Legendary lightness and rigidity converge with absolutely thumping lows in a dynamic new fiver.
A chilled-out look at the road rigs of guitarists Jimmy Herring and John “JB” Bell, and bassist Dave Schools—32 years after the legendary jam band’s first gig in Athens, Georgia.
Premier Guitar’s Ted Drozdowski met with virtuoso Jimmy Herring, frontman John “JB” Bell, and techs Joel Byron and Paul Agostino before the second of three dates at Nashville’s Ascend Amphitheater to get the scoop on how Widespread Panic’s string-stretchers get their sounds.
Jimmy Herring’s main guitar with Widespread Panic is a custom-built Paul Reed Smith with Lollar Imperial pickups, two volume controls and a single tone control. He favors jumbo frets with medium action for more clarity and definition, and strings them up with D’Addario .010 sets. The back of its headstock bears the legend “Custom built for Jimmy Herring,” and is signed by Smith. His backup axe, which also has Lollar Imperials, is a David Grissom signature PRS that he mostly pays in drop D.
Besides his PRS guitars, Herring brought this parts S-style guitar built by guitar tech Joel Byron on Widespread’s sojurn to Nashville. It’s “sort of a ’50s style,” says Herring. The guitar’s got a light ash body (from MJT), which he says tends to resonate better, a USA Custom Guitars neck, Don Mare pickups, and a Callaham bridge chosen to give the strings a more modern spacing. As with all his guitars with whammy bars, he uses four springs under the bridge. The axe’s middle setting activates the neck and middle pickup.
Herring’s dry tone comes from a 100-watt Homestead head handbuilt by Peter McMahon, outfitted with 6550 tubes. After a volume pedal and tuner, it’s what Herring’s signal hits first, and then a line out goes to a second volume pedal that leads to his wet amp rig.
The cab for Herring’s dry signal is this old 4x12 Sound City with 40/40 Tone Tubby ceramic magnet speakers. Perched atop the cabinet is a Brown Box input voltage attenuator with a sticker of his late mentor Col. Bruce Hampton’s face on it.
Herring’s Crown power amp pushes sound through an Orange 4x12 run in stereo, with four Electro-Voice Force monitor speakers, for big, clean tones. The reverb comes courtesy of an Eventide Space, and when things need to get dirty, there’s a Hughes & Kettner Tube Factor also atop the power amps.
Here’s the Ampeg BA210SP that Herring uses as a monitor for Dave Schools’ sound. Typically, he leaves the controls where Joel Byron sets ’em.
Herring might use this Germino Classic 45 to play smaller venues than an outdoor arena like the Ascend. It’s essentially an update on the Marshall JTM45, with Drake power and output transformers, and TAD KT-66 and Mullard reissue 12AX7 tubes.
Jimmy Herring’s versatile palette of tones with Widespread Panic mostly comes from his deft control of volume, but a few boxes are also along for the ride. The most important is his Eventide Space, which provides the reverb for the tone that emerges from his stereo Orange cab. That’s buoyed by a Hughes & Kettner Tube Factor, for overdrive, but he plugs straight into an Ernie Ball volume pedal and a battered Boss TU-2 tuner.
This array of volume pedals at the front of Herring’s stage carpet allows him to control what he’s hearing in his monitors without using his hands. He got the system while touring with the Dead in 2000. “I was finding myself for the first time on really big stages, and asked their soundman, Dennis Leonard, who they call ‘Wiz,’ if he could build something better for me than one of those monitors you have to control by hand. This keeps me from having to think about anything while I play.”
John “JB” Bell’s main guitar is the latest in a line of Washburn HB35 semi-hollowbody models he’s been playing since 1990, with a distinctive custom red finish and white binding. It’s got Seymour Duncan Pearly Gates humbuckers and is strung with .012 sets with a wound G. His backup is an all-black HB35 he uses for slide—mostly in open G, open D, or drop D. His slides are brass, and he also tunes the guitar down a whole step to play some Vic Chesnutt songs. The pickups are a Duncan Alnico II Pro in the neck and a Custom in the bridge. He tends to use both pickups at all times, for both guitars.
Depending on the tunes in the set, JB might play a National Tricone resonator, a banjo, or this Washburn M3SW F-style mandolin. The mando was the acoustic instrument he brought for these Nashville shows.
