The Van Halen-loving star sideman for Chris Cornell, Melissa Etheridge, and Don Henley, welcomes PG to his tone temple to see signature Suhrs, eight amps in a flash, and his core pedalboard.
Pete Thorn has constructed a dream career on being heard, not seen. He’s toured the world backing Chris Cornell, Don Henley, Melissa Etheridge, Jewel, and Japanese rock icon Tsuyoshi Nagabuchi (even performing at Mt. Fuji for over 100,000 fans on the biggest concert stage ever assembled in Japan). For a self-proclaimed “guitar nerd” (check out Pete’s 2011 album under the same name), it was a 21st century guitarist’s goal. After that, what does one do in between tours to stay busy and relevant in a modern world? You become a beloved YouTuber, of course!
His channel is a great destination for gear demos and comparisons, but Pete’s content stands out with his simple, and east-to-apply tone tips. (It’s worth noting that Pete did this very thing inside Premier Guitar for years with his “Tone Tips” column. Check it out!) The fun, diverse, informative videos Thorn has delivered have blossomed into a parallel profession with a built-in audience pushing 250k subscribers.
While PG was on the road in SoCal, Thorn graciously invited Chris Kies into his Hollywood-based recording sanctuary, where his YouTube channel takes form. The hour-long chat covers Thorn’s signature Suhr gear (guitars, amps, and humbuckers), he shows how his setup can switch between eight tube amps in a flash (only outdone by his ability to interchange cabs, mics, and speakers in a snap), and we dive deep into Pete’s primary pedalboard.
Brought to you by D’Addario XS Coated Strings.
Suhr Signature II
As you’ll soon find out, longtime luthier John Suhr and Pete Thorn go together like peanut butter and jelly, or, in this case, alder and maple. Suhr and Thorn have collaborated on several pieces of signature gear, and the above Pete Thorn Standard HSS is their latest. The S-style is built with a 2-piece alder body, roasted maple neck with a “Pete Thorn ’60s soft-V profile (a digitized copy of one of Thorn’s 2008 S-style Suhrs), ebony fretboard, Wilkinson WVS130 bridge, and Suhr pickups (V63 single-coils with a Thornbucker II in the bridge). Thorn is always trying the newest string offerings from Ernie Ball, and he’s currently using Primo Slinkys that are gauged .0095, .012, .016, .024, .034, and .044.
For His Spiritual Guitar Godfather
“I’ve talking a lot about Eddie Van Halen in this Rundown because he’s my spiritual guitar godfather. I’m a Van Halen nut and this guitar is something I had to have,” admits Thorn. After realizing that much of Eddie’s mind-blowing guitar work for Van Halen’s first albums were done on a 1976 Ibanez Destroyer, Thorn was on the prowl for his own. He recently acquired this “lawsuit-era” ’76 Destroyer in a Huntington Beach parking lot after securing the purchase online. The surprise of the score was that the pickups are early TV Jones P.A.F. humbuckers, because the owner that sold it to Pete actually bought it from the company’s founder Tom Jones. Pete’s thoughts: “Whatever’s going on in the pickups, they sound fantastic!”
Previous Pete
Here’s Suhr’s first Pete Thorn Standard signature model, with quite a different recipe than the HSS. This one has a chambered mahogany body with a maple top, mahogany neck with an “even slim-C profile,” an Indian rosewood fretboard, and a pair of Pete’s Suhr humbuckers—a Thornbucker+ in the bridge and a Thornbucker in the neck. Like its successor, this one also has jumbo stainless-steel frets, Suhr locking tuners, a Wilkinson WVS130 bridge, and a Graph Tech TUSQ nut.
Sweet as Cherry Pie
This cherry Gibson ES-335 looks new or neatly relic’d, but it’s from 1963. It fell into Pete’s lap nearly 20 years ago and wasn’t an astronomical price because it had a broken headstock (and has since garnered another wound by Thorn) and one of the previous owners went at the bridge pickup cavity with a chisel trying to get at the electronics. The sweet sauce that makes this baby sing is its ’60s, low-wound P.A.F.s—original in the neck and early patent numbered in the bridge—that sound like honey tastes.
