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Stompboxtober 2024 Day #29: StewMac

Stompboxtober 2024 Day #29: StewMac

Stompboxtober Day 29 is live! Enter today to win a pedal from StewMac—more chances to win tomorrow!


StewMac International House of Overdrive Pedal Kit, With Bare Enclosure

The IHOO is based on the Crowther Hot Cake, an overdrive that became available around 1976. It was one of the earliest hand-made boutique effects pedals available. The circuit was designed to be what is now referred to as a “transparent” overdrive. An effect that enhances the player's sound while keeping the original tone intact.

This circuit has undergone many changes since its inception, and we have further expanded on the design by returning to an earlier version most revered by players and removing the buffer, which resulted in a reworked circuit that is true bypass but still retains the charm of the design.

We also include the original LM741 IC chip found in the originals, as well as the TL071 that is found in later versions so you can experiment with which IC best suits your playing style.

StewMac
$89.95


Billy Doyle of Man/Woman/Chainsaw

Photo by Ella Margolin

Guest picker Billy Doyle of Man/Woman/Chainsaw joins reader Eddie Carter and PGstaff in musing on the joys of playing music.

Question: What’s the most rewarding aspect of playing music for you? Photo by Ella Margolin
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JD Simo and Luther Dickinson Jam on Phil Lesh, Guitar Gear, and the Blues
- YouTube

When they serendiptiously crossed paths onstage with Phil Lesh & Friends, JD Simo and Luther Dickinson's musical souls spoke to each other. They started jamming together leading them to cut Do The Romp at JD's home studio, combining their appreciation of hill country blues, spirituals, swamp rock, and Afrobeat in a modern grease and grime.

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Paul Reed Smith shaping a guitar neck in his original Annapolis, Maryland garret shop.

Photo courtesy of PRS Guitars

You might not be aware of all the precision that goes into building a fine 6-string’s neck, but you can certainly feel it.

I do not consider my first “real” guitar the one where I only made the body. In my mind, an electric guitar maker makes necks with a body attached—not the other way around. (In the acoustic world, the body is a physics converter from hand motion to sound, but that’s a different article for a different month.) To me, the neck is deeply important because it’s the first thing you feel on a guitar to know if you even want to plug it in. As we say at PRS, the neck should feel like “home,” or like an old shirt that’s broken in and is so comfortable you can barely tell it’s on.

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Billy Strings has become one of the biggest drawing guitar players out on the road these days. His music brings bluegrass fans and jam band scenes together, landing him on some of the biggest stages around. Your 100 Guitarists hosts have brought in guitarist Jon Stickley to help them work out their differences—one of us is a jammer and the other … is not.

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