1. A Storm In Heaven:
- Pedalboard:
- a Boss OD-2 Turbo Overdrive pedal;
- an MXR Phase 100 pedal.
- Rack-mounted effects:
- a Watkins Copicat Echo Unit;
- a Roland RE-201 Space Echo Unit;
- an Alesis QuadraVerb+;
- a Roland GP-8 Guitar Effects Processor;
- a Roland GS-6 Guitar System; and
- an Eventide H3000 Ultra-Harmonizer - used during the recording of the A Storm in Heaven album.
- Amplifiers:
- a Mesa/Boogie Mark III combo amplifier; and
- a Roland JC-120 Jazz Chorus amplifier.
- Pedalboard:
- a Boss OD-2 Turbo Overdrive pedal - often replaced with the Boss SD-1 Super Overdrive pedal; and
- an MXR Phase 100 pedal.
- Rack-mounted effects:
- a Watkins Copicat Echo Unit;
- a Roland RE-201 Space Echo Unit;
- an Alesis QuadraVerb+;
- a Roland GP-8 Guitar Effects Processor; and
- a Roland GS-6 Guitar System unit.
- Amplifiers:
- a Marshall JCM 800 100W Head;
- a pair of Marshall 4X12 Speaker Cabinets; and
- a vintage Vox AC30 2X12 amplifier.
- Pedalboard:
- a Boss OD-2 Turbo Overdrive pedal;
- a Marshall Drive Master pedal;
- a MXR Phase 100 pedal;
- a Boss CS-3 Compression Sustainer pedal;
- a Jim Dunlop Wah-Wah pedal - used on the song "Weeping Willow"; and
- a Boss FV-300L volume pedal.
- Rack-mounted effects:
- a Watkins Copicat Echo Unit;
- a Roland RE-201 Space Echo Unit;
- a Lexicon JamMan sampling and looping unit;
- an Alesis QuadraVerb+;
- a Roland GP-8 Guitar Effects Processor; and
- a Roland GS-6 Guitar System.
- Amplifiers:
- a Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier Head;
- a Marshall 4X12 Speaker Cabinet; and
- a vintage Vox AC100 Super Deluxe amplifier.
3 comments:
mccabe was limited in what he could do to a near-finished urban hymns. It will be interesting to see if the new album pays reverence to their early work, or if the band has truly moved in a new direction. From the released samples it sounds like the latter, which is a shame, and probably a result of the early tension caused by poor sales of the first two albums.
ultimately it is probably for the best. it's unlikely that anything could match a storm in heaven, and trying to do so would alienate fans won with urban hymns, and disappoint fans of early verve
Well we have the answer to that question. Ashcroft let go of the reigns and they worked together. I dig it. But im just a fookin cheeky monkey.
Forth, sadly, is still full of Ashcroft sounding trite - such as "Love is Noise". Could have been a Britney Spears song.
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