Convergeās 6-string steamrollerāwho also happens to be a famously heavy and in-demand producer (and gear designer)ātakes PG inside his GodCity Studio to talk mics, tracking, instrument building, and more.
If youāve thought to yourself, āthis is the most vicious-sounding record Iāve heard,ā chances are Kurt Ballouās fingerprints are on it. Since officially starting in 1995 inside his parentsā garage and eventually opening GodCity Studioās doors in 2003 (in āWitch Cityā Salem, MA, no less), Ballou has chiseled out granite tones for bands like Every Time I Die, High on Fire, Torche, Cave In, Old Man Gloom, American Nightmare, and Kvelertak. (āHe brings a lot to the table, and heās been pretty important in terms of how our sound got formed,ā Kverlertakās Vidar Landa in a PG interview on working with Ballou.) Oh, and we can forget his genre-shaping band Converge, that heās played guitar in since 1990, co-produced since 2001ās hardcore pillar Jane Doe and been the console captain since 2006ās No Heroes.
As youāll soon find out in this hour-plus episode, the dude is fascinated with every component of guitar tone. In between recording projects and creating new instruments and pedals, Ballou virtually welcome PGās Chris Kies into GodCity Studio. In this Rig Rundown, Ballou details his own GodCity InstrumentsĀ Craftsman Series 1 (something he calls a āsimple rock ānā roll machineā), provides a crash course on mics (types and techniques), and shows off additional GCI pedal waresāand a few foreign specimensāthat contort, mangle, and destroy any (in the prettiest way possible) guitarās native tongue.
D'Addario Auto Lock Strap:https://ddar.io/AutoLockStrap
[Facing a mandatory shelter-in-place ordinance to limit the spread of COVID-19, PG enacted a hybrid approach to filming and producing Rig Rundowns. This is the 38th video in that format.]
As youāll quickly find out, if Kurt canāt find exactly what heās after, heāll design something that will get the job done. Above is his first guitarābuilt under the God City Instruments brandācalled the Craftsman Series 1. This one features a chambered mahogany body with a spruce top (āitās incredibly resonant, snappy, and livelyā), set-neck construction (maple neck/wenge fretboard), 25.5" scale, Graph Tech nut and bridge, and a custom-wound, hot Slugjammer humbucker (13k output, 44 AWG). He prefers DāAddario NYXL strings (.011ā.052), hammers away with Planet Waves Duralin picks .70 mm (yellow), and Ballou uses a bunch of tunings for Converge, but two of his favorites are āa little out of tuneā D standard and one he calls āopen Slayerā (CāF#āCāF#āCāF#).
(This isnāt the first time weāve seen a God City Instrumentsā Craftsman Series 1 on a Rig Rundown. For those that missed it, Djunahās Donna Diane rocked out a wenge-top Craftsman Series 1 in her Rundown in late 2020.)
A close-up of his Malcolm Young-inspired Craftsman Series 1 body.
Need proof that Converge have diehard fans all over the world? Look no further than this Sparrowsā Sons head that was built for (and sent over to) Kurt from their Belarus guitar shop. He doesnāt know much about the circuit, but he notes in the Rundown that early in the signal path sits an active inductor-based midrange boost that sort of acts like a Neve preamp. Another think he mentions is that its gain knob is a dual pot that controls two tube stages at the same time giving the amp a wide range of crunch. (Ballou admits that he doesnāt use it for clean and rather make it a blast furnace of rock.)
The handmade beast (even has handwound inductors) floored Ballou enough that he ordered a second head for his European setup (but has since brought it home). He believes he owns are two of four or five in existence.
The Sparrowsā Sons custom jobber runs into a massive Emperor 6x12 that is loaded with various speakers, but what was micād and recorded for the Rundown were a pair of Eminence Texas Heats.
Because heās Kurt and heās awesome, not only did he treat this like a recording session, but he used four mics, in four different positions, to show how each works independently and how they work in unison to create a monolithic sledgehammer. The lineup starts (left to right) with an AEA N22 active ribbon mic, Heil Sound PR 30 large diaphragm dynamic supercardioid mic, a Rode (top) Reporter omnidirectional dynamic mic, and an sE Electronics X1 D large diaphragm unidirectional condenser mic.
āOne of the nicest things about owning a studio and designing pedals is that I can figure out what do I have a need for,ā admits Ballou. And as youāll soon find out, his biggest (and constant) need is angry, violent, metallic distortion. Starting at the top left (and then going clockwise), we have the Demedash Effects T-120 Videotape Echo. āThis is one of the coolest analog delay pedals,ā giddily asserts Ballou. He loves the overall functionality of the pedal and its feature set, but the icing on the cake is that when bypassed you can hold down the left footswitch and it will act as a momentary freeze/shimmer/oscillator. Next you have the Shift Line A+ Astronaut III Multiverb Space Unit. Kurt got hip to this pedal when Converge was touring Russia and ventured into a guitar store in St. Petersburg. For this pedal, Kurtās go-to setting is the reverse shimmer.
The single-knob red GCI design (Oh Yes!) is Kurtās latest creation (mentions tentatively it may be called Onslaught) that is a āmid-forward, ultimate thrashy, djenty, clanky, articulate, heavy guitar pedal.ā The red pedal on the right is Kurtās first original codesignāthe SBD or Super Beatle Distortionāthat was inspired by a circuit from Fu Manchu bassist Brad Davisā Creepy Little Fingers. Taking it up a notch, Ballou added in an active mid boost in front of the fuzz circuit. Additionally, he boosts the bass level after the fuzz circuit so it sounds huge.
Next up in green is the God City Instruments OGR (a collaboration with Electronic Audio Experimentsā John Snyder). The Optical Gain Reduction is a compressor that Ballou uses on every bass-recorded track in God City Studio.
Then there is the Foxrox Electronics Octron2 (inspired by the guitar feedback lassoed by Mahogany Rush guitarist Frank Marino) that Ballou uses for thorny solos that bristle with weird overtones and elastic ghost notes. Following that is a newer GCI Crimson Cock (original codesigned with Rob Davis) that is a treble booster loosely based on the Rangemaster circuit with an added range control (a cap blend on the input) and the switch toggles in a Muff stage at the end of the circuit.
The penultimate stomp is the God City Instruments Ape Eye (collaborated with Soursound) that is dirt box centered around the API 2520 discrete op amp. Lastly, we have Kurtās Jugendstil silicon fuzz that is aptly described on their site: āIf there were a Venn Diagram showing the overlap between ā90s British shoegaze and ā90s Swedish death metal, Jugendstil would feel right at home in the middle.ā And everything was powered by a Truetone 1 Spot PRO CS7.
An unheralded but appreciated tool used by Ballou is this Radial Engineering SGI TX that is line driver system that takes an unbalanced instrument signal and allows you to drive it as far as 300' feet without noise.