JB runs both his amps throughout the band’s two-set marathons. He’s had a Roland JC-120 since Widespread began and typically has the chorus engaged. But things get a little “wonky,” he says, when he steps on his Vox wah, so Joel Byron modded the wah with a switch that deactivates the amp’s chorus when it gets stomped on.
JB’s other amp, a 100-watt Fuchs Overdrive Supreme, has a radically different tone than the Roland. There’s a Radial Tonebone switcher on top, connecting both amps. We’re not sure what effect the crystal has on his tone, but it’s cool!
The cab beneath the Fuchs is a stock Mesa/Boogie 4x12 with a closed back.
JB’s Horizon Selectaline switcher routes his guitar signal into his JC-120 and Fuchs amps, and dates back to a time when one of his guitars was a Gibson Chet Atkins model.
JB’s essential tone-shaping pedal is this Ibanez Tube Screamer, which he leaves on all the time. It’s joined on the floor by a Peterson Strobo Stomp 2 tuner, a Fulltone OCD overdrive for solos, an Ernie Ball volume pedal, his modded Vox wah, and a Voodoo Lab Pedal Power 2. He also uses a passive Radial DI when he decides to play National Tricone resonator, banjo, or his Washburn M3SW F-style mandolin.
Dave Schools’ No. 1 is a custom 6-string Modulus Graphite bass he calls “Merle.” It has Bartolini pickups, an active preamp, and active EQ controls. There are two stickers laminated onto the back, for inspiration. One is Grateful Dead-themed. The other is derived from Indian classical painting.
His other 6-string bass is a gorgeous Alembic Custom Series II in a dark mahogany with a cocobolo top and a walnut, ebony, purpleheart, and maple neck. It’s a Bird of Prey body shape, with Alembic’s proprietary pickups and an active preamp and EQ. Both of his basses sport multi-pin connector ins, but those go unused.
Clean power is the aim of Schools’ current system, which is driven by a d&b power amp. Agostino explains that the bass rig mirrors the band’s overall PA system, and that Schools was inspired to put it together by Phil Lesh’s rig. It’s bi-amped, with the highs running through two d&b Y10 speakers and two of the company’s 1x15 cabs for low end. Those rest atop a pair of 18s, controlled by the monitor engineer, who feeds them some kick drum, too, letting them double as monitor and bass output. A currently unused Line 6 Relay wireless receiver rests below the d&b amp.
Schools’ core tone shaping is done by an Avalon Design Vacuum Tube VT 737sp preamp, which rests in his rack alongside a Live Wire power conditioner and a Korg ToneWorks tuner.
According to bass tech Paul Agostino, Dave Schools changes his buffet of effects on a nightly basis, but his two constants are this MXR Bass Octave Deluxe, for subtones, and the new Waza Craft version of the classic Boss DM-2 Delay.
The rest of School’s pedal feast at Nashville’s Ascend: a Catlinbread SFT Ampeg-voiced overdrive, a Walrus Audio Luminary Quad Octave Generator, EarthQuaker Devices’ The Depths optical vibe, a Catlinbread Echorec, a Caroline Guitar Company Kilobyte Lo-Fi Delay, and, on the floor, a Carl Martin Octa-Switch. He’s also fond of envelope filters, but not for this gig. And Schools uses an Ernie Ball volume pedal to mute before tuning, and a Voodoo Lab Pedal Power 2 to run his rotating roster of stomps.
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Modulus is back with a flyweight bass that’s easy on the shoulders but heavy in tone—and couldn’t care less about how cold it is outside.
Recorded direct into Focusrite Saffire 6 interface into MacBook Pro using GarageBand.
Clip 1 - Flat EQ.
Clip 2 - Bass boost at 25 percent and treble boost at 25 percent.
A few years ago, I had a chat with Tony Cimperman about the idea of resurrecting Modulus Guitars. His enthusiasm was contagious, as he shared his thoughts on the limitless possibilities of graphite’s application in guitar design. And although he didn’t reveal anything too specific, it seemed that Cimperman and master builder Joe Perman were definitely preparing for a reboot of the storied company. Modulus did, in fact, make its presence once again known over the following years, but the most significant development was revealed last summer at Nashville’s NAMM show, where the revived company unveiled a new adaptation of the Funk Unlimited model. Coined the Funk Unlimited RevOLite, Modulus has developed an incredibly lightweight instrument that preserves the sonic advantages of both graphite and wood.
