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What
guitars does Trey play?
Trey has played these guitars, in this order, and still plays
those with asterisks:
-
Pearl-white solid-body Ibanez
-
Time Guitars
-
Europe acoustic
- Original blonde (1987)
*
- Padauk blonde (1990)
- Koa hollowbody (1996)
*
- Wentzell acoustic
*
The first guitar Trey used live was a pearl-white solidbody Ibanez
. Next, he played (and endorsed) Time Guitars located in Burlington,
VT. Trey's good friend, Paul Languadoc, worked at Time, and made
his guitars for him. Time Guitars went out of business shortly
after that, and Trey asked him to join the band as their soundman.
Trey's first guitar made by Paul Languadoc after Phish hired
him was a short-scale acoustic travel guitar he took to Europe
with him after getting kicked out of school. Pete and Dudley (both
also of Space Antelope) joined him on his trip.
The first guitar Trey got made by Paul was a short-scale travel
guitar he took to Europe with Pete and Dudley (both also of Space
Antelope). Prior to that, he used a pearl-white solidbody
Ibanez (which he used to write "I Am
Hydrogen" in his father's basement), last seen at his
bachelor party jam session. (Thanks to Dave
Abrahams, 3/97)
The Wentzell acoustic
Trey's newest acoustic guitar was made by Michael Wentzell, whose
website includes
this description: "This guitar is a very unique combination
of woods. The sides and back are made of Quilted Hon. Mahogany,
the top is Larch, the bridge and bindings are made of Flamed Maple,
and the rossette and headcap are also of Quilted Mahogany. The neck
is Hon. Mahogany and the fingerboard is ebony."
Three Electrics: Trey Anastasio has three Languedoc
guitars, all built by Paul
Languadoc, soundman for the band who also built Mike's
bass. (A second bass was stolen
during the summer of 1992.)
Trey's guitars include:
- Old reliable, a blonde beauty built in 1987 from a combination
of spruce and maple, with 2 humbuckers and a piece of plastic
filling the middle pickup hole (where a single once was). This
became Trey's backup until the koa was built in 1996.
- His main guitar, built in 1990, with the same (blonde) finish
as the main one but made from padauk, with a different inlay on
the headstock, a large inlay from frets ~11-13, and two chrome
soapbars. (This is the one Paul is talking about below.)
- A koa hollowbody built 1996, with a darker, redder finish, almost
like mahagony, with different inlays, and two soapbars. He used
this for the first three or four tunes at Hartford, which included
PYITE and AC/DC Bag, and for the Waste encore 10-16-96
and for PYITE, Poor Heart and AC/DC Bag 10-23-96.
(Thanks to Julia Mordaunt) Mainly
a backup, it was used increasingly throughout 1996 and into 1997,
though the padauk remains Trey's main axe.
Trey Anastasio has thre"index.html"ul Languadoc electric guitars,
all built by Paul Languadoc, the soundman for the band. Trey's
guitars include:
1. "Old Reliable," Trey's first custom electric guitar. This blonde
beauty was built in late1987 for Trey when he told Paul that he
wanted a fatter sound. Paul built it from a combination of spruce
and maple, with 2 humbuckers and a single coil in the middle.
The back and sides are spruce and the top is maple. This became
Trey's primary guitar until his next one was built in 1992. When
Paul began to build Trey's second guitar, he removed the single
coil from the middle, and covered up the hole with plastic. Photos
from 1992 show Trey using the spruce guitar with the plastic pickup
cover, indicating that construction had begun on #2. When #2 was
complete, Old Reliable became his backup guitar.
2. Trey's second Languadoc, built in 1992, became his main guitar
in the beginning of 1993 primarily, until late 1996. This one
has the same natural finish as the first one but the body is made
from padauk (as opposed to spruce). There is a slightly different
inlay on the headstock, and the inlay on frets12 and 24 are larger
while the rest have been thinned down. The upper and lower bouts
of this guitar are also not as curved as the original. Paul put
the single coil pickup from the spruce guitar into this one, replacing
the vacant hole in his old one with a plastic cover.
