From walls of 4x12s to modern modeling tech, heavy tones have come a long way since the age of Iommi.
No style of amp is so definitively a part of a musical genre and culture as high-gain amplifiers. In the modern amp market, thereās a wide range of amps that can achieve a heavy tone, from hulking stacks to lunchbox heads, but their objective unites them. High-gain amps are a cornerstone of electric guitar, and their aggression is heard in every style of music under the sun.
The debate about where high-gain started rages on, but thereās a strong consensus that Tony Iommi and Black Sabbath had more than a little to do with it.
āThe first record that really had an impact on me, with regards to that aspect of tone, was Sabbath Bloody Sabbath,ā says Sweetwater hard content creator and former Grim Reaper guitarist Nick Bowcott. āIt was a brutal sounding record. Iommi was so ahead of his game.ā
Keep in mind that there were no high-gain amps when Iommi got his start. Instead, Bowcott explains, āHe was doing his thing with a modded Dallas Rangemaster (treble booster) and running into a (Laney) Supergroup while often tuning down to C#. Thatās how far ahead of the curve he was.ā
Iommiās tone and Sabbathās influence were so dramatic that guitarists worldwide adopted it while honing it into a faster, more streamlined style. It was the beginning of heavy metal, and even the worldās biggest rockers claim itās still unmatched. āRob Zombie said, āThe reason there aren't any more good heavy metal riffs today is because Iommi wrote them all,āā Bowcott adds. āIt reminds you of how brilliant those songs are.ā
The Marshall JCM800
Introduced in 1981, the Marshall JCM800 series kicked open the doors to the high-gain amp market.
Like Iommiās Laneys, the tube amplifiers of the time didnāt offer the quick response, tight low end, and increased distortion those players required. The closest thing on the market was Marshallās 1959 Super Lead, aka the plexi. While definitely distorted, these amps only gave up their saturated tones when played much too loud for most performances.
Guitarists begged for an amp that gave them the tones of Van Halen, Randy Rhoads, and the New Wave of British Heavy Metal, while still being something they could use. Over in England, Jim Marshall responded. In 1981, he released one of the most iconic electric guitar amplifiers of all time, the master-volume-equipped Marshall JCM800 2203.
āTo me, the (JCM)800 is a foundational piece with regard to high gain. They owned the ā80s.ā āNick Bowcott
For the first time, the famous Marshall kerrang could be had at gig-appropriate volumes. The amp was a hit, and the JCM800 quickly laid the foundation for what would come. āTo me, the 800 is a foundational piece with regard to high gain,ā remarks Bowcott. āThey owned the ā80s.ā
The Mesa Engineering Mark Series
The first Boogies were created when Mesaās Randall Smith āboosted the daylights out of a little (Fender) Princeton.ā
However, Marshall wasnāt the only one pushing overdrive into the modern era. Randall Smith and Mesa Engineeringās first ampsāhot-rodded Fender-style combos which Smith called āBoogiesāāalso marked the transition between vintage and modern with a high-gain voice of their own.
āEarly on, I boosted the daylights out of a little [Fender] Princeton,ā Smith notes. āIt was 80 times the gain of the normal amp! It had this amazing crunch. Power chords and single-note riffs had that vocal, singing thing that made Carlos (Santana) so famous. You could go from the biggest, most amazing Fender clean sound to this level of distortion that nobody had ever heard before.ā
Those first Boogies launched one of the most respected names in guitar amplification. Now known as the Mark I, Smithās amps were soon a favorite of plenty of well-known guitarists.
The Boogie has had multiple variations and feature sets over the years. Each one was given a numeral to differentiate its designs, and the Mark II, with its tighter, more aggressive tone, is where the heavy metal world took notice.
One band, in particular, would launch themselves and the amps to incredible heights after stopping by Smithās shop in the 1980s.
