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Featuring the DMCA-Free Rock of KCWM & Cold the Winter

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  • A New Song for a New Album KCWM

Pedals

Once most guitarists (or bassists) are bitten by the pedal bug, they are doomed to a nearly unending quest to find the “right tone”. My pedal journey started with a Zvex Box of Rock back in 2007 and, man, has it been a wild ride. Since starting the process of recording Skylines and the Horizon in 2017 the pedals I’ve used have changed considerably, with only one remaining.

When I first got serious about putting together a pedalboard, I had a custom 24×12 board made by a company called Solid Rock Customs. Unfortunately, shortly after finishing my board, Solid Rock Customs indicated they would no longer be making boards.

Eventually, I added a complimentary 12×12 board made by DFW-based SIG Custom (that I already owned) and, at one point, I ran 15-17 drive pedals, a couple of delays, a modulation pedal, and a Line 6 M5.

I realized that my board had grown too big and, eventually, I sold a number of pedals and the 24×12 board. I kept the 12×12 board loaded with my T2 and Metaverse, and simply swapped out drives in between tracks.

Recently, however, I realized I was grabbing the same handful of pedals and wanted to have ready access to all of them, so I bought a 20×12 board by Ghost Fire that now sits on my desk and the SIG Custom board on the floor.


When one is putting together a pedal board, there is an order that many agree on:

  • A compressor or wah pedal is at the front
  • Pitch bending pedals
  • Overdrive, distortion, and fuzz pedals
  • Modulation
  • Delay and reverb pedals are the caboose to the pedal train.You can always play with the order, and let’s not get into stacking drive pedals together to get all sorts of interesting sounds.

What the Colors Mean

Down below, you will find numerous pedals listed. I’ve used the following colors to represent the different categories of pedals and what their use is.

  • Overdrive – Overloads the signal to replicate the sound of a tube amp breaking up. Overdrive is generally a less saturated sound
  • Distortion – Similar to overdrive but is more distorted/saturated. Think of 80s metal, 90s grunge, and 00s post-grunge rock
  • Heavy Gain – This is the sound of harder rock, metal, and other “heavy” music. It’s a thick, searing drive sound that isn’t often used in my music, but it has it’s place in genres that I do not play
  • Fuzz – Drive effect that is generally very saturated. Billy Corgan helped make this even more famous via the early Smashing Pumpkins albums
  • Delay/Reverb – Delay takes the notes you’ve played and repeats them. Reverb is like an echo in a room, only more complicated.
  • Utility – Other things, like pitching shifting, compression, wah, etc.

Modulation is another category of pedals, but I do not currently own any modulation pedals. Modulation changes the texture of the signal. Examples from famous songs include “Come As You Are” for chorus, “Lightning Crashes” for phaser, “Unchained” for flanger, and “Black Hole Sun” for a rotary effect.

My Current Pedals

Let’s group these pedals by maker, in ABC order. Colors are explained a bit further below

    • Bearfoot FX: Honeybee X
    • Benson: Preamp
    • Blackout Effectors: Musket (Whiteout Edition)
    • Boss: HM-2 Heavy Metal
    • Catalinbread: Dirty Little Secret Deluxe
    • CKLab: Purplex + SIOD
    • Disaster Area: Micro Clock
    • Dunlop: MC404 CAE Wah
    • Electro Harmonix (EHX): POG 2
    • EQD: Black Ash
    • Jet Pedals: Lion Programmable Distortion
    • Loophole Pedals: Grey Matter
    • MXR: Timmy
    • Pedal Jerk: Denton Drive
    • Radial Engineering: Twin City ABY
    • TC Electronic: Ditto X2, Polytune 3, and T2
    • Wampler: Ego Compressor, Metaverse, Phenom, Triumph, and Tumnus Deluxe
    • Zvex: Double Rock

The Ghost Fire board is powered by a Trutone CS12, the SIG Custom is powered by a Voodoo Labs ISO 5, and everything else is powered by adapters. I utilize Y-splitters as needed to power drive pedals and a daisy chain to power the Radial Engineering Twin City and Ego Compressor

The Benchwarmers

The following two pedals sit up on a shelf waiting to be used

    • Danelectro:  CF-1 Fuzz (Frantone Peachfuzz clone)
    • Kokko: Distortion

Why so many overdrive and distortion pedals!?!?

If we count them up all the names above, I have a whopping SEVENTEEN different drive pedals. One might be inclined to ask, “Why in the world would you need 17 different pedals that do the same thing?”  and that’s a fair question. At the beginning of 2022, interestingly enough while in the middle of a stint in the ICU, I read what is probably the best comparison: Is one type of chocolate sufficient for someone that enjoys chocolate? 

I’m not even a chocolate lover and I can think of at least four different chocolates that I enjoy, even more if you add in toffee, nougat, caramel, or rice crisps to the mix. Let’s do a quick Q&A of things I’ve been asked before.

