadly, he never composed for guitarāonly with it.) But the fun part would be portraying his larger-than-life personality. Talk about attitude! He was ambitious, angry, arrogant, and unspeakably funny. His prose is as amazing as his compositions, especially his MĆ©moires, my fave book about classical music. (Free English-language edition here.) On page one he writes, "I was brought up in the Catholic faithāthe most charming of religions since it stopped burning people." And the snark never stops.
Joe Gore'sĀ Current Obsession:
Baude Cordier's "Belle Bonne Sage," a 14th-century love song notated in the form of a heart.
Medieval music! When I was a teen, my plan was to go into academia, specializing in early music. Life decreed otherwise. But now, in late middle age, I'm returning to the late Middle Ages. I've just recorded my first-ever solo album: a compilation of 14th-century pieces. I play the notes exactly as written, but using modern instruments, including lots of electric guitar. To modern listeners unfamiliar with the style, it sounds like music from Mars: eerie, beautiful, and totally frickin' weird. (Example: This love song by Baude Cordier, notated in the form of a heart.)
The Brian May Gibson SJ-200 12-string in the hands of the artist himself.
Despite a recent health scare, guitarist Brian May cannot be stopped. With the Queen reissue project, heās celebrating his legacy, and with his new SJ-200āa limited edition signature Gibson acoustic guitarāhe looks to the future.
Long lasting instrumental relationships are something we love to root for. Neil Young and Old Black, Willie Nelson and Triggerāthose are inseparable pairings of artist and instrument where, over the course of long careers, those guitars have been shaped, excessively in both cases, by the hands that play them. Eddie Van Halen went steps beyond with Frankenstein, assembling the guitar to his needs from the get-go. But few rock ānā roll relationships imbue the kind of warm-and-fuzzy feelings as the story of Brian May and his dad building Red Special, the very instrument that hung around his neck for his rise to superstardom and beyond.
Together, with a legion of Vox AC30s and a few effects, May and his homemade Red Special have created some of the richest, most glorious guitar sounds that have ever been documented. It is with that guitar in his hands that heās crafted everything from his velveteen guitar orchestras to his frenetic riffs and luxuriant harmonies to his effortlessly lyrical leads, which matched the dramatic melodic motifs of Freddie Mercury in one of the most dynamic lead singer/guitarist pairings in rock music.
Although it has a smaller role in his body of work, overshadowed by such an accomplished, prolific electric guitar C.V., Mayās acoustic playing is a major part of the story of his music. His bold opening strums of āCrazy Little Thing Called Loveā are some of the most recognizable D-major chords in the classic-rock canon, and his supportive work on āSpread Your Wingsā adds lush dimension between Freddie Mercuryās arpeggiated piano chords and his rich electric guitarmonies. The multi-tracked 12-string figure that opens āā39āāhis ācosmic folk songāāis among his most recognizable.
Itās a surprise, then, that when I ask May about the acoustic guitars used while recording with Queen, the most notable is his Hallfredh acoustic, a ācheap as hellā guitar from a virtually unknown brand. āMy little old acoustic, which I swapped with my dear friend at school,ā he reminisces. āThe strings were so low on it that everything buzzed like a sitar. I capitalized on that and put pins on it instead of the bridge saddles, and you can hear that stuff on āThe Night Comes Downā [from Queen]. I used it all the way through Queenās recordings, like on āJealousyā [from Jazz] years later and lots of things.ā He also recalls his Ovation 12-string and some others, but the Hallfredh remains in the foreground of his acoustic memories.
The cosmic inlays on the Brian May SJ-200 represent the rock legendās work in the field of astrophysics, in which he holds a PhD.