āMetallica, I remember them coming up,ā laughs Smith. āThey were young guys. They came up to the factory and grabbed some IIC+s. That was it. That was what they were looking for sonically. They said, āOkay, this is what weāve been hearing in our heads.āā
Smith never considered his Boogie to be a heavy metal guitar amplifier,, but the enormous Mark IIC+-fueled success of Ride the Lightning and Master of Puppets changed that forever.The Amp Modding Craze
Together, the JCM800 and Mesaās Mark series kicked off a new era in guitar amplification. But, as is always the case, players still wanted more. Many players even modified their amps in search of new, heavier tones.
Before long, the amp-modding community had grown into its own industry with famed amp techs such as JosĆ© Arredondo, Lee Jackson, and CĆ©sar DĆaz squeezing the most tone and gain from the circuits as possible. Those modded amps were the go-to high-gain rigs for everyone from Steve Vai and Paul Gilbert to Alice In Chainsā Jerry Cantrell.
The modification game became so popular, and the modders so well respected, that many began producing their own amp designs. Brands like Bogner, Friedman, and Rivera are just a few that owe a lot of their early success to the mod craze. Even Mike Soldano got in on it.
āI did Marshall mods just like all those other guys,ā he admits. āAs I started gaining notoriety around L.A., people would bring me their Marshalls and say, āHey, can you make my Marshall sound like this?āā
The Soldano SLO-100
Mike Soldano says he built his first high-gain amp for himself, but soon learned that other players wanted one too.
Soldanoās notoriety was well-earned. As the father of the Soldano Super Lead Overdrive (SLO) 100, many credit him for starting the modern high-end, high-gain tube-amp market.
As a young guitarist, he had faced the same gain-to-volume dilemma that plagued all aspiring rockers of the time. An early adopter of Mesaās Boogie amps, he thought he had solved the issue, but while the Boogie had a high level of gain, it wasnāt a āhigh-gain amp.ā Unsatisfied with the Mesa and wanting to avoid wrestling with a non-master volume Marshall, he built his own.
āI already knew what I wanted my guitar to sound like,ā he says. āI heard it on records, but I knew they were getting that with post-effects and using plexis and big, giant rooms with the volume cranked to 11. I was determined to create an amp that would give me that sound at any volume, at any time, in any place.
āI got a bunch of old radio manuals from the ā40s and ā50s, and every night when Iād come home from work, Iād sit in my room and tinker around, build circuits, and try different things out.ā
Soldano was excited about his new creation, but it was other guitaristsā reactions to the amp that told him he was onto something special.
āIn order to crank the thing up, I needed to take it down to my friendās rehearsal space. Every time I did, everybody in the place would start flocking to the room, and theyād be like, āWhat are you guys playing in there? I want to try it!ā I realized then that that sound wasnāt just the sound I wanted. There were other people who wanted it, too.ā
āI already knew what I wanted my guitar to sound likeā¦. I was determined to create an amp that would give me that sound at any volume, at any time, in any place.ā āMike Soldano
It took a while, but eventually, Soldanoās new amp started turning the heads of all the right people. āWhen I first got to L.A., I met Howard Leese,ā he remembers. āThe next morning, I shot out to meet him at Rumbo Recorders and took my amp with me. He plugs it in, plays about two notes, and heās like, āThis is awesome, I'm buying this.ā Then, this guy Tony managed to get an amp in front of Steve Lukather, and Steve went nuts for the thing. Then, I was checking my message machine one day, and there were calls from Lou Reed, from Vivian Campbell, and from Michael Landau. They all were asking about that SLO!ā
If the JCM800 started high-gain amps, the SLO-100 was the first tube amp designed for the job. It completely changed the amp industry, and, like Leo Fenderās Telecaster, it remains an industry standard that's largely unchanged today.
The German High-Gain Explosion
Inspired by the SLOās searing gain, sustain, and versatile volume control, manufacturers began cranking up their ampsā performance worldwide. Builders were finally delivering all the gain and control players wanted.
German makers like ENGL, Diezel, Hughes & Kettner, and L.A.-based Bogner made names for themselves with legendary high-gain heads like their Savage, VH4, TRIAMP, and Uberschall. For European metal guitarists, this was the dawn of a new era.