Do I NEED all of them?
No. Even I cannot deny that I do not need all of them. At one point, when I first made this page, I had 15 drives. I sold a good number of them, got things down to nine, and then have acquired some through trades or incredible prices.

Do I know which ones I’d keep if I had to start selling them off?
Yes.

Do I have favorites that I tend to use more than the others?
Absolutely.

Why so many pedals then?
In a situation where all I do is record music, it’s nice to have the right sound for the job. Most of the drive pedals I have have unique voices, but there are some overlaps.


Let’s take a deeper dive into that last question and point and talk about these drive pedals, arranged by category.

Light Overdrive

These are the pedals that you use to recreate the sound of a tube amp starting to break up. If you play the guitar right, you can even keep the sound clean and then really dig into your playing to bring that overdriven sound out.

When I think of recognizable songs to reference, I immediately think of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers’ “Free Fallin'” ,  Genesis’ “The Way I Walk”,  or Joe Cochran’s “Life is a Highway” as three examples of songs that, in my opinion, incorporate light overdrive.

Bearfoot FX: Honeybee X
  • The Honeybee is a classic low-gain drive pedal that’s been around for ages but I’ve never owned. I recently traded for this model, which is a handpainted version made for the 10th anniversary of the pedal. It has additional gain on tap and a couple of extra controls: Nature for normal tone control, a mids control to add mids, and a treble control for tuning the top end
Benson: Preamp
  • Benson modeled this pedal after the preamp of their Chimera amp. It’s still a relatively new pedal, but it’s one I like enough that I didn’t immediately sell it when I got it in a trade. I’m still figuring out how to use it and often wonder if it shouldn’t be at the end of the pedal chain so I can treat it like you would the preamp of an actual amp: running drive pedals into it
Loophole Pedals: Grey Matter
  • Loophole Pedals is another D/FW pedal maker. I have #3 ever produced. It is Loophole’s take on the grey DOD Preamp 250, but in a two-in-one pacakage. There’s a lot of flexibility within the pedal and even after owning it for some time now, I still go back to it. If you stack the two sides together, it wanders well into medium gain territory
MXR Timmy
  • This is a mini version of one of the best light overdrive pedals ever made, the Paul C Timmy. It’s considered a “transparent overdrive” in that it doesn’t really add it’s own “color” to what your amp sounds like. It just amplifies it. The tone controls let you cut frequencies, so it gets really interesting to use. I used it quite a bit on the first two KCWM albums.The original Timmy was SO popular that a big pedal maker like Danelectro actually cloned the pedal (the CTO-1) and sold it for something $35, If I recall correctly, there was a post from Paul C (the Timmy maker) on The Gear Page that explained that the CTO-1 was so much of a clone that after learning the truth, the president of Danelectro reached out to the creator of the Timmy, had a conversation, and Danelectro paid the man.
Pedal Jerk: Denton Drive
  • The Denton Drive is made by a local pedal maker here in the D/FW area and is his take on the Analogman King of Tone, a really popular pedal that has an extreme waiting list and an hyped up price because it. It is a really great rhythm sound for less aggressive songs
Wampler Triumph
  • In 2022, Wampler released a couple of $99 budget pedals, the Triumph and the Phenom. The Triumph is built around two circuits: a Digitech Bad Monkey (which is a Tubescreamer circuit) and a Boss SD-1, depending on which position the switch is in. Reverb was doing this crazy “$50 off of a $100 purchase” so my wife and I bought made purchases. I don’t use it often, but it’s nice to have the option, especially now that I understand why TS-circuits are so popular
Wampler Tumnus Deluxe
  • Wampler’s take on the legendary Klon pedal. There’s a toggle that you can use to add some extra gain and push this into an almost medium overdrive sound, but I have other tools for that sound. It’s similar to the Timmy, but yet it’s different.Brian Wampler actually made a video that was recently a suggested video where he talked about folks saying the Klon is a “transparent” drive, but point out how the mids get boosted the more you turn the gain up, so  it’s not, in fact, “transparent”. However, people tend to use it with the gain turned down, which colors the mids less, leading to many hearing it as transparent.Funny thing is, that video isn’t in my YouTube history even though I know I watched it.
Medium Overdrive

To me, this is the meat of rock songs. The Who, Led Zepplin, Pearl Jam, Nirvana, Soundgarden…all great examples of the range of what I think of when I think of a good medium gain. Sure, did the latter two swing into harder rock sounds? Yeah, probably, but Pearl Jam has stayed in this ballpark for most of their studio releases.

This is the realm of overdriven Marshall sounds, which is why “Marshall-in-a-box” pedals are so popular. Having never owned a proper Marshall amp, and I’ll never be in a real position to push a Marshall amp to get those tones, these pedals are a godsend to me.

