retro sonic

The Year in Gear 2020

It may be the understatement of the century, but this year was weird. Even so, the killer gear kept coming. Here are the goods that stood out as extra-great amongst our annual haul of Premier Guitar reviews.

MXR

Clone Looper

With a two-button system for recording and playback, the Clone Looper simplifies many looping maneuvers by eliminating some double-click and hold sequences. But with awesome and trippy features like adjustable playback speed and reverse playback, you can easily take the Clone Looper's simpler looping processes to particularly psychedelic ends.

$149 street

jimdunlop.com

Read the review.


Silktone

Silktone Amp

This handwired 1x12 combo employs a KT66 power tube for its class-A circuitry, resulting in glassy cleans reminiscent of a tweed Champ, and fat and pleasantly compressed high-gain tones without sacrificing shine. Joe Gore was also impressed with its aesthetic and workmanship, as well as Silktone's spring reverb. ā€œIt's got the feel of a vintage Fender tank, but with uncommon wetness and depth."

$2,199 street, as reviewed with ceramic speaker (alnico speaker $200 extra)

silktone.org

Read the review.

Fender

Vintera Telecaster '50s

Just about any Telecaster flirts with perfection in form. But Fender did not rest on their laurels in re-interpreting the '50s-styled variation in the new, affordable Vintera series. The neck is lovely, with a hefty deep-U shape, and the alnico 2 bridge pickup delivers the essence of bright, spanky, and rowdy Tele-ness, while maintaining a warm glow around the edges that is a beautiful match for a touch of vintage-style reverb.

$899 street

fender.com

Read the review.

Fender

Vintera Telecaster '70s

Keith Richards, who could have any freaking Telecaster in the world if he wanted it, has used the Telecaster Custom he bought new in 1975 regularly ever since. When you play the Vintera version, it's easy to understand why. Fender's Tim Shaw worked hard to build a more authentic WideRange humbucker for this instrument, and the work paid offā€”creating an expansive palette of spanky-to-smoky tones when paired with the alnico 5 bridge single-coil.

$899 street

fender.com

Read the review.

Yamaha

Red Label FSX3

Adam Perlmutter found that the OM-sized FSX3, which honors Yamaha's much-loved red-label guitars of the '70s, feels better-built than the company's original FG guitars, which is no small compliment. Perlmutter shared that the FSX3, boasting all-solid-wood construction, ā€œfeels great, exhibits real versatility, and is free of the old-guitar baggage that comes with vintage examples."

$999 street

usa.yamaha.com

Read the review.

TC Electronic

Hall of Fame 2x4

A maximalist expansion of TC's popular Hall of Fame 2 pedal, this reverb machine boasts 10 factory settings, six user memory slots, and eight stored patches, accessible via its four hefty footswitches. ā€œEverything about the Hall of Fame 2 x4 Reverb is exceptional," is the word from reviewer Joe Gore, who welcomed its rich and varied reverbs, as well as the pedal's delightfully simple interface.

$299 street

tcelectronic.com

Read the review.

Origin Effects

RevivalDRIVE

Origin's luxurious stomps feel like outboard studio gear from analog audio's golden age. The RevivalDRIVE, however, has so much tone-sculpting power that it actually tends to function and sound like an old recording console module, too. The EQ is powerful, sensitive, and responsive, and the low-end tones are especially delectable. If you need an overdrive that can fill a very specific mix niche, this tool is worth every penny.

$385 street

origineffects.com

Read the review.

Jackson Audio

Bloom

This ultra-versatile multi-effects pedal captivated PG with its ability to control, shape, and expand natural playing dynamics through its five different types of compression, a 3-band Baxandall-inspired EQ, and a 20 dB clean boost. Boasting super-sensitive knobs with finely tailored sweeps, the folks at Jackson Audio topped off the Bloom with MIDI control over all parameters via its TRS input.

$329 street

jackson.audio

Read the review.

Electro-Harmonix

Ram's Head Big Muff

Given what a vintage Ram's Head Big Muff costs these days, this new version's $99 price tag alone is cause for celebration. But the tab is extra-impressive when you hear how well EHX nailed a vintage Ram's Head's legendary essence. It's growling, bold in the midrange, and stings like a wasp when you run the gain and tone wide open. If you don't have the bucks for a vintage pedal or a high-end Ram's Head clone, this remarkably economical iteration is a must for rounding out your Big Muff collection.