In recent years, May has been performing the 1975 ballad and emotional Mercury vehicle āLove of My Life,ā which appears on A Night at the Opera, as an acoustic tribute to the late singer. May and his acoustic 12-string sit center stage each night as he leads the crowd through a heartwarming rendition of the song, joined at its climax by a video of Mercury. For that powerful, commanding moment, heās relied on āa number of guitars we wonāt mention, but it just came to the point where Iām thinking, āThis isnāt sounding as good as I would like it to.āā
At one concert, a Gibson representative who was around piped up and offered to make him a guitar to his specs specifically for this piece. āI was surprised that they would notice me in the first place,ā May recalls, ābecause part of me never grew up.ā A surprising take from a rock star of such stature, but he explains, āIām still a kid who was reading the Gibson catalogs and not able to afford anything, seeing the SGs and the Les Pauls and dreaming of being able to own a Gibson guitar. I now have a couple of the SGs, which I absolutely love, but, of course, I made my own guitar and I now have my own guitar company, so I went a different way. But to me this was a joy that they would offer to make me a guitar, which I could take out onstage.ā
After building one for the guitarist, Gibson created a limited edition run of 100 instruments of the new model, called the Brian May SJ-200 12-string. Featuring a AAA Sitka spruce top with a vintage sunburst finish, AAA rosewood back and sides, a 2-piece AAA maple neck with walnut stringer, and a rosewood fretboard, itās a top-of-the-line acoustic. The most noticeable feature on the SJ-200 is probably the string arrangement, which is flippedāas is most commonly found on Rickenbacker 12-stringsāwith the lower string above the higher string in each course. May has made that modification on other 12s, because he likes to string the high string first when fingerpicking. āYou get an incredibly pure sound that way,ā he points out. āāLove of My Lifeā is a good exampleāif itās strung the other way, it sounds very different.ā
On its pickguard, all seven of the other planets in our solar system are etched. The shaded one, close at hand, is Mercury, a tribute to the Queen singer.
Mayās aesthetic customizations draw from his astrophysics work and add a personal sparkle to the large-bodied acoustic. The pickguard features a custom design with the seven other planets in the system, which is to say, not Earth. Mercury sits close at hand, a tribute to the singer. The fretboard and headstock include 8-point star inlaysāto give a āmore cosmic feelingāāthat are made from agoya shell, as are the bridge inlays.
āIt became a discussion about art and science, which I love,ā May says of the design process. āThatās probably the biggest thread in my life, this path trodden, some people would say, between art and science. But I would say that theyāre the same thing. So, I just tread among art and science.ā
Mayās own Gibson has already appeared in concert during the āLove of My Lifeā segment of Queenās show, and occasionally for āā39.ā On social media, where May stays active, many fans caught a glimpse of the guitar when he posted a new song for Christmas Eve. āI just wanted to say Merry Christmas, and thatās the way it came out,ā he says. āIt was incredibly spontaneous. I wanted it to be a gift. I didnāt want it to be, in any way, a way of advertising or making money or anything. It was just a Merry Christmas gift to whoever wants to listen to me.ā
āIt became a discussion about art and science, which I love,ā
While that was one of the first things created with the new Gibson, he has more plans. āIāve been playing around with it. In fact, weāve been dropping the D,ā he says, hinting at some future plans with guitarist-vocalist Arielle. āI have quite a few songs with the bottom D dropped. I havenāt normally played them acoustic or 12-string, but Iām discovering that some of that sounds really good. It gets such a lovely big clang and a big depth to it.ā
Recently, May spent a great deal of time looking back as the band prepped the Queen I box set. The remixed, remastered, and very expanded version of their 1973 debut, Queenātheyāve added the āIā hereāwhich was released last October, encompasses a rebuild of the entire record, plus additional takes, backing tracks, a version recorded specifically for John Peelās BBC Radio 1 show, and a 1974 live concert recording from Londonās Rainbow Theatre.May says of his new Gibson: āTo me, this was a joy that they would offer to make me a guitar."
Revisiting this early document over 50 years later, itās amazing to hear how well-developed the guitaristās sound already wasāfull of the propulsive riffs and harmonies that would become part of his signature. May concurs, āYou go back into these tracks quite forensically, and I hear myself in the naked tracks and I think, āWow, I didnāt realize that I could do that at that point.ā It must have happened very quickly.ā
Reflecting on those formative times, he continues, āI think thereās a period of just exploding, knowing what it is in your head, and striving to make what you play match whatās in your head. But I see it in other people, too. Sometimes, I go back and listen to the first Zeppelin album, and they were pretty young when they made that. But I think, āMy God, how did they get that far and so quick?āā
āI thought guitars do work as primary orchestral instruments, so thatās what I want to do.ā
Before Queen, May had already recorded a two-part guitar solo on the song āEarth,ā a late-ā60s track recorded with his earlier band, Smile, which also featured future Queen drummer Roger Taylor. While that lead certainly points toward the ambition in Mayās later work, its raw untamedness doesnāt quite show evidence of his ultimate precision. But he says he had it in mind from early on. āThere werenāt any more tracks to do three partsā when they recorded with Smile, he says, ābut I always dreamed of it. It goes back a long, long way to hearing harmonies in other ways from the Everly Brothers, from Buddy Holly and the Crickets, from all sorts of things that we were listening to when we were kids.