āThe ENGL Savage was my main live amplifier for maybe seven years,ā says Haunted guitarist, YouTube personality, and Solar Guitars owner Ola Englund. āNot too many other brands at that time could give you this insanely tight, modern metal sound without using a boost. You just hook up your guitar, and it sounds incredible.āThe Mesa Rectifier Series
āThe Dual Rectifier just completely proliferated all of the grunge years,ā says Mike Soldano.
Between the Marshalls, Mesas, a flood of modded amps, and the amps coming out of Germany, the late ā80s and 1990s had a lot of high-gain to offer. Still, a new amp from a familiar face defined the next couple of decades.
āThe (Mesa) Rectifier was the one in the ā90s,ā Bowcott says, point blank. āThe ā80s were the JCM800, and the ā90s were the Rectifiers.ā
āThe Dual Rectifier just completely proliferated all of the grunge years,ā echoes Soldano. āThere wasnāt a band out there that wasnāt playing a Rectifier.ā
āWe had no expectation that the Rectifiers would end up being so popular.ā āRandall Smith
Today, Randall Smithās Mesa Rectifiers are definitive high-gain amps. Everyone from Metallica and Korn to Soundgarden and Cannibal Corpse uses them to create the heaviest tones in rock history. So itās surprising they were designed by someone more Santana than Sepultura. According to Smith, he was as surprised as anyone.
āWe had no expectation that the Rectifiers would end up being so popular,ā he said. āIt was to the point that we had to fight that image. Players are like, āMesa, those are the high-gain metal guys. Iām not interested in that.ā But it was only one product! (Laughs)ā
The Peavey 5150 And Beyond
The Peavey 6505 and EVH 5150 are both descendants of the original Peavey 5150 designed by Eddie Van Halen and amp designer James Brown.
While Mesaās Rectifiers had no equal in terms of popularity, one amp did give it a run for its money in impact and aggression: the Peavey 5150. Created by amp designer James Brown and Eddie Van Halenāwho had been playing SLO-100sāthe 5150 quickly transcended classic-rock heroics and laid the foundation for a new breed of extreme high-gain tone.
Machine Headās Burn My Eyes was arguably the first release to put the amp on the metal map, while producer/engineer Andy Sneapās legendary use on countless records cemented it in place. Bands like In Flames, Killswitch Engage, and Arch Enemy also used the amps to great effect.
āThe 5150 was probably the most aggressive amplifier out there,ā says Englund. āI remember it was either the 5150 or the Rectifier, (those were) the ā90s choices right there. If you played in a serious metal band, itās one of these.ā
Like the Rectifier, the 5150 has seen multiple tweaks and changes since its inception. The most notable came when Eddie took his 5150 trademark to Fender to launch EVH and the 5150 III amp line. Not wanting to drop one of the most popular high-gain amps ever, Peavey gave theirs a facelift and renamed it the 6505. The world lost a hero when Eddie passed away in 2020, but he left us with two amp lines that will go down in high-gain history.
Solid-State High Gain and Dimebag Darrell
The ā90s and 2000s were all about high-gain tube heads. But a handful of solid-state and hybrid amps also drove some of the eraās most intense music. The most famous of these amps was the Marshall Valvestate 8100. While many players denounced its cold, toothy voice, Bowcott says others built a career around it.
āMarshall came out with Valvestate in the early ā90s, and people like (Prong guitarist and singer) Tommy Victor adopted that amp. It was his sound on āSnap Your Fingers, Snap Your Neck.āā
Victor wasnāt the only one using the 8100; itās also the sound of Static-X's Wisconsin Death Trip and, reportedly, shaped the sound of early Meshuggah. No other 8100 player, however, is credited with having the influence and savagery of Deathās Chuck Schuldiner. Plugging into his 8100, heās widely regarded as creating death metal.
Of course, there was one other high-gain hero who more than deserves a mention when it comes to ā90s solid-state. Panteraās Dimebag Darrell and his Randall RG100 and Century 200 amps sounded so heavy, singular, and next-level that few have even tried to cop his sound.