$99 street

ehx.com

Read the review.

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Looking for a Gilmour-esque flanger? Here's a compact and buttery-sounding take on the Pink Floyd legend's Animals-era modulation machine. The PG Retro-Sonic Flanger review.

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Ratings

Pros:
Open, spacious, and rich modulation waves. Excellent quality. Useful level control. 18-volt option.

Cons:
Could use a touch more top-end sparkle.

Street:
$199

Retro-Sonic Flanger
retro-sonic.com



Tones:


Ease of Use:


Build/Design:


Value:
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Frontman John Baizley and former Cirque du Soleil shredder Gina Gleason explain the atmospheric metal outfitā€™s switch to single-coilsā€”and how a fuzz pedal first brought them together.

Creating one concept album is a daunting task for any band. So, the fact that Southern prog-metal steamroller Baroness just capped off their color-coded, 5-part odyssey (2007ā€™s Red, 2009ā€™s Blue, 2012ā€™s Yellow & Green, and 2015ā€™s Purple) with 2019ā€™s Gold & Grey, is no small feat. But the idea that John Baizley (the lone founding member and visual leader) still has a band is the bigger accomplishment. For one, during a 2012 world tour in England, the bandā€™s tour bus careened down a viaduct near Bath and severely injured numerous bandmembers and crew personnel. Following that turmoil, then bassist Matt Maggioni and drummer Allen Blickle left the band.

Enter bassist Nick Jost and drummer Sebastian Thompson. The fresh synergy from new members and raw emotions still bubbling from the crash fueled the stalwart guitar combo of Peter Adams and John Baizley, ultimately earning the band its most critical praise, including and a Grammy nod for ā€œBest Metal Performanceā€ on Purpleā€™s ā€œShock Me.ā€ (Check out our 2015 interview with Peter Adams and John Baizley.) And after another grueling run of dates, Peter Adams decided to leave the band to focus on family life back home. This left Baizley, once again, in the need of a musical chair to be filled.

Around this same the time, guitarist Gina Gleason was busy in Las Vegas working as the Muse in Michael Jackson: One by Cirque du Soleil at Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas. While browsing the interwebs in search of new gear, as guitarists do, she noticed fuzz fanatic Steve Strohm of Philly Fuzz was not only based in her hometown (duh, Philadelphia), but he was building them in her familyā€™s neighborhood. She had to have one for two reasonsā€”she was after a germanium-based snarler and she wanted to support a local artisan. Purchase complete.

But before the pedal was shipped, part-time associate and Philly Fuzz friend, John Baizley sent Gleason a quick note on Instagram and the two hit it off. Instead of shipping the pedal, Baizley invited her over to his house to test out some other Philly Fuzz creations and to jam on his smorgasbord of equipment. The two kept in touch and whenever they crossed paths and had time in Philly, they jammed.

They talked about working on a side project, but letā€™s be honest, Gina played a muse once in the King of Pop production, so it seems apropos sheā€™d spark a new musical start for this chiseled rock band to help them finish their pentalogy. Her swaggering presence is best felt alongside Baizley, when their symbiotic relationship is most powerful with seething, dueling guitar riffs (ā€œBorderlinesā€) and evocative harmonized vocals (ā€œCold-Bolded Angelsā€) that season Gold & Grey like new spices reinvigorating your motherā€™s prized dish.

Before Baronessā€™ Nashville gig at the Cannery Ballroom, PGā€™s Chris Kies stopped by after soundcheck (and before an acoustic set at Music Cityā€™s Grimeyā€™s record shop) to see how the band who once adorned humbuckers and full stacks onstage now slay with offsets and T-styles that chime and grind through a pile-up of small-wattage tube combos designed for high headroom and pedal manipulation. After a lengthy chat with John Baizley and Gina Gleason about their new full-Fender setups, each guitarist slings on a 6-string and shows off their stomp stations that illicit everything from spacious tranquility to mondo crush.

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