āI wanted to make the sound of an orchestra just using guitars, and thereās other little inspirations along the way,ā he continues. āJeff Beck was an inspiration because thereās that wonderful track, āHi Ho Silver Lining,ā which Jeff hated. But thereās one bit where he double-tracks the solo and in just one point it breaks into a two-part harmony, probably by accident. I guess I should have asked himādamn well wish I had. But that sound echoed in my head, and I thought guitars do work as primary orchestral instruments, so thatās what I want to do. I could hear it in my head for a long time before I could make it actually happen.ā
Brian May and his Red Special at a recent concert.
Photo by Steve Rose
Though the Queenrecording sessions gave the guitarist his first opportunity to explore the larger harmonized sections that would become part of his signature, many of the sounds on the record left the band dissatisfied. Recorded at Trident Studios in London, the young band could only afford to use the room during downtime. Over the course of four months, they had sessions, usually at night, with in-house producers John Anthony and Roy Thomas Baker, both early supporters. However, the Trident style and sound wasnāt what Queen had in their collective ears, and theyāve remained unhappy with the sonic quality of their debut all these years.
The drums were the bandās primary issue, which Taylor describes as having a āvery dry, quite fat, dead sound.ā Mayās tone is recognizably his own. āWell, Iām a very pushy person,ā he laughs. āBut nevertheless, it was difficult for me, too. Because of this Trident style of recording, the intention was not to have room sound on it. I kind of pushed, I suppose, to have a mic on the back of the amp as well as the front. That gave me a bit more air. I did feel a little hampered and the change is more subtle on the guitar, but itās there.
āJeff Beck was an inspiration because thereās that wonderful track, āHi Ho Silver Lining,ā which Jeff hated. But thereās one bit where he double tracks the solo and in just one point it breaks into a two-part harmony, probably by accident.ā
āItās funny because it changed radically as time went on,ā he continues. āAnd I can remember by the time we got to Sheer Heart Attack, Roy is putting mics all over the room and miking up windows in the booth and whatever to get maximum room sounds. Itās certainly nice to go back and make everything sound the way we pretty much wouldāve liked it to sound at the time.ā
With Queen I out, a new Queen IIset is in the works, which May calls āa very different kettle of fish.ā The drum sounds on their sophomore effort were more in line with the bandās original vision, but the dense layers of overdubs that famously appear on the record came at a cost. āI think it is the biggest step musically and recording-wise that we ever made,ā says May. āBut thereās a lot of congestion in there. Thereās mud because of all this generation-loss stuff [caused by overdubs], and because we liked to saturate the tape, which seemed like a good idea at the time. It made it sound loud. But if you disentangle that and get the bigness in other ways, I think Queen II is going to sound massive.ā
The AAA rosewood back and sides of Mayās signature acoustic are stunning.
At 77 years old, May certainly seems to keep his schedule packed with music workānot to mention his animal advocacy and scientific endeavors. In May of last year, though, everything came to a halt when the guitarist suffered a stroke. āI couldnāt get a fork from the table to my mouth without it all going all over the place,ā he recalls. āIt was scary.ā Luckily, things began turning around quickly. āAfter only a few days, itās amazing what you can get back. By sheer willpower, you just start retraining your muscle.ā Not quite a year on when we speak, May estimates heās regained 95 percent of his abilities, which, he says, āis enough.
āThe short answer is, āIām good,āā he assures.
May is in great spirits and appears excited about all his recent projects, finished and in-progress alike. In this time of looking back on his earliest works, I ask him to think about his beginnings, when he would gaze at Gibson catalogs but had to build his own guitar out of necessity, because, as he points out, he ācouldnāt afford anything else.ā
So, what would young Brian May, stepping into an afterhours session at Trident, making his bandās debut, think about his new limited edition signature model Gibson acoustic? He takes a long pause. āIt would have been ā¦ā he pauses again, āunthinkable.ā
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The final installment with Santa Cruz Guitar Company founder Richard Hoover details the remaining steps that takes a collection of wood and wire into an impeccable instrument. Hoover explains how the company's craftsman delicately sand and finish the acoustics with a light touch to keeps them shiny and singing. He describes the pragmatic reasoning behind finishing the body and neck separately before marrying the two. He describes the balance between mechanical precision with the Plek machine and luthier artistry for the individualistic, hands-on set ups and intonation. Finally, Richard outlines why the company is now designing strings specific to their guitars.
