See these jam-happy ganders soar with one guitar each and a stockpile of Strymons. Plus, why Rick Mitarotonda embraces random changes to pedal settings.
“Are you guys with the band?” A pleasant passerby asked while we were loading out camera gear near the Goose tour bus parked outside Nashville’s Brooklyn Bowl.
“No, we’re just here to do an interview.” I responded.
“Oh man, tell the band that last night’s concert was uh-mazing,” exclaimed the joyous fan. “We’ll be talking about it for years to come.”
And with that sort of impassioned, infectious positivity, Goose is following the freeform footsteps of the Grateful Dead, Phish, Dave Matthews Band, and Umphrey’s McGee—where polished, recorded albums are secondary to improvisation-rich, snowflake-unique performances that illicit exchanges like that above. (Adding to their jam-band credit, they livestream most shows, and guitarist Peter Anspach mixes the band’s gigs for release shortly afterwards.)
Formed in 2014, the quintet currently includes: Peter Anspach (guitar, keys, vocals), Jeff Arevalo (percussion, vocals), Ben Atkind (drums), Rick Mitarotonda (guitar, lead vocals), and Trevor Weekz (bass). The Northeast-based crew has released two albums (2016’s Moon Cabin and 2021’s Shenanigans Nite Club), an EP (2020’s Night Lights), and Dripfieldis on the horizon, for release on June 24.
However, the recorded songs are just guideposts and mile markers. It is all about the live experience. The band often performs two sets, without an opener, and keeps fans on their toes with natural, symbiotic excursions and unlikely, progressive covers. The first evening of their sold-out, two-night run in Nashville saw them flex their musical adeptness and vocabulary with covers of Wes Montgomery (“Switchin’”) and Steppenwolf (“Magic Carpet Ride”).
Their word-of-mouth growth has elevated them to cross several milestones in 2022. They sold out their first arena (Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Connecticut) and followed that with sell-outs at the legendary Red Rocks Amphitheatre and historic Radio City Music Hall. So you can plan on seeing these birds fly high for years to come.
Before Goose’s second sold-out show in Nashville, PG was invited onstage to catalog their current setups. In this Rundown, guitarists Peter Anspach and Rick Mitarotonda show off their all-night 6-string costars, detail the pedals that help them warp space and time for organic odysseys, and Mitarotonda explains how a looper helps him from hitting mental walls and getting cornered in redundant guitar-playing boxes.
Brought to you by D’Addario XPND Pedalboard.
Suhr Is Pretty
Goose guitarist Peter Anspach has always loved humbuckers, but he felt the huskier tones on ’bucker-equipped guitars had a few shortcomings—primarily lacking the 2- and 4-position squawk of an S-style instrument. The solution was switching to this Suhr Mateus Asato Signature Classic that threads the needle with an Asato Custom Humbucker and a pair of ML Standard single-coils. He rocks D’Addario Classic Celluloid picks (1.0 mm), NYXLs (.010 –.046), and Original Fuzz straps.
The Backup Beauty
Sitting close by in the bullpen is this Fender American Vintage ’62 Stratocaster that pulls its weight as a backup.
A Reliable Deluxe
“It’s just so full, clean, and reliable, and that’s what you need on the road. I can’t emphasize its reliability enough,” says Anspach of his Fender ’64 Custom Deluxe Reverb. “I have a ’70s silver-panel Deluxe Reverb at home that gets blown out of the water by this one.” He plugs his guitar into the normal channel, while putting his clavinet into the bright channel.
Peter’s Pedal Playground
Quickly glancing at Anspach’s pedalboard, you see that he has his feet in the analog and digital worlds. The industry standbys include a Moog Moogerfooger MF-101 Lowpass Filter, Electro-Harmonix Small Stone phase shifter, Keeley Compressor Plus, Ibanez TS9 Tube Screamer (with Analog Man mod), and an Analog Man King of Tone. The modern juggernauts include a trio of Chase Bliss boxes (Dark World, Tonal Recall, and Mood) and a pair of Strymon stomps (TimeLine and Flint). A Dunlop Cry Baby Classic GCB95F sits in the lower righthand corner and a TC Electronic Polytune 2 Mini keeps his guitars in check. Underneath is a Strymon Zuma to power his noisemakers.
One for the Birds!
During his formative guitar-playing years, Rick Mitarotonda’s father took him to the House of Guitars in Rochester, New York. He tried a bunch of instruments that day, but the cream of the crop for 13-year-old Rick was a PRS. And ever since he’s been partial to the birds. His main ride for some time has been this PRS Hollowbody II Piezo. The hollowbody features PRS’ 58/15 LT (low turn) humbuckers that work alongside the LR Baggs/PRS proprietary piezo electronics. And similar to his guitar mate, Mitarotonda employs D’Addario NYXLs (.010 –.046).
Bird of a Feather Flock Together
Rick’s 6-string insurance plan is in the shape of another PRS Hollowbody II Piezo, but this one technically still belongs to Anspach, who has settled into his Strat-osphere.
Blast Off With Boogie
Rick has been plugging into Mesa/Boogie combos for 10-plus years. He started his journey with the smaller Express 5:25 Plus 1x12 combo with EL84s. He’s since graduated to the Express 5:50 with 6L6s. He’s stayed loyal to the brand because he enjoys how the amps naturally compress his guitar sound.
V Formation
Mitarotonda has some serious pedal power at his feet. The first board on his far right is dedicated to vocals. He has a TC Helicon Play Electric vocal effects processor that integrates and is controlled by the TC Helicon Switch-3. (The Play adds an octave-up harmony. The three buttons on the Switch-3 toggle engage hardtune, delay, and reverb for his vocals.)