āDimebag had the most distinctive metal tone, and I donāt think anyone has managed to break that,ā comments Englund. āIt was his and no one elseās. He would just overdrive it to hell and back and add all these doublers and flight flangers and stuff. That was a solid-state tone right there.ā
The Rise of Digital Modeling
The legacy of the Line 6 Pod lives on, elevated to stages everywhere, in the Helix.
How guitarists get their high-gain tones has changed drastically over the years, and thatās never been more true than in the last couple of decades. Instead of walls of amps and 4x12 cabinets, these days, we get remarkably similar sounds from compact digital rack and floor processors. Evolving from the original Line 6 POD, digital modeling now defines this era of guitar.
Initially relegated to practice tools for home use, starting in the late 2000s, bands like Periphery and Animals As Leaders have increasingly embraced modeling units like the Fractal AXE-FX, the Kemper Profiler, the Neural QuadCortex, and Line 6ās flagship Helix. The bandsā pristine tones, impressive musicianship, and pummeling riffs opened the floodgates of high-gain for a new generation. Theyāve established modeling as a legitimate tone tool for professionals and even won over old-school rockers like Bowcott. āThereās some amazing stuff out there,ā he says. āYou can argue that thereās never been a better time to be a guitar player, apart from maybe decision paralysis.ā
The impact of digital amp modeling canāt be overstated. Whether a physical unit or the countless inexpensive software amp sims, they all sound realistic, respond remarkably well, and open a world of routing and control options. Theyāre so prevalent that many younger guitarists have never even owned a tube amp.
Tube Amps and Impulse Responses
The Revv G20 is one of a growing number of modern lunchbox-style heads with IR capabilities combining portability and high-gain tone.
So, will digital modeling actually kill high-gain amplifiers? The consensus is probably not, but tube amps do have to evolve. The answer may lie in impulse responses (IRs).
Impulse responses are digital snapshots of real speaker cabinets and microphones loaded onto a modeler or computer. They let you hear a well-recorded cab without plugging into an actual speaker.
More and more brands are adding IR capabilities to smaller, lunchbox-style tube amps. Heads like the Revv G20 and ENGL Ironball Special Edition are pioneering this approach and striking the perfect balance of tradition and convenience. Randall Smith is a fan, and Soldano even joined the party with his Astro-20.
āI think itās a great evolutionary step. Thatās ultimate if you ask me,ā says Smith. āThe important thing is that you have your tube amp. Youāre not sacrificing that in order to get the virtues of digital and modeling.ā
Soldano echoes Smithās enthusiasm, saying, āI think for home recording, itās going to completely take over. Itās a perfect recording amp. You can set this thing on your desktop. You donāt even have to plug in a speaker cabinet. You can run it straight into your digital mixing world, and you can bring up these different IRs. You can do amazing stuff without even a single dB of sound in the room.ā
Long Live High-Gain Tube Amps
Hybrid tube designs are helping ensure a bright future for high-gain tube amps. Still, Soldano, Smith, Englund, and Bowcott agree that tube rigs werenāt going anywhere anyway.
āOn any Friday night, in any bar in any town, youāre still going to see some guy up there or some gal with a 50-watt half stack rocking it out,ā says Soldano.
āThe metal community, they still want moving air,ā adds Englund. āThat's something that canāt be modeled. You canāt explain it, but when you stand in front of an amplifier, itās so easy to justify.ā
Bowcott also agrees but says the experience extends beyond plugging in. āI remember, back in the day, going to see Diamond Head and Judas Priest. They had that huge wall (of amps) that, before they played a note, youāre like, āThis is going to be cool!ā There was something visually visceral.ā
High-gain tone has taken many forms over the decades. From Iommiās influence to the tech-death insanity of bands like Archspire, itās forever part of the electric guitar lexicon. As it evolves, so do the tools we use to achieve it.
Nothing will replace the physical interaction of a cranked tube head. At the same time, nothing today matches the convenience and possibilities of digital modeling. Then again, maybe the hybrid approach is the future. Whatever's next for our favorite heavy sounds, there are still plenty of legendary builders, technological innovators, and boundary-pushing players working hard to ensure high-gain guitar tone is here to stay.