Every level of player uses backlines, from the smallest stages to the biggest. Here, SIR Chicago sets up a backline for Bettye LaVette before she opened for the Rolling Stones at Soldier Field.
On the road, in the clubs, or on outdoor stages, youāre going to encounter all kinds of gear, from ace to disgrace. If you need to assemble one of your ownāor donāt have backline experienceāhere are some things you should knowāstraight from one of Nashvilleās top providers.
Picture this: Youāve been tapped to play a small stage for a date on the Warped Tour. You find out that youāll be on at around 4 p.m., and your band is slotted third in a lineup that includes seven other groups. You think, āHow could they possibly turn the stage over between each band swiftly enough to make every set happen on time?ā Thatās where a backline comes in.
At some point in your gigging life, you can likely expect to run into a situation where youāll be plugging into a pre-arranged backline. A backline, as defined by the production pros we spoke with for this article, is essentially all the equipment that you, as a band, need to play a show. Itās usually either provided by the promoter that has hired you to play, or youāve provided a backline supplier with a rider that lays out exactly what your band needs to execute your set just the way you want. But that latter situation is usually reserved for bands that are already operating with quite a bit of success. If youāre just starting out and you donāt have the dough behind you to have a supplier set you up for every gig, itās more likely that the first time you run into questions about backline will be in the context of a festival or showcase.
Case Jumper, the live events manager of backline supply company and rehearsal studio Soundcheck Nashville, lays out the way things go down for the Country Music Associationās summer extravaganza, CMA Fest.
āWe do five small stages of backline, then we do the River Stage, which is a larger package, and then we do Nissan Stadium,ā Jumper says. āSo, on the smallest stages, CMA says, āLook, we need something where bands can come up, play, get off, and get the next band on in 30 minutes.ā It has to be a very quick turnaround, and that means that it has to be things that people are going to play and use. So for something like CMA Fest, on the small stages, youāre probably going to get a Nord keyboard. Thereās going to be a Fender Twin, thereās going to be a Vox AC30, thereās going to be a [Fender] Deluxe [Reverb], and then thereās going to be probably a Gallien-Krueger bass rig, and then an assorted drum kit with cymbals. I give them those specs, and then they use that in their advance with bands. With something like the River Stage, which is still that same format of āquick-on, quick-off,ā but itās a little bit larger scale, we up it. There are multiple key rigs but also a Hammond B3 and Leslie, and a pretty giant drum set. Sometimes we do a grand piano, and then the amp range goes more. So thereāre Peavey Nashville 400s, thereās a Marshall JCM900 rig. There are Voxes, Twins, maybe some Deluxes, probably a Roland KC-550 keyboard amp. It just becomes a larger thing. For the stadium, we basically build it out per band. Then we get into specifics of riders, where weāre doing exactly what theyāre asking for.āHere are some of the most common pieces youāll see on backlines in Nashville. Do you know how your guitar and effects rig sounds through them?
Vox AC30
Fender Twin Reverb
Fender Deluxe Reverb
Marshall JCM900
Gallien-Krueger bass amp
Peavey Nashville 400
Nord keyboards
Hammond B3 organ
āFor the stadium, we basically build it out per band. Then we get into specifics of riders, where weāre doing exactly what theyāre asking for,ā says Soundcheck Nashvilleās Case Jumper.
Photo by Case Jumper
The equipment provided in a backline changes in every situation, but generally a band can expect that, onstage, theyāll be provided amplifiers, drums, and microphones. Depending on your needs, you might also have a keyboard and keyboard amp, and some stands. Generally itās up to your band to bring your guitars, basses, pedals, and your drummerās breakables, plus snare drum. But because the situation differs with every gig, itās best to have an in-depth conversation with whoever is providing backline so that no one is left high and dry without the gear they need to get through the show. Some things get overlooked more than others. When we asked Jumper to tell us the most important thing for guitarists and bassists to remember about dealing with backlines, he immediately provided a pro tip: āBring your cables!ā And capos, he adds.
When it comes to the specific amp brands and models that one might expect from a typical backline which has been put together without artist input, Jumper notes a few common examples. In Nashville, AC30s, Twins, and Deluxe Reverbs are nearly ubiquitous. In Los Angeles, players might be more likely to find Marshall and Mesa/Boogie rigs. āDepending on what the sound of the area is, I think that dictates which amps youāre going to use,ā says Jumper. āBass rigs are another prime example. Ampeg SVT rigs may be more prevalent in Nashville, where Aguilar might be more prevalent in New York and L.A. And maybe Gallien-Krueger and some of the more funk rigs are more prevalent in Atlanta. Then Texas is its own market. Itās such a mix.ā
Itās a good idea to figure out how your rig interacts with Fender Twin Reverbs, because youāll encounter plenty of them on backline gigs.