3. Trey's third, and current Languadoc is a koa hollowbody built
during 1996. This guitar is all koa with a maple neck, and the
same tapered body shape as the second one. The finish on this
one is a darker, redder stain, with a slightly different headstock
shape, different (even smaller) inlays, and two chrome-covered
humbuckers. The saddles are bronze on this guitar as opposed to
the bone of the first two. He used this for the first time in
October of 1996, and sporadically for the remainder of the year.
In 1997, it completed the transition to his main axe, leaving
the two blonde ones as backups. Languadoc states that "The koa
guitar is the best of all of them because the wood has the most
elegant and solid sound of the three."
According to Guitar World (12/98), "Each has a carved
top and bottom (with minimal interior bracing), exquisit fingerboard
inlays, and six-in-line headstock, a custom tail-piece, and a
hand-carved bridge. (The padauk and maple/spruce guitars are made
of bone, but the koa's is bronze to give it a more brilliant sound.)
The hand carved, arched top hollowbodies have a shape reminiscent
of a scaled down Fender Starcaster. The tops, backs and F-holes
have multiple layers of white and black binding. The laminated
curly maple necks are set and glued to the body with carved heel-joint,
and have 24 fret, bound ebony fingerboards with a 25-1/2" scale.
The shaped headstocks (with chrome plated Schallar tuning machines
all on one side) have multiple binding and black faces with exceptional
mother-of pearl inlay work depicting Trey's dog Marley. Bone was
used for the nuts and two piece bridge saddles and bases on the
first two guitars, and bronze was used for the saddles of the
koa one, for a more brillian sound. The cello-style tail-pieces
are all hand carved ebony. Trey's primary Languedoc (before the
koa one) has a top of European curly maple - preferred by cello
builders - and the back and sides are padauk with no back bracing.
The guitar's wiring harness and controls are painstakingly accessed
through the F-holes. The electronics consist of a pair of Schallar
Golden 50 humbucking pickups with individual volume controls,,a
tone Control, and a 3-way pickup selector."
Misc.
Surrender
to the Air: Eric Liebman <eliebman@acs.bu.edu>
posted (3/7/96): "Trey used the following gear on his solo
album: Vox AC30; Paul Languedoc guitar; wah pedal; Digitech WP II
whammy pedal (for pitch-shifting and pitch-bending); Ibanez digital
delay; Alesis Microverb; Univibe (recreated for Trey from other
components)."
Thanks also to Jonathan Epstein (11/4/96), Charles Dirksen
(3/18/97), Julia Mordaunt (10/27/98), Chris Mcmillan 10/22/97, Brad
Sarno 1/20/98, Mike Flouton (6/30/98), and Jeffrey D. Goldberg (4/2/2000),
and Andy (8/16/00).
See also: The official site (phish.com)
offers a picture of Trey's rig -- click the red picture to the left
of the discussion about Amy's
Farm on the band page
to see it. (Thanks
to Adam Gallina <ag001f@uhura.cc.rochester.edu> 12/3/97.)
Rigs
Rigs/Amps: There are (at least) three eras of amp/rig setup:
1992, 1995,
and 1996. (Thanks to Steve, Trey's guitar
technician, who sent the rig diagram
and legend 10-19-95.
1996 Rig: PGM <pmark@icds5.dseg.ti.com> emailed (7/14/96)
that the August 1996 issue of Guitar Shop [p.28] "features
the lowdown on Trey's live setup, as well as the Languedocs. As
an added bonus for you bass players with $35K or so to throw around,
Mike's bass rig is featured as well. ... Trey uses a midi-switchable
rig with multiple loop paths, which many of you might not be familiar
with; for an excellent description of such a setup, consult the
fantastic book "The Complete Guitarist". There, amongst _tons_ of
other great info which you can't live without if you're a guatarist,
you'll find a very detailed description of rigs of this sort. --
An interesting thing is that the article shows the tone settings
of the preamp, which if accurate are _very_ different from the Boogie
settings described in the HPB (as I recall, an inverted "V", analogous
to cranking the midrange and cutting the highs and lows; I've tried
these settings on Boogies, and it really sounds kind of harsh...perhaps
Trey footswitched the EQ out on the Boogie except when he really
wanted a stinkin' sound...." The article also notes that Trey
uses Schaller pickups (Joey "wwbohl@aol.com" said (5/28/98)
that they're Schaller humbuckers -- which, Eric Christman <ec002f@uhura.cc.rochester.edu>
emailed (9/13/97), are "somewhat hard to find": he had
to order his from Germany.