Honestly, for as much as I love the idea of a thick, heavy distortion, it doesn’t translate well to a recording. Even Nirvana’s Nevermind sounds heavier than it is because of how the producer, Butch Vig, layered four or five different guitar tracks. Think about their follow up album In Utero. It doesn’t sound nearly as heavy. Raw, maybe, but raw doesn’t equal heavy.

Catalinbread Dirty Little Secret Deluxe
  • I love Plexi pedals. I’ve owned a lot of them, especially ones made by Lovepedal. I’ve always had interest in the regular Dirty Little Secret, but watched a video that Anderton’s put out and the DLS didn’t fare well.However, in 2022, Catalinbread released the Deluxe version that included a couple of tweaks. I was super interested, but at $300 and no 48 month financing in sight, it wasn’t happening. Then, they did a 30% off B-stock sale and…well…I’m weak.I love this pedal. I feel, or convinced myself, that the Presence control really lets me adjust the pedal to the guitar I’m using
CKLab Purplex + SIOD
  • When I first bought the Lovepedal Purple Plexi Plus and plugged it in, I was sold. THAT was the MIAB sound I’d been seeking. Around the same time, I’d acquired a few pedals from then local pedal maker CKLab. I saw that I’d just missed out on a pedal he’d made called the Purplex, which was his take on, and tweaks to, the Purple Plexi.I reached out to him and he built me a custom pedal that consisted of his Purplex and SIOD, which is very similar to a Lovepedal COT 50.Unfortunately, CKLab recently announced that he’s leaving the pedal-building business.
Zvex Double Rock
  • This should PROBABLY be on the light overdrive section, but I use it as a light-medium drive most of the time. I’m telling you, when I first bought the Box of Rock I was in love with it. Sure, it’s known for having a bassier sound, and I love Les Paul style guitars which are, you guessed it, known for a bassier sound.I eventually had to sell my Box of Rock, but years later I was able to buy a Distortron, which was the drive side of the Box of Rock with a couple of switches to a) cut the bass and b) boost the drive. It was my foundational sound.Then I learned about the Double Rock. I was immediately sold. Two Box of Rocks in one enclosure with a bass cut? Score!
Wampler Phenom
  • The Phenom is kind of an evolution of the Wampler Plextortion, a discontinued pedal I’ve always been interested to try. As mentioned above, this is one of their $99 budget pedals that I was able to pick up for $50 on Reverb due to a Reverb coupon. It’s a really cool pedal that I’ve been using more recently
High Gain
Boss HM-2 Heavy Metal
  • For years, this was a joke pedal, right? Then, it somehow started to gain traction and the MIJ versions were going for something like $200. I bought this for $20, and for $20, I’ll try pretty much any pedal.Interestingly, I don’t use this as a high gain pedal. I keep the gain below 12 o’clock and the tone around the same or less, and it sounds pretty good. It’s definitely a sound, and not one I use a TON, but I use it.Interestingly, these older HM-2 operate at 12v instead of 9v. If you run them at 9v with a dedicated line, they become under-powered but sound pretty cool. Alternatively, you can use a daisy chain, or a Y-splitter in my case, and it does something to somehow fully power the pedal
Fuzz

While not the originators of the sound, it’s hard to talk about fuzz and not mention Smashing Pumpkins, especially their Siamese Dream album. The way that “Cherub Rock” or “Today” blast off (not to mention “Rocket”), the sound of the EHX Big Muff is all over that album. I own three different fuzzes and they are all very different from one another.

Danelectro CF-1 Fuzz
  • A clone of the Frantone Peachfuzz. Like the CTO-1 mentioned above, the CF-1 sold for about $35 and was, and still is, a fraction of the cost of the pedal it was ripped from. Like the CTO-1 (and CO-1 that was a clone of the Fulltone OCD), the CF-1 was discontinued and redesigned under the CF-2 model number. While I’ve sold two CTO-1 and the CO-1 I bought, the CF-1 has remained. It is a thick fuzz sound. Some people think it’s along the same lines as the Big Muff. Either way, for the $35 I spent on it
EQD Black Ash
  • A limited edition pedal where I think 1500 were produced. It cost $150 and I see them going for something like $450 now on Reverb. It’s a Bender-style fuzz that has a brighter sound to it. You can turn the gain down and get some gnarly overdriven sounds out of it. It’s a super flexible pedal. I believe I used it on “All the Feels” from Volume Three
Blackout Effectors The Twosome
  • I used to own a Musket Fuzz, which was a Muff-style pedal that introduced three controls that address issues that people have with the Muffs: a Mids control, a pre-fuzz bass cut, and a preamp boost to give it some volume. I LOVED my Musket until I learned about this pedal, which combines the Musket with their Fix’d Fuzz, a unique fuzz that lets you select different circuits to shape the fuzz sound. There are a lot of combinations. Having two fuzzes in one is an excellent concept.