Photo courtesy of Fender
Vox AC30s come up often in Jumperās responses, for good reason. He notes that theyāre incredibly versatile, which makes them great for many situations.
"You can go very clean, but very loud, still [with an AC30],ā he says. āAnd then it works well, because most players are coming in with a pedalboard system. So while some old-school, L.A.-type players might still use the gain structures from a Marshall head or a Mesa head, most of the people are doing that all internally now.ā
On that note, Jumper has noticed that in Nashville many players have been moving away from guitar amps altogether and opting instead for modelers and profilers like Kempers and Fractals.
āItās a unit, much like a keyboard, where you say, āIām looking for this particular sound,ā and you can plug in and itāll get you very close to that sound,ā says Jumper. āSo maybe youāre a touring guy, and youāre having to do lots of flightsāinstead of trying to work with a backline company to make sure they have all your exact amps in every city, you might invest in a Kemper, and outfit the Kemper to sound exactly like you want. That way youāre just rolling into every venue with an SKB case instead of wondering what youāre gonna get.ā
If youāre a backlininā bass player, you should probably know your way around Gallien-Krueger amps, like these Legacy 800 heads.
Photo by J.B. Stuart, SIR Phoenix
Itās worth pointing out, too, that every company is different, and some backline providers donāt necessarily advise clients about what they should use in specific situations, or build one-size-fits-all sort of packages. Some companies, like Studio Instrument Rentals [SIR] in New York, work pretty much strictly with equipment riders provided by bands or promoters, putting together their preferences exactly. So itās also best to know exactly what you might need to ask for if you know youāll be in a situation where backline rentals will make up a large part of your on-stage gear.
The best way to get that in order is by writing out an equipment rider. Jumper notes that itās important to keep that rider constantly updated in order to avoid unnecessary confusion come gig day, pointing out that plenty of artists just forget to update riders after theyāve made changes in their sound.
An equipment rider is exactly what it sounds likeāa document that very clearly lays out all the gear youāll need to play a show. It will certainly contain the number of pieces per gear youāll need (e.g. two guitar amps, one bass amp, etc.), but it should also note preferred brands and models, as well as brands and models that will work if your preferred amps are not available; wattage and power specifications; sizes of speakers; drums and drum sizes; and microphone preferences, if you have them. Essentially, you want to get down to the nitty-gritty of what must be on stage to pull off a great show. With a detailed equipment rider, backline pros can solve problems more quickly, giving them the tools they need to improvise when your preferred amp or mic isnāt available locally.
Do you have an equipment rider and stage plot for your band? Those are the first steps to getting ready for pulling together your own backline.
Photo by William OāLeary, SIR New York
Another document that works either alone or in tandem with a detailed equipment rider is the stage plot. As noted above, itās not necessarily common that youāll run into a situation where youāre able to simply ask for everything you want. But you will definitely wind up in situations where a stage manager needs to know how to set everything up. The stage plot is a visual document that indicates how gear should be arranged. This should include the placement for microphones, amps, drums, keyboards, and any other instruments, helping a stage manager quickly discern where band members will be standing or sitting.
If youāve got any worries about your potential backline situation, or communication with the promoter leaves you with more questions than answers, it might help to generally expect workhorse gear. As Jumper says, in this part of show business, reliability is keyāthe aforementioned AC30s and Fender Twins are reliable, as are solid-state bass rigs. So itās likely that youāll encounter this gear on the regular. It could be a good idea to get familiar with these pieces and how your specific rig interacts with them.
And, of course, if you do get the privilege of working directly with a backline supplier, clear and friendly communication goes a long way to making sure your big gig goes off without a hitch.
āWhen people are coming to Soundcheck, I want them to ask how I can help them make their event, whether it be a festival or one-off, run as smoothly as possible from a backline perspective,ā Jumper says. āI obviously canāt run it all, but I can make it so our gear is not faulty, you knowāweāre not the chain that breaks. That allows artists to focus on whatever else theyāre having to worry about. They know that Soundcheck is always going to provide top quality equipment, and theyāre always going to provide people to make sure it works right.ā