Jeffrey D. Goldberg <glide@gwis2.circ.gwu.edu> emailed (9/26/96)
that, "as far as effects are concerned, Trey uses two Ibanez
Tube Screamers (the classic TS-9 model... NOT the re-issue, the
TS-808, TS-10, and certainly not the TS-5 soundtank). Trey most
consistently uses only one of the pedals with the drive set just
below halfway. This is the sound you most frequently hear (listen
to the beginning of 'It's Ice' on Rift for a clear example of what
I'm talking about.) This sound is a distortion, but not as you might
think. The Tube Scremer has a smooth distortion at this setting.
There is no muddiness, but it is definitely distorted. The other
'Screamer is turned on only during certain songs (Chalkdust Torture,
Sloth, etc.) In this case, the first is shut off, and the second
is turned on. The difference is that the drive is turned up all
the way on this one. The only time Trey turnes on both of them is
at the end to a crazy jam (Maze, Bowie, etc.) This makes his guitar
wail. --- Trey uses a Mesa Boogie Pre-amp and celestain speakers.
[Mark Powers corrects that "He _used_ to use a Boogie Mark
III _amp_, but as far as I know has never used a Boogie preamp.
He uses a CAE three-channel pre with a Groove Tubes stereo amp."]
He also has a roto-Vibe [Mark Powers adds that "Jimi Hendrix
popularized this effect. It simulates the sound of a rotating speaker."],
a phase shifter, a wah-wah, and a volume pedal. -- Oh yeah, and
trey switches to his neck pickup for clean sounds. He also switches
the channel of his pre-amp, and turns on the vibe. This is for songs
like Mano Song, and the beginning of the guitar solo in Foam. I
hope this helped, if you have any more questions, send me a mail!"
Mark Powers <pbm@ti.com> posted (9/27/96) the portion of
an August '96 Guitar Shop article that details Trey's setup
at that time: "Trey's new amp rig is a monster, allowing instantaneous
access to an infinite variety of sounds. It was co-designed by Steve
Dikun, a professional guitar tech from Cleveland. Its brain is a
Custom Audio Electronics 3-channel preamp with a Bradshaw switching
system to control multiple effects. Power is supplied by a Groove
Tubes Dual 75 selectable stereo tube amp. "There are actually no
new GT tubes in there", says Trey. "Steve Dikun collects old tubes,
new-in-the-box, ane he loads up the amp, and my preamp, with those.
I'm using this Bradshaw, 3-channel preamp now, and even that has
old RCA tubes." The GT's 75 watts per channel [a highly inflated
rating imo with EL-34 or 6l6-GC output tubes] drive a pair of 2x12
speaker cabinets also built by [Paul] Languedoc [which as far as
I know still contain Celestion Vintage 30 speakers, which are awesome
speakers ;-)]. Sharing the same rack with the CAE preamp and the
GT D-75 are a pair of CAE 4x4 Audio Controllers [used to switch
between different combinations of effects], four reverb units (three
Alesis Microverbs labeled Reverse, Vast, and Full, and a Peavy rackmount
reverb/tremelo), a CAE Super Tremelo, and a CAE Black Cat Vibe,
about which Trey says "Bob Bradshaw recreated the UniVibe with quality
parts, so it's not so noisy. It's silent and sounds great--I love
that thing!" [obviously ;-)]
"The second rack contains another pair of CAE 4x4's and many
more effects. These include an Ibanez DM2000 Digital Delay, an old
Electro Harmonix Small Stone Phase Shifter, Roland MS-1 Digital
Sampler, a pair [;-)] of Ibanez Tube Screamers, a Ross Compressor,
and a Tone Works DTR-2 Digital Tuner. A 24-switch control board
[which controls the 4x4's to select the aforementioned combinations
of effects, aka "loops"] shares floor space with a number of pedals:
a volume pedal, a wah-wah, speed and waveform control for the CAE
trem, and a Digitech Whammy Pedal, one of Trey's favorite toys.
