This remnant will be replaced soon. The FAQ is back, with a new design!
What
guitar effects does Trey
use
The guitar itself: "Trey has a very complex setup on
his guitar. There are many effects that he uses here and there,
but there are three main components to his unique sound. "First
off, his guitar accounts for most of the ripe sound. Paul Languadoc,
Phish's soundboard manager, made the guitar for him. Although many
people believe his guitar is a semi-hollow body, it it not. It is
a true hollow body. "What makes it unique, however, is the
size and thickness of it. There is no doubt that it is very small
for a true hollow bodied guitar. Most musicians who use hollow bodies
have large guitars. This is because if the body is too small, the
sound feeds back when the bridge pickup is used. Trey, however,
likes this, and uses it to his advantage. By skillfully muting all
strings but the one he is playing, we hear long sustains like in
Divided Sky and YEM." (Posted by Jeff
Goldberg 9/26/96) Mark Powers clarified, "Actually,
a larger guitar would be more feedback-prone; the greater surface
area would absorb more vibrations from the speakers, which would
result in more feedback. All hollow-bodies are very feedback-prone;
Ted Nugent used his Gibson Byrdland to get an interesting array
of feedback noises."
A bridge: trey uses a 3-position locking tremolo bridge
mechanism. notice he'll finger a chord and then flick his right
hand and bing! he's in a different key without moving his left hand
at all." (richard miller 10/4/99)
Pedals: As Guitar Worled noted (12/98),
"Onstage the guitar is fed through an effects chain that includes
a Digitech Whammy II, a Dunlop Crybaby, two Ibanez Tube screamers
(each with a different setting), a Ross compressor, and Ernie Ball
volume pedal and a Bradshaw remote switcher, which has four pre-programed
effects loops. Each loop includes an Ibanez 2000 digital delay,
an Alesis Microverb cable, a C.A.E univibe and a C.A.E. tremalo."
Wah: Trey plays a Teese Real McCoy Custom 3 Tunable Wah-Wah,
not a Jim Dunlop Crybaby. It has controls for low, mid, high,
sweep range, contour, and gain all hidden inside the pedal. It
is numbered and signed by builder-designer Geoffrey Teese. (Thanks
to Andy Hunt 10/30/98, harpua1083 12/23/98, and Guitar Shop.
And Sunil posted 8/14/98 that "Trey is using the Whammy
pedal much more than he ever has before. 4ths and 5ths pop up
in funk jams and the 2 octave jump is what you hear when Trey
motions with his right arm up to the sky and back down at the
end of some songs. (Gorge 2nd night, maybe 2001)"
Tube Screamers: Trey has two Ibanez Tube screamers. They
are shown on p. 28 of the 8/96 Guitar World -- a TS-10
(on the left, next to the Ross Compressor) and a TS-9 (on the
right; possibly a re-issue). (Gil Guajardo
10/10/98.) They use the same circuitry, and the difference
is neglibable. Brad Sarno 1/20/98)
Originally, he had two original TS-9 models. (Mark
Goldberg)
Compressor: Brad Sarno posted (1/20/98):
"I hear so much talk abou Trey's amp but really, for the
most part his tone gets formed well before the amp. The most overlooked
device of all is the Ross (not Boss) compressor pedal. In my opinion
it is THE secret weapon of his tone. If you ever plug into one
you will go "aaaaah". There is no other compressor that sounds
like that. It is this pedal that lets Trey go from a single note
to a full chord and have it all come out full and even and sustaining.
His guitar doesn't really sustain that well, but with the compressor
he can add sustain and also induce feedback easier. The key also
is that the tube screamers come before the compressor. This lets
Trey turn on a tube screamer, turn down the guitar volume to control
the distortion level, and the compressor keeps the overall volume
nice and loud and even. This is probably why he gets away with
having the Tubescramer's volume on 10 without sounding so loud
when he kicks it on. This evenness that the compressor provides,
lets Langudoc keep him real hot in the PA without fear of suddenly
getting too loud."
Boomerang: Richard Akers (11/17/98)
reported that Trey is "using a Boomerang looping device
but has began experimenting with an Oberheim Echoplex digital
pro (an extremely nice looping device)" and
added 3/1/99 "Trey seems to be very satisfied with
the boomerang and uses it to it's full advandage."
Pedal quotes: According to wahfuxx
(via email 8/18/96): Trey has put these quotes on his footpedals
in this order: "The end and the begining of all philosophy
is freedom", I've been all around the world and I have never
seen a statue of a critic", and "A man has to shoot his
own dog" (Not Jim I hope).
Other effects:
- Chris
Glushko posted (12/19/97) about noticing "the subtle
use of Midi horns by Trey during the fall tour. For a good example,
check out the Bowie from Philly 12-3. I know he's always messing
around with Midi sounds, but I don't believe I've ever heard him
use the Midi to produce another instrument before this tour. Could
be wrong. ...The sound is evident every once in a while [during
summer 1997 shows] but not to the degree as it was during the
fall."
- Paul Roth posted (10/23/97) that
"During the summer tour of this year trey has been using
a new guitar effect quite frequently and i would like to know
what it is. He uses it in songs like Free and the jam after Harry
Hood at Darien Lake and Ghost at Virginia Beach. It is kind of
a spacey effect." Anyone have
an answer
- Spacey effect 4/28/99: The spacy effect Trey is using now at
the end of songs and during jams is a Uni-Vibe. He has a homemade
version that someone made him, but original maker it was a Dunlop
Uni-Vibe. Also this effect can be heard very good on Machine Gun
by Jimi Hendrix and on Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon.
"My three all-time-favorite
guitarists are Jerry [Garcia], [Jimi] Hendrix, and [Frank] Zappa.
They are all totally unique from one another, yet oddly similar.
They were all striving for this depth where a solo would take you
on a journey. But the journey was their own vibe: Zappa was sarcastic,
Hendrix was bluesey, Jerry was downhome. I guess I have a suburban
vibe. But I still want to get to the places that they got to."
-- Trey Anastasio, New York Post
1/1/99
This page last updated February 03, 2007. All contents © 1992-2007 Ellis Godard. All rights reserved.
|