With a rep for energetic live improvisations, the jammers explore the potential of the recording studio and lean toward their indie-rock influences on their latest album.
āWhat I love the most about it is the magic and the lore,ā says Rick Mitarotonda, discussing his passion for jamming. āItās a rabbit hole, and you can go as deep as you want. And you never really reach the end of it. It speaks to that magical dream quality, the way the shows travel to these different places.ā
As guitarist and vocalist for Goose, Mitarotonda has spent his time in the improvisational trenches. Founded in 2014 in Norwalk, Connecticut, the bandāwhich also includes guitarist, keyboardist, and vocalist Peter Anspach, bassist Trevor Weeks, drummer Ben Atkind, and percussionist Jeff Arevaloāhas ascended in the jam-band scene. Like other groups in the genre, the quintet has built their following on their performances, where they dive deep into improvisational jams. In 2019, they got their first taste of widespread success, when the video of their set at the Peach Music Festival in Scranton, Pennsylvania, racked up hundreds of thousands of views.
Goose - Dripfield (Official Music Video)
āThe thing about this genre is you donāt bat a thousand, whatsoever,ā Mitarotonda continues. āItās not feasible. You canāt be āonā every night when youāre improvising in a very intense and constant way. But when itās there, when the magic strikes, thereās nothing like it.ā
On their third full-length studio album, Dripfield, Goose channel their vibrant live energy and transforms it into a new iteration of their sound. This time around, they headed into the studio with exploratory ears to collaborate with producer D. James Goodwin, whose influence largely shaped the sonics of the record.
āWe wanted to find a producer who was on the same wavelength, but also was going to take our music to a different place sonically.ā āPeter Anspach
Dripfield is addictive. The bandās stellar musicianship, infectious enthusiasm, and songwriting, which bursts with funk but is woven together with indie rock threads, form a joyous syzygy that demands repetition. The title track sets a cosmic stage, with an arpeggiated synthesizer backed by a simple, powerful drum pattern, which leads into a sweeping, reverb-laden vocal. āArrowā shifts seamlessly between a pumping, horn-driven groove and softer, atmospheric passages, while āMoonriseā takes on a more traditional acoustic-ballad format. The album radiates influences from across the more creative ends of rock, including My Morning Jacket, the Grateful Dead, Fleet Foxes, and a bit of Pink Floyd. But mixed with the bandās improvisational language, it becomes a sound all their own.
In the wake of the release of their 2021 studio album, Shenanigans Nite Club, the band was feeling a bit drained. The production process had been long, taking several years to complete. Despite how it captures the bandās live dynamic, there was a lot that went into it behind the scenes to achieve that effect. āShenanigans is very much a jam-band record,ā says Mitarotonda. āBut thereās a real irony to that record, in that I spent an absurd amount of hours editing and tinkering with it.ā
For Dripfield, Goose called on producer D. James Goodwin to help them approach the studio with fresh ears. āI think he was actively trying to subvert the typical jam-band song,ā says Mitarotonda.
