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Submit Your Photos: Most Unique Gear

Submissions are open for the next Show Us Your Gear gallery!

Marion, IA (December 10, 2010) -- Submissions are open for the next Show Us Your Gear gallery! Submit pictures of your most unique gear for consideration. It can be built by you, a custom commission, a one-off paint job, or anything else. Make sure to include the following information:
  • Your Name
  • Name of the gear (Make/Model if applicable)
  • What makes it so unique, and why you dig it.
Send the photos and information to rebecca@premierguitar.com by January 5, 2010.

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

Day 9 of Stompboxtober is live! Win today's featured pedal from EBS Sweden. Enter now and return tomorrow for more!

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John Mayer Silver Slinky Strings feature a unique 10.5-47 gauge combination, crafted to meet John's standards for tone and tension.

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For the first time in the band’s history, the Dawes lineup for Oh Brother consisted of just Griffin and Taylor Goldsmith (left and right).

Photo by Jon Chu

The folk-rock outfit’s frontman Taylor Goldsmith wrote their debut at 23. Now, with the release of their ninth full-length, Oh Brother, he shares his many insights into how he’s grown as a songwriter, and what that says about him as an artist and an individual.

I’ve been following the songwriting of Taylor Goldsmith, the frontman of L.A.-based, folk-rock band Dawes, since early 2011. At the time, I was a sophomore in college, and had just discovered their debut, North Hills, a year-and-a-half late. (That was thanks in part to one of its tracks, “When My Time Comes,” pervading cable TV via its placement in a Chevy commercial over my winter break.) As I caught on, I became fully entranced.

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A more affordable path to satisfying your 1176 lust.

An affordable alternative to Cali76 and 1176 comps that sounds brilliant. Effective, satisfying controls.

Big!

$269

Warm Audio Pedal76
warmaudio.com

4.5
4.5
4.5
4.5

Though compressors are often used to add excitement to flat tones, pedal compressors for guitar are often … boring. Not so theWarm Audio Pedal76. The FET-driven, CineMag transformer-equipped Pedal76 is fun to look at, fun to operate, and fun to experiment with. Well, maybe it’s not fun fitting it on a pedalboard—at a little less than 6.5” wide and about 3.25” tall, it’s big. But its potential to enliven your guitar sounds is also pretty huge.

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