A Crusher for Chris Cornell
This meaty, hulking 2000 Gibson Les Paul Custom toured with Pete when he backed up Chris Cornell. It would see the stage for Soundgarden smashers like “Spoonman” and “Outshined.” This guitar took a lot of abuse while onstage with Thorn, as he’d often end the night ripping off the strings one by one and Cornell would slam his microphone into the pickups. During these collisions, nothing ever broke (except the strings). However, one slow-motion fall off a guitar stand onto carpet caused this axe to need headstock surgery. He dropped in a set of Thornbuckers and swapped out the gold hardware for chrome.
Not a Bad Day
During a Chris Cornell tour stop in Nashville, Thorn ventured into Gruhn Guitars to find a pre-CBS Fender Stratocaster. He walked out with this sunburst ’64. That night, he got to play it alongside Peter Frampton, starting a longtime friendship. “There’s just so many great things I remember about that day. You know, these times in your life where you’re going to have bad days, this wasn’t going to be one of them. This was a good day [laughs]. This guitar just gives me great memories.”
Meet Frankie
Thorn’s collection wouldn’t be complete without this EVH Striped Series Frankenstein named “Frankie.” It’s got the paint job, the exposed electronics, and the Floyd Rose. The rest is up to Pete. “How can you not have fun with a guitar like this? I’ve seen Paul Gilbert with one—and he’s a diehard Ibanez guy. I’ve seen Andy Wood with one—and he’s a longtime Suhr artist. We all have signatures, but we had to have one of these Frankensteins to shred on. We all bow down to the church of Eddie,” confesses Thorn.
Tone Henge
For a dude whose main business is making videos and playing riffs, you need to maximize not only space, but inspiration. Before you is Pete Thorn’s twin tower of tone that can cover any amp sound he needs. Starting in the top left and working our way down, we have a 1972 Marshall JMP 1986 model pumping 50W, a handful of Synergy Amps modules (Synergy IICP, Engl Powerball, Soldano SLO, Vai Signature preamp, Engl Savage, Friedman BE-BB, Bogner Ecstasy, Bogner Uberschall, and a Fryette Pitbull), a Soldano SLO-100, a Jim Kelley Reverb, and a Suhr SL68. The right side is home to a Universal Audio OX Amp Top Box, a Suhr Hedgehog 50, a Top Hat Amplification Emplexador, a Suhr Pete Thorn PT100, and a Komet Concorde. Possibly the most impressive part of this whole structure is the Ampete Engineering 88S-Studio Amp and Cabinet Switcher that allows Thorn to switch between all these amps with a smash of a button.
Upside Down Cabinet Cake
The Ampete 88S runs all those amps into a late-’70s Marshall 4x12 loaded with Celestion Black Back G12M 25W speakers and mic’d with a Shure SM57 and an Audio-Technica AT4050.
Pete Thorn’s Pedalboard
For a pedal-loving session-booked YouTuber-guitarist, you gotta believe Thorn is stuffed to the gills with stompboxes. What’s above is the board he relies on for most demos and videos while performing in his Hollywood hideaway. Top left, he has a Source Audio ZIO, MXR Echoplex, Suhr Riot, Maxon Apex 808, J Rockett Archer, Ryra Tri-Pi Muff, a Strymon Mobius, and a DryBell Unit67. Elevated above them rests a Strymon TimeLine, a pair of Eventide H9s, an MXR Phase 95, a Suhr Woodshed Comp, a Boss FV-500L Foot Volume Pedal, a Dunlop CBM95 Cry Baby Mini Wah, and a DigiTech FreqOut. Everything is controlled by MusicomLab EFX-LE II Audio Controller and MIDI Pedal, and a TC Electronic PolyTune 2 Noir Mini keeps his guitars emotionally and sonically stable.