Understandably, Goose was ready to find a new approach for their next album. As Anspach shares, they were thinking that collaborating with a producer might be the solution. āI was watching that Taylor Swift documentary [Folklore: The Long Pond Studio Sessions] where she worked on those folkier albums, and you see the collaborations going on in the studio that allowed her to get to that place,ā Anspach says. āThereās a lot of interesting parallels there between a lot of our favorite albums. We wanted to find a producer who was on the same wavelength, but also was going to take our music to a different place sonically.ā
After talking to a few different producers, Goose connected with D. James Goodwin, whose credits include Bob Weir, Devo, Kaki King, and Murder by Death. Creative trust was established almost immediately. āThe first conversation we had with Dan, I was like, āOh, this is the guy,āā says Mitarotonda. āI was very much at a point where I felt like I didnāt have the right ideas to break us out of the box. You establish a box and then you become claustrophobic in it. And he was the right person to basically light the box on fire in the studio.ā
Rick Mitarotondaās Gear
Rick Mitarotonda, seen here with his PRS Hollowbody II Piezo, feels like the band has become the organic rock improvisational ensemble heās long aspired for them to be. āWhen the downbeat of a new phrase is approaching,ā he says, āI can cue, without looking at anyone, if I want it to resolve or not. Itās fun stuff.ā
Guitars
- PRS Hollowbody II Piezo
- Fender Eric JohnsonĀ Stratocaster
Amplifier
- Mesa/Boogie Express 5:50 50-watt 2x12 combo
Strings & Picks
- DāAddario NYXL (.010 sets)
- Dawg Mandolin Pick by David Grisman
Effects
TC Helicon Play Electric vocal and guitar effects processor
TC Electronic PolyTune
Dunlop Cry Baby
DigiTech Whammy 5
Mu-Tron Micro-Tron IV
Strymon OB.1 Compressor
Love Pedal Eternity overdrive
MXR Carbon Copy Deluxe
Strymon Deco Tape Saturation & Doubletracker
MXR Analog Chorus
Strymon El Capistan
Strymon TimeLine
Strymon NightSky
Strymon Flint
TC Electronic Ditto X4 Looper
āWe went back and forth with him, sending him a bunch of live recordings of the songs,ā Anspach elaborates. āAs he was going through, he was telling us, āI see a way into that song,ā or, āI donāt really see a way into this one.ā He was looking at it through the lens of, āHow can I reconceptualize this song and put it in an interesting style that would take it to a new place.ā He ended up coming back like, āThis is what the strongest 10 songs are; this should be an album.āā
Once they hit the studio, the band took a new approach to much of that material, experimenting with new arrangements and instrumentation under Goodwinās guidance. āHe had a lot of ideas about just crafting the things and pushing them in different directions,ā says Mitarotonda, āwhich was really exciting for us.ā
One song that went through a significant shift is the seven-minute blues-funk jammer āHot Tea.ā āWhen we play it live, itās fast, disco funk. And he was like, āI canāt listen to that for eight minutes straight. I just canāt do it. We have to slow it down,āā says Anspach, laughing. āBut we had an open mind. And as soon as we heard the drum sounds coming through, we were like, āYeah, this is legit.ā
Rig Rundown: Goose's Peter Anspach and Rick Mitarotonda
Goose tracked the song, then did a full-band overdub on top ādoing different things. At one point he [Goodwin] was like, āEverybody play this rhythm,āā Anspach describes, clapping out the idea. āWe played it through the whole track on our different instruments, and then he kept the clavichord and a cowbell for various parts and got rid of the rest.ā
āI think he was actively trying to subvert the typical jam-band song,ā adds Mitarotonda. āIf you listen to the way we play āArrowā liveāand we still do play it live that way because it works, itās funāit sounds like a jam-band song. And he heard that song for the first time, and I think all he heard was its clothes. He wasnāt interested in it at first, and then he listened to it more, and then I guess heard the song within the clothes and became interested in it. Thereās that section in 7/4, and he had the idea of pursuing the Afrobeat, horn-driven thing. Dripfield doesnāt sound like a jam-band recordāitās not like what we do live. But at the same time, there was a lot of improvising in the studio in a different way, which was a lot of fun.ā
āYou canāt be āonā every night when youāre improvising in a very intense and constant way.ā āRick Mitarotonda
Both guitarists take different approaches to their gear, and particularly how they apply effects. Mitarotonda plays his PRS Hollowbody II Piezo through a Mesa/Boogie Express 5:50 50-watt 2x12 combo and two pedalboards, but says, āOften I donāt have a lot of patience for gear. I see the effects almost as a way to open up new doors improvising, but sometimes it feels like a crutch. Sometimes [during a jam], when I feel like Iām hitting a wall, Iām like, āKick on an effect; maybe thatāll juice things up.ā Then I think, āNo, figure it out. Keep trying to find something that is unique musically instead of just falling back on effects because you can.
