Premier Guitar features affiliate links to help support our content. We may earn a commission on any affiliated purchases.

6 Overdrives for Any Occasion

6 Overdrives for Any Occasion
6 Overdrive Pedals for Any Occasion

If you're looking for your next overdrive pedal, Tom Butwin has you covered. Discover the unique features, tones, and best use-cases for 6 killer overdrives, including the PRS Horsemeat, Rev Amps Tilt Overdrive, Electro-Harmonix Spruce Goose, Wampler Mofetta, Warm Audio Warmdrive, and the Godlyke Tamura-Mod Tube Screamer. Whether you're looking for a transparent boost, versatile dual-function overdrive, or vintage-inspired tone, there's something in here for you.


Featuring the SansAmp section, Reverb/Delay/Roto effects, and OMG overdrive, with new additions like a switchable Pre/Post Boost and Effect Loop. Pre-configured for the RK Killer Wail wah, this pedal offers versatile tones and unmatched flexibility.

Read MoreShow less
Bohlinger Tests EMG's SL20 Steve Lukather Pickguard on a '90s Strat
- YouTube

PG's demo master quickly (and easily) drops in an H-S-S setup into his 1994 40th Anniversary Stratocaster that needed help. Find out what happens when gets his first taste of active pickups.

Read MoreShow less

Barry Little’s onstage rig.

How you want to sound and what makes you happy are both highly subjective. When it comes to packing and playing gear for shows, let those considerations be your guide.

I was recently corresponding with Barry Little, aPG reader from Indiana, Pennsylvania, about “the One”—that special guitar that lets us play, and even feel, better when it’s in our hands. We got talking about the gear we bring to gigs, and Barry sent me the photo that appears with this column.

Read MoreShow less

While creating her new solo record, Kim Deal was drawn to exploring the idea of failure.

Photo by Kristin Sollecito

The veteran musician and songwriter steps into the spotlight with Nobody Loves You More, a long-in-the-making solo record driven by loss, defeat, and friendship.

While Kim Deal was making her new album, she was intrigued with the idea of failure. Deal found the work of Dutch artist Bas Jan Ader, who disappeared at sea in 1975 while attempting to sail by himself from the U.S. to England in a 13-foot sailboat. His boat was discovered wrecked off the southern coast of Ireland in April 1976, 10 months after Ader departed the Massachusetts coast. Ader’s wife took one of the last photos of him as he set off on the doomed journey from Chatham Harbor: Ader, wearing a blue tracksuit and a bright orange life jacket cinched around his neck, is beaming.

Read MoreShow less