No oneās really toured for a year, but that hasnāt stopped us from catching up with guitarists of all stripes to find out what board candy has got them excited. Pandemic be damned! Here are some of the coolest stomp stations from the last year of PG Rig Rundowns.
Caspian's Phil Jamieson
Post-rock instrumentalist Phil Jamiesonās most recent live board features four main food groupsādirts, loopers, delays, and reverbsāplus Electro-Harmonix Voice Box and MEL9 pedals for a snack. A Boss GE-7 graphic EQāused for a clean boost with low-mid punchāis always on, while a Strymon Sunset and an Empress Heavy provide three layers of beef.
Next is an Ernie Ball VP Jr. volume pedal, then a TC Electronic Ditto X4, which Jamieson favors for its hold and tape-stop modes. Four more Strymons followāa TimeLine, an El Capistan (āThe pedal I canāt live withoutā), a blueSky Reverberator, and a Flint. At the end of the signal chain are a Boss RC-3 Loop Station loaded with samples for use as interludes, a mini black box for dramatic signal cuts, and a TC Electronic PolyTune Mini.
Nick Perri ā Photo by Justin Higuchi
The Underground Thieves frontman (and former hired gun with Shinedown and Perry Farrell) has a fairly modest and old-school board.
His guitar signal first hits a vintage Dallas-Arbiter Fuzz Face, then proceeds to a Texadelphia Germanium Booster, a Sir Henry Uni-Vibe clone, a Metropoulos Supa-Boost, a Peterson StroboStomp HD, a Maxon AD999 Analog Delay, and a Hamstead Soundworks Signature Analogue Tremolo.
The retro rocker opens up about retrofitting reissues, returning to the JTM45s, and finding the piece of gear that changed his life.
Facing a mandatory shelter-in-place ordinance to limit the spread of COVID-19,Ā PGĀ enacted a hybrid approach to filming and producing Rig Rundowns. This is the 17th video in that format, and we stand behind the final product.
Ā Nick Perri has always appeared out of place. He first flew against modern trends and embraced loud-and-proud ā70s rockāeven looking the partāwith the creation of his band Silvertide. The band sprang to life in the early 2000s, and when most teens his age were listening to Limp Bizkit or Eminem, Perri was bowing to the guitar heroes of his parentsā generationāPage, Hendrix, Gilmour. While the Philly-based teens of Silvertide only released an EP (2002ās American Excess) and one LP (2004ās Show and Tell), they earned major rock-radio airtime with āBlue Jeansā and were handpicked to open for legends Aerosmith, Van Halen, Velvet Revolver, and Mƶtley CrĆ¼e.Ā
Ā Continuing to carry the arena-rock-filling, full-stack-screaming, guitar-hero torch in the face of the garage-rock revolution of the mid 2000s, Perri found work backing Perry Farrell, Matt Sorum (drummer for Guns Nā Roses and Velvet Revolver), collaborating with his pop-star sister Christina Perri, and filling in as lead guitarist for Shinedown. Additional pursuits included producing a Transformers compilation, putting music to TV commercials, and writing the score for Gibsonās The ProcessĀ series. No matter the project or musical context, he was always loyal to the guitar. And now, with his solo debut 20 years in the making, Nick Perri is being loyal to himself.
Ā Nick Perri & the Underground Thieves reconnects the lead guitarist/vocalist with Silvertide bassist Brian Weaver. Other Philly friends in the group include singers/songwriters Anthony and Michael Montesano, keyboardist Justin DiFebbo, and drummer Zil Fessler. The groupās debut LP, Sun Via, has some obvious nods to Are YouĀ Experienced and Zeppelin II, but some surprising stunners include the sparse, psychedelic spaghetti western āLet You Know,ā and the somber, synthy swirl of āFall.ā All 10 tracks honor Nickās growth as a musician, vision as an artist, and the instrument that still inspires him today.Ā
Ā Before releasing the brand-new album, Sun ViaĀ (out now), Perri virtually welcomed PGās Chris Kies into his Philly-based jam space. The positive retro rocker explains overhauling holy-grail reissues, returning to the altar of Jim Marshall and the JTM45, and reducing his pedalboard to expand his creativity. Ā
Special thanks to Derek Brad for additional video footage.