Moving left, we have his first board for guitar. He has a Dunlop Cry Baby 535Q wah and DigiTech Whammy at his disposal before hitting a Lovepedal Eternity Fuse. Then he goes into a Mu-Tron Micro-Tron IV envelope filter, Strymon OB.1 compressor and clean boost, and a MXR Carbon Copy Deluxe. The top-right corner holds a TC Electronic Polytune. Strapped to the bottom is a Truetone 1 Spot power supply.
The third and final board has a MXR Analog Chorus. And then things get serious with a 5-pack of Strymons that include a Deco tape saturation and doubletracker, El Capistan dTape Echo, TimeLine, Flint tremolo/reverb, and a NightSky time-warped reverberator. Off the board to the left is a TC Electronic Ditto X4 that Rick leans on to peel open new textures to help him get out of his head during improvisational parts and see his instrument with a fresh lens.
Bucket-brigade analog chorus with an individual voice and stereo functionality opens doors to classic and irreverent modulation worlds.
Unique voice that straddles classic and weird modulation worlds. Effective stereo capabilities. Toppy voice will stick out more effectively in many mixes.
Lives on the pricier side of the analog chorus affordability line.
$249
Supro Chorus
suprousa.com
There are distinct tendencies in Supro's design philosophy. Certainly, they are a style-conscious bunch. Everything in the Supro line looks ace. But you also get the feeling that Supro stuff is designed and built by players—particularly those on the performing and recording side of the equation. And whether a Supro product is absurdly simple, like their 1-knob '64 Super amp, or more option-rich like the Supro Chorus reviewed here, they're equally terrific at facilitating a direct path to a great sound and adventurous routes to unexpected ones.
The analog bucket brigade-driven Supro Chorus adroitly walks the border between those two places. Inspired in no small measure by the rack-mounted Roland Dimension D stereo chorus, it brims over with high-fidelity, vintage-y modulation tones. But the dual-chorus circuit and stereo options enable weirder variations on those core sounds too, making the Supro a potent ally in the studio.
Wide Horizons, Deep Seas
A casual perusal of the Chorus' manual and marketing materials makes it clear that Supro are keen for folks to experience this pedal in stereo. They're right to encourage this pursuit. The Chorus sounds mind-bendingly submarine in stereo, and it's a kick to lay flat on your back, stick your head between two little tube combos, close your eyes, strum a few chords, and go swimming. But folks that don't have multiple amps or DAWs with emulations that enable stereo effects shouldn't feel left out. The Chorus has many mesmerizing tones to explore in mono.
The speed knob has great range. At its slowest settings with moderate depth levels, it has a sweet slow rotary flavor. At the fastest and deepest settings, it takes on the personality of a chatty, twitchy 'droid. Thankfully (in some cases, surprisingly) this sound is a perfect foundation for psychedelic lead lines and slashing Paul Weller and Who '66 chords. But roll back the depth on the Chorus, and the tone on your guitar, and the fast-yapping robot takes on the air of a basement jazzer kickin' it against a Leslie. Just a few very simple and fast adjustments enable travel between those ranges. And exploring the regions between is intuitive and painless. The depth knob isn't the deepest of all time, but it does make room for the extra intensity you can add via the delay knob, which shifts resonant peaks and adds swirling depth.
While guitar tone attenuation won't replace the low-mid content that's less prominent in the Supro's basic voice, the time knob can give the illusion of thicker low-mid by adding extra-chewy tape-like elasticity to the output.
Blue Bravado
The base tonality of the Supro is slightly toppy for an analog chorus. In isolation, it can sound a little bold and bright—especially if you compare it to an older, darker bucket-brigade chorus. In a mix with other musical elements, however, the Chorus sounds extra lively. What's more, there's wiggle room for accommodating the darker tones of PAF-stye pickups, hollowbodies, or other effects. There are more syrupy analog choruses out there—in the sense that they sound a little thicker in the bass frequencies. And the Supro's tone profile may be too toppy for some players that primarily use Fender-style single-coils—especially Strats. But I loved the strong, at times almost immodest, '80s tonalities that single-coils and the Supro Chorus impart to simple or complex signal chains. And while guitar tone attenuation won't replace the low-mid content that's less prominent in the Supro's basic voice, the time knob can give the illusion of thicker low-mid by adding extra-chewy tape-like elasticity to the output.
All of these qualities are an extra treat in stereo. The sense of extra space—or disorientation, depending on the setting—is perceptible. And it's easy to be tantalized about the possibilities of using a two-amp set up in the studio (or live, if you have a very cooperative sound engineer). The two critical controls in stereo applications are the time and dimension knobs. The former increases the delay time between modulations in one channel while reducing it on the other. The latter intertwines the Supro's twin chrouses in mono or stereo operation, and the confluence of oddly wobbling waveforms creates textures from classy and luxurious to odd. I have no doubt some players will drive engineers crazy capturing and applying the wobbling sounds the Supro makes in stereo. I also have little doubt some engineer will turn the results to gold. There are a lot of sound sculpture possibilities here.
Another upside to the Supro Chorus is that the vibrato does not feel like an afterthought. At moderately high speed and depth settings it does a more than respectable approximation of Lonnie Mack's woozy Magnatone wiggle and leaves plenty of room for rhythmic articulation amid the thick modulation pulses.
The Verdict
While strictly mono users might find the Chorus' $249 price tag steep, the Supro has a unique, present voice that alone could justify the cost for chorus users that dread being lost in a mix. And though there's a decent bit of competition in the analog chorus domain in this price range, the Supro distinguishes itself with its immersive stereo effects and a lively voice that leaves room for other effects. As a very conditional and particular chorus fan, I recommend trying the Supro Chorus to see how its distinct voice and extra functionality fit into your musical world and your classic-versus-irreverent chorus orientation in particular. For a wide variety of users, though, Supro's recipe will be a sizzler.