A Swiss Army amp-in-a-box.
RatingsPros:Fine tones. Easy interface. Super useful. Cons: Doesn’t do freaky, over-the-top fuzz. Street: $249 Komet K.O.D.A. kometamps.com | Tones: Ease of Use: Build/Design: Value: |
Baton Rouge, Louisiana-based Komet Amplification is best known for their flagship amplifier model, the Komet 60. Trainwreck mastermind Ken Fischer designed it before his untimely death in 2006. Their debut pedal is the K.O.D.A., short for Komet Overdrive Amplifier.
Thinking Inside the Box
Komet bills the K.O.D.A. as an amp-in-a-box—a description applied to an entire species of stompbox. Like most pedals of that description, it’s more useful in front of an amp than as an amp simulator. (Though you can get good faux-amp sounds using software speaker emulations.)
Most such pedals mimic a particular amp, often by replicating its circuitry with transistors standing in for tubes. The K.O.D.A. is different. It’s not about making your Fender tweed sound like a Marshall plexi, or vice-versa. It’s more of a Swiss Army tone tool whose controls happen to mirror those of a vintage-style amp. It doesn’t do freaky stuff. It always sounds conventionally amp-like. But it can definitely expand an amp’s tonal range.
All Gain, No Pain
Any player who has spent time thinking about gain-staging—that is, how the boost stages in your signal chain interact, and the sonic consequences of boosting in one location rather than another—is likely to understand the K.O.D.A. within minutes.
Here, you have four active gain stages plus active bass and treble tone controls. The drive control is simply a clean input boost, though there’s ample power gain to make a clean amp dirty. Next comes gain, a distortion stage. You can summon a broad spectrum of tones with varying drive/gain mixes. If the K.O.D.A. had only these two knobs, it would be pretty darn useful.
Sculpting With EQ
The K.O.D.A.’s 2-band tone control is gorgeous. Their ranges are relatively narrow. They focus on the frequencies and levels you’re likeliest to need. Again, they don’t produce extreme effects, but there are literally no unusable settings. Treble adds just the right slice. You can further refine its effect with a subtle 3-position bright switch (off, mild treble cut, and a slightly less-mild treble cut).
The bass knob can add nice low-mid mass, but don’t be surprised if you find yourself using it subtractively. Multiple gain stages can accumulate overpowering lows, yielding muddy tones. But with the right bass cut, you can slather on more gain while maintaining definition.
The Sound of Power
The K.O.D.A.’s ace in the hole is its output stage control—a damn good power-amp simulation. When cranked, the knob replicates the low-end thump and smooth compression of a hard-working non-master-volume amp. It makes your amp sound loud, even when it’s not. (You can toggle this stage out of the circuit if desired.)
The K.O.D.A.’s final stage is a simple master volume control. At low settings, you can crank the upstream controls for color without necessarily incinerating your amp. Or you might keep the boost and gain controls low, and use volume for a nice clean boost.
My demo clip online demonstrates a few possible K.O.D.A. scenarios. I recorded a short phrase using only the PAF bridge pickup of a DIY guitar, and then reamped it repeatedly through a small Fender-flavored combo set to a rather wimpy clean tone. You hear the bypassed sound first, followed by a grab bag of possible settings. The amp’s knobs never move.
The K.O.D.A. lives in a standard BB-sized enclosure with Boss-style knobs. There’s room for a battery, or you can use any standard 9V power supply.
The Verdict
If there’s such a thing as a drive pedal for tone snobs, the K.O.D.A. is an example. It’s not radical enough to reconfigure your sound, but it can fatten, sharpen, and refine it. It’s a bit Klon-like in that regard, but with interactive gain stages and a lovely active tone circuit. The pedal would be especially useful perched on a studio desktop, shaping sounds to suit a mix. It was obviously voiced by guitarists with good ears, and those are the players likeliest to appreciate this refined tool.