No. 0571971·hard-rock·4 blocks

Black Dog

Black Dog's snarling, compressed riff was recorded with no guitar amp at all. At Island/Basing Street Studios in London (December 1970), Jimmy Page ran his 1959 Les Paul through a direct box into a mic channel of the Helios console and overdrove the console's mic preamp to make the distortion — then fed it through two UREI 1176 compressors in series, the first cranked as a saturation stage and the second doing the compression. Engineer Andy Johns triple-tracked it (left, right, centre). The tone that sounds like a synthesizer is a preamp pushed past its limit, not a speaker.

Led Zeppelin IV coverLed Zeppelin IV
Settings for
Signal path · input → output · 4 blocksLive values · Boss Katana
Guitar
Gibson Les Paul Standard 'Number One' (1959)
Pickups
HH
Tuning
bridge (inferred from the aggressive midrange — Page did not document the selector for this track)
Strings
standard
Booster
Brown
Reverb
Booster
← Console-preamp grit (alt flavour)
Distortion
Drive
3
Bottom
4
Tone
6
Level
6
Brown
← Overdriven Helios console mic preamp (no amp used)
Amp
Gain
6
Volume
6
Bass
4
Middle
7
Treble
6
Presence
6
Master
6
Reverb
← Dry riff (minimal ambience)
Reverb
Time
0.8ms
PreDelay
10ms
Tone
5
EffectLevel
8

Engineer's note

File 057
Black Dog's snarling, compressed riff was recorded with no guitar amp at all. At Island/Basing Street Studios in London (December 1970), Jimmy Page ran his 1959 Les Paul through a direct box into a mic channel of the Helios console and overdrove the console's mic preamp to make the distortion — then fed it through two UREI 1176 compressors in series, the first cranked as a saturation stage and the second doing the compression. Engineer Andy Johns triple-tracked it (left, right, centre). The tone that sounds like a synthesizer is a preamp pushed past its limit, not a speaker.
Jimmy Page

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