āBut thatās not exclusively true,ā he acknowledges. āItās a different means of exploration than just searching for things musically. It makes me think of Radiohead, where so much of what makes up the substance of that band is sonics: searching and discovering strange instruments and sounds and crafting songs around that, as opposed to songs being driven purely by melody and harmony and lyrics. I see them as different pursuits.ā
Peter Anspachās Gear
Goose goes big! Ever since 2019ās Peach Festival, the band has found itself in a much larger spotlight. āItās something to get used to,ā says guitarist, keyboardist, and vocalist Peter Anspach.
Photo by Adam Berta
Guitars
- Suhr Mateus Asato Signature Classic
- Fender American Vintage ā62 StratocasterCustom T-style thinline built by Goose percussionist Jeff Arevalo
Amplifiers
- Fender ā64 Custom Deluxe Reverb
Strings & Picks
- DāAddario NYXL (.010 sets)
- DāAddario 1mm (medium/heavy)
Effects
- TC Electronic PolyTune 2
- Dunlop Cry Baby
- Keeley Compressor Plus
- Chase Bliss Mood
- Moog Moogerfooger MF-101
- Electro-Harmonix Small Stone
- Ibanez TS9 w/Analog Man mod
- Analog Man King of Tone
- Chase Bliss Tonal Recall
- Strymon TimeLine
- Strymon Flint
- Chase Bliss Dark World
Anspach, who plays a Suhr Mateus Asato Signature Classic with a humbucker bridge pickup through a Fender ā64 Custom Deluxe Reverb, has a different take on effects. āI try to keep my pedalboard as consolidated as possible. But I think I have 10 or 11 stompboxes,ā he explains. āSince I got into Tame Impala early on, Iāve had way more effects on my board in the past than I do now,ā he elaborates. āBut I love delay. Iāve written songs where delay is part of the main riff. Without the delay there, there is no song. Effects are definitely important to my sound.ā
While each guitarist fills his board with options, neither is overly lavish about their effects, which may help them stay focused on what seems to matter most: being responsive, sensitive collaborators. And over their eight years as a band, Goose have gotten so used to playing with one another that they can communicate through musical cues alone. āOne of the coolest parts about this, just from doing it for a bunch of years, is how many things are communicated when weāre improvising without any sort of visual cue at all,ā Mitarotonda shares. āThe whole tension and release thing is something Iāve wanted for years to figure out. And now itās really pretty easy: When the downbeat of a new phrase is approaching, I can cue, without looking at anyone, if I want it to resolve or not. Itās fun stuff.ā
āI think he was actively trying to subvert the typical jam-band song.ā āRick Mitarotonda
The best jamming, arguably, happens when the performers are taking risks. Inevitably, however, that involves making mistakesāso what do you do when you play a phrase youāre not happy with? āBe like a goldfish,ā says Anspach, laughing. āI have been thinking a lot about this recently. If you mess up and you get in your head about it, you end up affecting the rest of your performance. But if people in the crowd are having a great time, and you look out and you realize this is a really special moment for them, you get over [your mistakes] pretty fast.ā
Although itās been a few years since the famous Peach Music Festival video launched Goose into a bigger spotlight, the fame that the guitarists have been experiencing is still fresh, and they agree that it can be existentially jarring. āItās something to get used to,ā says Anspach. āRelationships change with other people in your life, and thatās weird. Itās something Iāve been dealing a lot with recently. Itās incredible and I wouldnāt change it for anything, but life is different. People look at you a different way and youāre a different person to them, but youāre the same person to yourself.ā
The bandās close dynamic makes a massive difference in coping with those stresses. As Anspach shares, āIt definitely helps everything off-stage, dealing with life and whatever else, when you have this brotherhood of people who are able to get on the same page in a musical way. Everything else in life becomes a little bit easier. I can handle anything at that point.ā
Goose - Hot Tea - 11/19/21 Aspen, CO
The Badlander 25 is designed to carry the tradition of high performance, high gain forward with tight low end, an aggressive midrange character, and enhanced harmonic content.
