Bernie Leadon's bright country-rock lead licks on Take It Easy come from a refinished early-'60s Fender Telecaster fitted with a B-Bender, run clean into a Fender combo — no pedals. The Eagles cut their debut at Olympic Studios in London with Glyn Johns, whose dry, natural, room-honest approach kept everything close to the source. The track is in G major (open chords, no capo); Glenn Frey strums a Martin dreadnought and Leadon doubles on the bright double-time banjo.
Plain-English guide to compressor pedal settings for guitar. Covers sustain, attack, release, level, and use-case settings tables for country, clean, funk, and lead playing.
The 2555 Silver Jubilee sits between the JCM800 and the JCM900 in both era and gain structure. Here is what makes it different, who used it, and the settings that get you there.
The Celestion V30 takes a beating in modern djent contexts, and that criticism is fair. But in the medium-gain rock zone (Marshall plexis pushed to breakup, Bluesbreaker-stacked Twin Reverbs, AC30 territory), the V30 is still the speaker its 1990s reputation was built on. Here is when to choose it, and what it does that nothing else quite does.