No. 0561974·southern-rock·4 blocks
Sweet Home Alabama
Sweet Home Alabama's instantly-recognizable intro lick — and the spoken 'one, two, three' count-off — was played by Ed King, not Gary Rossington, on a Fender Stratocaster with notably weak single-coils. Tracked at Studio One in Doraville, Georgia (1974), it ran into a cranked amp captured by a single padded Neumann U87 placed close to the cabinet, with no pedals — just a touch of reverb. The cleanness is the secret: King turned the amp all the way up for sustain, but the feeble pickups couldn't push it into breakup, so the lick stays glassy even at full volume.
Signal path · input → output · 5 blocksLive values · Pedalboard
Guitar
Fender Stratocaster (1972, per Ed King)
Pickups
SSS
Tuning
neck/middle (positions 4-5, inferred from the warm tone — King did not document the selector position)
Strings
standard
Cranked amp — 50W Marshall (per Ed King) or Fender Twin (per engineer Rodney Mills)
The cranked amp's own cab (Marshall 4x12 or Fender Twin 2x12)
Neumann U87 (single, padded, close)
A touch of short studio reverb
Cranked amp — 50W Marshall (per Ed King) or Fender Twin (per engineer Rodney Mills)
preamp
Volume
10
Treble
7
Middle
6
Bass
5
A touch of short studio reverb
reverb
Engineer's note
File 056
Sweet Home Alabama's instantly-recognizable intro lick — and the spoken 'one, two, three' count-off — was played by Ed King, not Gary Rossington, on a Fender Stratocaster with notably weak single-coils. Tracked at Studio One in Doraville, Georgia (1974), it ran into a cranked amp captured by a single padded Neumann U87 placed close to the cabinet, with no pedals — just a touch of reverb. The cleanness is the secret: King turned the amp all the way up for sustain, but the feeble pickups couldn't push it into breakup, so the lick stays glassy even at full volume.
— Ed King
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