Research and Development
It took nearly two-and-a-half years to create the RevOLite bass—a project committed to delivering optimum comfort and tone to players. The body is comprised of chambered alder with carbon fiber running through it, which not only reduces weight, but, Modulus believes, gives the body strength and improved resonance.
This reduction in body weight required Modulus to redesign their carbon-fiber neck, primarily for balance reasons. So, the RevOLite neck uses less carbon fiber than their standard necks, thereby lessening the instrument’s mass while preserving the vibrational transfer. (Modulus states there is no tonal difference between the RevOLite neck and one of their standard necks.) Keeping with tradition, Modulus caps the neck with their original phenolic fretboard.
Savvy gearheads might wonder why Modulus installed a truss rod in their carbon-fiber neck, since the material is known for its stability. According to Cimperman, the application simply allows players to adjust action to their taste—a set-and-forget option that offers flexibility for a variety of playing styles.
There are myriad electronic options available for RevOLite basses. Our tester was outfitted with the cool combination of an Aguilar OBP-1 preamp driving a Lane Poor Legacy MM pickup. With Lane Poor’s blessing, a former employee of his has resumed production using the same machinery to wind and design the classic pickups.
Graphite Delights
Another advantage to carbon fiber is its resistance to temperature changes. When the RevOLite arrived at my door, it just happened to be one of the coldest days of the year—4 degrees with sub-zero winds. It was evident by touch that the box had spent a long period of time suffering the wintry elements. Had any other instrument arrived in this condition, I would have given it a few hours—perhaps overnight—to acclimate to a stable environment. However, for the sake of this review and a prevailing enthusiasm to check out the bass, I decided to test the RevOLite’s integrity right away.
Opening the chilly hardshell case revealed a matte-black beauty—freezing cold but devoid of any visible damage from the weather conditions outside. I immediately plugged into a Peterson Stomp Classic tuner and, to my surprise, the bass was almost exactly in tune with only ever-so-slight movement from the tuner’s spinning strobe. After making some very subtle tuning adjustments to the bass, I left it alone for three hours to see how it would react after a temperature change. The second check indicated the RevOLite held tuning and was ready for performance.
Ratings
Pros:
Authoritative sound in a dependable, playable package. Very light.
Cons:
The price is way up there.
Tones:
Playability:
Build/Design:
Value:
Street:
$5,324 street (as tested)
Modulus Graphite Funk Unlimited RevOLite
modulusgraphite.com
Get ready to smile, bassists: The RevOLite tipped the scale at an impressive 6.7 pounds. Sitting with the instrument on the thigh was predictably comfortable, as was a classical-guitar orientation. Modulus Graphite’s latest held a solid playing position using a strap, though it couldn’t quite maintain more acute playing angles.
When assessing the response of an electric guitar (or bass in this case), discerning musicians tend to play the instrument unplugged. Unamplified, the Modulus bass was quite loud and each string spoke at a consistent level. Harmonics bounced out with confidence, even around the first and second frets.
To hear how the bass would cut through a loud environment, I took the RevOLite to a blues jam and connected it to a B|Amp and two HD112 cabinets from Bergantino. With everything set flat, StingRay-esque sounds projected from the instrument, but with added crispness and clarity. The Lane Poor Legacy pickup and OBP-1 proved to be an excellent pairing, with the boost-only preamp providing ample amounts of lows and highs. To my ears, a slight boost in the bass gave each note weight and low-mid definition, and while I would’ve liked to temper the highs with a passive tone control, the bass cut through the mix with a snappy top end.
Moving my plucking hand delivered plenty of tonal versatility. Playing over the fretboard had a punchy warmth that gave ballads a full foundation, while pulling the strings over the pickup gave shuffle bass lines lots of attack with a slight mid-scoop. At the end of the night, listeners remarked how punchy and powerful the Modulus bass was in supporting the ensemble.
The Verdict
It’s a great thing to have Modulus back in the fold, and the RevOLite is an example of the company’s hopefully bright future. They have created a bass that is light on the strap, heavy on tone, and impervious to the worst that Mother Nature has to offer. Its price tag will most certainly raise an eyebrow or two, but on the flip side, investing in a dependable instrument that delivers tonal consistency will likely provide repair-free performance. So, if you’re considering pulling the trigger on a professional workhorse that’s likely to provide many years of service, try taking the Funk Unlimited RevOLite on a test ride and, well, start saving.
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