Badlander 25 Head
Mesa/Boogieās Badlander Series of amplifiers draw inspiration from Mesaās legendary Dual Rectifiers, paying homage to rock and heavy sounds in their own distinctive and percussive way, with a focus on todayās musical genres. Its tight low end, refined top end, and defined mids combine with Mesa gain for huge tones that will appeal to rock leaning guitarists who like a bit of Brit influence with their American-voiced gain. The Badlander 25 Head uses the same straightforward channel format as its 50 and 100 Watt siblings, with 2 identical, footswitchable channels each containing Clean, Crunch, and Crush modes that feed an EL84 power section to deliver an unprecedented fierceness and harmonic complexity. The Badlander 25 Head combines these ingredients in a small package and power range that adds a raw character all its own, offering the essential voice, performance, and features of the Badlander 100 and 50 in a fiery-sounding, ultra-portable low-power format thatāll gratify those not seeking big horsepower.
Badlander 25s employ a pair of EL84 power tubes operating in MESAās proprietary Dyna-Watt Class A/B Pentode for maximum power, punch, and clarity, producing 25 Watts or switched to its 10 Watt Class A/B Triode setting for lush harmonics and a sweet, liquid feel at lower volumes.
The Badlander 25 Head packs a built in CabClone IR Direct Interface making recording and cab-less live capture consistent and easy. Players can choose from a preloaded collection of eight Rectifier Closed-Back and Boogie Open-Back Cabinets IRs from MESAās standalone CabClone IR for a wide array of sounds and responses.
A Tube-Driven, Series Effects Loop acts as a circuit bridge, permitting players to patch their favorite outboard effects between the preampās end to just before the Driver tube feeding the power section.
For guitarists seeking the tone and feel of an all-tube amplifier with huge sounding gain that is voiced to handle the demands of todayās musical genres, the Badlander 25 Head delivers from a package that fits in an overnight bag.
Badlander 25 1x25 Combo
Mesa/Boogieās Badlander Series of amplifiers draw inspiration from MESAās legendary Dual Rectifiers, paying homage to rock and heavy sounds in their own distinctive and percussive way, with a focus on todayās musical genres. Its tight low end, refined top end, and defined mids combine with MESA gain for huge tones that will appeal to rock leaning guitarists who like a bit of Brit influence with their American-voiced gain. The new Badlander 25 1x12 Combo uses the same straightforward channel format as its 50 and 100 Watt siblings, with 2 identical, footswitchable channels each containing Clean, Crunch, and Crush modes that feed an EL84 power section to deliver an unprecedented fierceness and harmonic complexity. The Badlander 25 Combo combines these ingredients in a small package and power range that adds a raw character all its own, offering the essential voice, performance, and features of the Badlander 100 and 50 in a fiery-sounding, ultra-portable low-power format thatāll gratify those not seeking big horsepower.
Badlander 25s employ a pair of EL84 power tubes operating in MESAās proprietary Dyna-Watt Class A/B Pentode for maximum power, punch, and clarity, producing 25 Watts or switched to its 10 Watt Class A/B Triode setting for lush harmonics and a sweet, liquid feel at lower volumes.
A UK-made Celestion Creamback 65 Watt speaker is MESAās driver of choice for this 1x12 Combo amp. G12M-65 Creamback is ideally suited for the Badlander 25 as its power handling permits added low-end grunt complementing the warm and vocal mids, crunchy upper-mids and sweet, refined highs.
The Badlander 25 Combo packs a built in CabClone IR Direct Interface making recording and cab-less live capture consistent and easy. Players can choose from a preloaded collection of eight Rectifier Closed-Back and Boogie Open-Back Cabinets IRs from MESAās standalone CabClone IR for a wide array of sounds and responses.
A Tube-Driven, Series Effects Loop acts as a circuit bridge, permitting players to patch their favorite outboard effects between the preampās end to just before the Driver tube feeding the power section.
For guitarists seeking the tone and feel of an all-tube amplifier with huge sounding gain that is voiced to handle the demands of todayās musical genres while being incredibly portable, the Badlander 25 1x12 Combo delivers.
BADLANDERā¢ 25 Head & 1x12 Combo | MESA/Boogie
Explore and shop the Badlanders on www.mesaboogie.comand at all authorized Mesa/Boogie dealers.