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Permalink Reply by Vagabonds on January 22, 2009 at 9:18pm
Permalink Reply by The Branded on January 23, 2009 at 6:45am I need to play more slide.
Oh and I need some more rockabilly type licks. I swear to god I just keep using the same two over and over.
In my humble opinion, the best thing to do is learn the 5-tone blues scale and listen to a lot of Billy Childish....
Permalink Reply by Gonzo on February 23, 2011 at 2:34am Garge Punk
Gear/Tone:
Cheap ass Strat Copy, Teisco etc. Fender/Vox/Silvertone/RottenTube amp slightly overdriven, touch or a bunch of reverb.
Fuzz pedals are a good idea...I think generally the raspier the better. Stay away from a fuzz face.
Full chords to me seem much more garage punk so play those. Add some shitty penatonic riffs in there to.
Listen to Billy Childish, The Troggs, The Reatards & any other band rocking out with shitty guitars and body odor.
Permalink Reply by Ted on February 23, 2011 at 1:15pm
Permalink Reply by Ted on February 23, 2011 at 1:15pm In my humble opinion, the best thing to do is learn the 5-tone blues scale and listen to a lot of Billy Childish....
Permalink Reply by Thee Wild Wraith on February 23, 2011 at 1:29pm You don't need a manual or method. Then everything would sound the same. I think you are going about this the wrong way. Play what you want to play. The key is keeping with a raw and rock n roll sound. It's up to you how to approach that.
You can look around here and see the primitive more punk type bands, the more 60s sound inspired bands and everything inbetween. Doesn't matter if you're into the Ramones, the Cramps, the Sonics, Billy Childish or whatever else. Go with what you think is right, don't let others dictate your sound.
Permalink Reply by Bamalama Records on February 24, 2011 at 8:51am I am not a believer in distortion pedals - too friggin' metal and rawk. Overdrive your amp - that's the only distortion you need. Or loosen a tube like Link Wray. Slash your speaker cone with a razor blade (that's how Dave Davies did it and I swear by it but I have several amps) and it's not that expensive to put in a new cone. Get an amp with tremolo or, most importantly, REVERB! DON'T GET A REVERB PEDAL!! Nothing sounds worse... A tremolo unit is ok if you can't get an amp with both but reverb pedals are the seed of Stan's nutsack. Nobody in the 50s or 60s were using pedals and you don't need 'em. Get a fuzz for solos or single note riffs but distortion pedals - bleh. People rely WAY too much in pedals these days (that and fucking modeling amps - LOSER) and they don't sound organic - they sound fake and sterile and shitty (and not in the way you want it to sound shitty). Cheap guitars aren't really necessary but they will work well. My main guitar these days is a Kent Americana.
Listen to records you like and learn the songs and then STEAL THEM! You'll learn everything you need to know. Lessons, books, etc are overrated and a waste of money.
Permalink Reply by The Beat Rats on February 24, 2011 at 9:19am
Permalink Reply by Gonzo on August 18, 2012 at 3:03am They didn't use pedals, but a lot of garage bands used Reverb in the 60's..natural hall reverbs ( I know Link Wray recorded songs this way ) and Spring Reverb Units. I recently bought a Vibro Champ XD ( Tube Hybrid amp ) and I swear by it..I can get very decent overdriven tones on the tweed setting and the blackface clean settings are damn close..I've owned a Pro, Super and Twin Reverbs and it's %95 there. Most solid state/hybrid amps are rubbish, but I have found the Vox Pathfinder 15R & Vibro Champ XD to be solid amps for practise & recording basic demos.
Bamalama Records said:
I am not a believer in distortion pedals - too friggin' metal and rawk. Overdrive your amp - that's the only distortion you need. Or loosen a tube like Link Wray. Slash your speaker cone with a razor blade (that's how Dave Davies did it and I swear by it but I have several amps) and it's not that expensive to put in a new cone. Get an amp with tremolo or, most importantly, REVERB! DON'T GET A REVERB PEDAL!! Nothing sounds worse... A tremolo unit is ok if you can't get an amp with both but reverb pedals are the seed of Stan's nutsack. Nobody in the 50s or 60s were using pedals and you don't need 'em. Get a fuzz for solos or single note riffs but distortion pedals - bleh. People rely WAY too much in pedals these days (that and fucking modeling amps - LOSER) and they don't sound organic - they sound fake and sterile and shitty (and not in the way you want it to sound shitty). Cheap guitars aren't really necessary but they will work well. My main guitar these days is a Kent Americana.
Listen to records you like and learn the songs and then STEAL THEM! You'll learn everything you need to know. Lessons, books, etc are overrated and a waste of money.
Permalink Reply by Cory on August 18, 2012 at 1:13pm to the drumming question, a small cardboard box of old bolts and a suitcase sounds pretty cool with reverb!
Permalink Reply by The Frankies on August 18, 2012 at 1:20pm Download some drum samples or loops off the net and have fun building beats. For garagey stuff, it don't take much! I've wasted more time waiting for drummers to show up than I care to admit. Steve's surf drum samples worked perfect for my type of sour mash garage tunes.
Your pal,
Frank
jailbird said:
On a similar note(and completely serious - disregard my joke above) - what are the best things to drum on for a home recording/bedroom 4 track setup that sound good and lo-fi(ala Jay Reatards bedroom recordings, etc)when you dont actually have drums and/or a drummer? Ive tried boxes and buckets, but if anyone knows of a better solution besides getting a drummer, lemme know. Thanx.

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