[This is a pitch-shifting device which can be used to emulate the
dive-bombing effects normally produced with a vibrato bar; it can
also make a guitar sound like a bass and vise-versa, which is what
Trey and Mike do when they "switch places", as was done in the ALO
Tweezer]. Topping it all off, literally, is the horn and crossover
unit of a Leslie rotating speaker, which sits atop the first rack,
surrounded by four microphones for quadrophonic feed to house or
board." [Trey's rig also includes an additional reverb (a Midiverb),
used only in the quad configuration (its outputs are DI'd into the
board), an A-B switch for the D-75, a panner for the stereo/quad
setup, and a partridge in a pear tree. ;-) ]
1992 rig: R. Stern <stern@col.hp.com>
posted, "Trey uses a Mesa/Boogie MkIII head pre-amp, (with
Russian tubes: "Sovtek 5881" -- shelly). Here's the best I can remember
off the top of my head. Some could be off by +-1.
Pre Volume: 10 !! Lead Drive: 2.5
Treble: 5 Lead Master: 6 Mid: 4.5 Master: 3
Bass: 4.5 Presence: 2 (on back of the amp)
Reverb: 0 (he uses the Microverb)
There is an Alesis Microverb (not II) sitting on top of his amp. He
uses a Large 2 or Large 3 setting. He doesn't vary it at all...reaches
for it quite often and just touches the knobs without changing the
settings :-). His pedalboard has a volume pedal, a cheapo Ross(?)
compresser, 2 Ibanez tube screamers, and the lead/rhythm switchbox
for the Mesa (maybe more...). The Tube Screamers are the new version
Tube Screamer Classic. Both have the volume turned all the way up,
which really confused me at first. He doesn't seem to get much of
volume boost when switching them on, and mine gives a huge boost if
I set the volume all the way up. What I think happens is this: since
his Mesa Pre-Volume is at 10, the input is already overdriven. So
when he switches in the Tube Screamers, they can't drive any more
volume out of the pre-amp, and simply give more overdrive. That's
my best guess anyway :-). .... One of the keys to his cool tone is
the way he uses the Tube Screamers and the Mesa lead mode. He has
the Mesa eq switched to only work for lead mode, and he sets the eq
in an upside down V (lots of mid boost, lots of high cut). One Tube
Screamer is set for a very light crunch, and the other is set for
full screaming overdrive. Trey will often start with a light crunch,
then turn that off and turn on the full overdriver. Then he'll turn
back on the crunch (so he has both Tube Screamers on!). Then he'll
kick in the Mesa to lead mode for a final push over the edge :-) !!
By mixing and matching any combination of the 3 distortions, he gets
an incredible variety of tones. Add in the unique feedback properties
of his semi-hollowbody guitar, and wow ... Yes, he does sound quite
amazing!!"
?????
In Guitar Shop Magizine they said Trey played a white Late 70's early
80's Ibanez ES-335 Copy (posted by botchalism@aol.com 11/19/97)
lemonwheel rig:
Date: Mon, 31 Aug 1998 00:17:11 -0400
From: Judy Pidgeon
basically what i saw (or thought i saw) was a rig exclusively enclosed
in the rack. the wooden cabs were nowhere to be seen, and there were
lots of red LED's on the silver portion of the rack. he used the new
guitar (with the soapbars) and danced on his effects as much as ever.
Special thanks to....
"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.
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