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Submit Your Photos: Acoustic Guitars

What do you play when you unplug?

Marion, IA (May 25, 2011) - We're now accepting submissions for our latest reader gear gallery: acoustics!

What do you play when you unplug? Send photos and and a caption identifying the gear and why you love it to rebecca@premierguitar.com for consideration.

Check out our previous galleries:
GALLERY: Show Us Your Gear - #1 Guitars
GALLERY: Show Us Your Gear - Favorite Overdrive/Distortion
GALLERY: Show Us Your Gear - Practice and Recording Spaces
GALLERY: Show Us Your Gear - Pedalboards I
GALLERY: Show Us Your Gear - Pedalboards II
GALLERY: Show Us Your Gear - Vintage Gear
GALLERY: Show Us Your Gear - Unique Instruments
GALLERY: Show Us Your Gear - Unique Instruments II

Selenium, an alternative to silicon and germanium, helps make an overdrive of great nuance and delectable boost and low-gain overdrive tones.

Clever application of alternative materials that results in a simple, make-everything-sound-better boost and low-gain overdrive.

Might not have enough overdrive for some tastes (although thatā€™s kind of the idea).

$240 street

Cusack Project 34 Selenium Rectifier Pre/Drive Pedal
cusackmusic.com

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The term ā€œselenium rectifierā€ might be Greek to most guitarists, but if it rings a bell with any vintage-amp enthusiasts thatā€™s likely because you pulled one of these green, sugar-cube-sized components out of your ampā€™s tube-biasing network to replace it with a silicon diode.

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Gibson originally launched the EB-6 model with the intention of serving consumers looking for a ā€œtic-tacā€ bass sound.

Photo by Ken Lapworth

You may know the Gibson EB-6, but what you may not know is that its first iteration looked nothing like its latest.

When many guitarists first encounter Gibsonā€™s EB-6, a rare, vintage 6-string bass, they assume it must be a response to the Fender Bass VI. And manyEB-6 basses sport an SG-style body shape, so they do look exceedingly modern. (Itā€™s easy to imagine a stoner-rock or doom-metal band keeping one amid an arsenal of Dunables and EGCs.) But the earliest EB-6 basses didnā€™t look anything like SGs, and they arrived a full year before the more famous Fender.

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Some of us love drum machines and synths, and others donā€™t, but we all love Billy.

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An '80s-era cult favorite is back.

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