So, as you can see, each drive has its own story…its own flavor. There is definitely SOME crossover and there are some I could definitely see myself getting rid of, but it’s also fun to figure out which sound I want for which part, especially as I move into a more permanent area of having 3 separate guitar parts in the songs I record.

I”m always happy to talk gear, especially if someone has questions on a pedal I currently own. The pedal world has gotten HUGE and, frankly, a bit complicated for my feeble old man brain.

All the best!

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It has come time to part ways with one of the cool It has come time to part ways with one of the coolest Muff-based fuzzes I’ve ever played: the Blackout Effectors Musket, which is the right side of this pedal, the Twosome. 

You might question what a Muff fuzz is, and if you’re a non-guitarist/musician, I point you to Smashing Pumpkins’ album Siamese Dream, notably “Today” and “Cherub Rock”. 

Fuzzes have been used for a long time and the Electro Harmoniz Big Muff is one of the most well known. 

However, this allows me to bring other fuzz sounds into my bag of tricks and that makes me excited.
Gear that came and went in 2023: Pedal Edition (ma Gear that came and went in 2023: Pedal Edition (maybe pt. 1)

There might have been more. I’ll have to check an Imgur folder

• Jet Pedals Lion 
• Lovepedal Echo Plexi (traded toward Friedman PT-20 v2 head/cab
• Emerson Paramount (traded toward Friedman PT-20 v2 head/cab
• Line 6 HX Stomp + extension pedal (traded for Crate Palomino v16 and cash)
• TC Electronic Sub n Up (came in 2022)
• Boss DS-1
• Old Blood Noise Endeavors Float
• Kelley Katana Mini Boost
• Ibanez TS-9 Tubescreamer (traded for Katana Mini Boost)
• Barber Gain Changer (traded for Bearfoot FX Honeybee X)
• Jackson Audio Broken Arrow v1 (traded for Fulltone Fulldrive 2)
• Line 6 Helix LT

Gone but not pictured:
• JHS Buffered Splitter (traded for Tubescreamer)
• Fulltone Fulldrive 2 (traded for Emerson Les Paul Harness)

Bought and returned:

• Used Jackson Audio Asabi (defective)
• New Jackson Audio Asabi (gain was not useful)
•Jackson Audio Golden Boy mini

The Lion, Float, Paramount, and DS-1 were taken in as trade for the light blue tele in my recent guitar post 

I’ll probably think of a couple more I missed because I don’t still have the pictures of them, or never took pictures because I never posted them for sale. 

#guitar #guitarpedals #pedals
@bugdayband It’s glorious @bugdayband It’s glorious
@teresa.aldaco, ignore this post. I was going th @teresa.aldaco, ignore this post. 

I was going through my photos today and saw a number of guitars and pedals that I’ve sold/traded or bought in 2023. 

These are 10 of the guitars that came into and left my possession in 2023.

• 2016 Fender Chris Shiflett Telecaster Deluxe
• 2019 Gibson Les Paul Tribute DC
• 2021 Squier 40th Anniversary Jazzmaster, Vintage Edition
• Partscaster Tele
• 2021 Sterling Avis AX3FM
• 2022 Gibson Les Paul Traditional Pro V Satin
• 2007 Epiphone “1966”  G-400 SG
• LTD M-1000 with HetSet EMG (can’t remember the year)
• 1970s Session Les Paul Custom Copy
• 1997 Squier Affinity Strat (this year was one of the first years of the Affinity models)

I also sold or traded:

2022 Squier Classic Vibe ‘60s Strat
2018 Fender P-Bass Deluxe FSR
2012 Gibson Les Paul Traditional 

There might be one or two more I’m forgetting about. I also have a few that are waiting to be listed for sale too. 

It’s been a bit crazy, and 2024 is off to a start of its own. 

#guitar
Out getting into some Christmas Mischief and neede Out getting into some Christmas Mischief and needed some background music. It’s a good choice of good music. 

Finding new music from half the country (or world) away, or even right next door, is one of the best things about the internet and social media. Without it, I’d have never found bands like @bugdayband, No More Kings, @zwetschconnor, @clinically.sane.band, the musicians I’ve met and talked to, or people wouldn’t have found my music. 

Seek out new music. Don’t stay stuck in your music habits for too long like I too often do. I do love me some ‘90s rock, but I needed to move beyond what gets played on Lithium. 

Finding that new song that gives you chills with a lyric, when the distortion kicks in, a transition between section, or opening chord is never a disappointing feeling. 

It’s not 2024 yet, but we don’t have to wait to make a resolution to find and embrace new music by artists we might never have found if it weren’t for our friends, or an algorithm, saying “hey, check this out”.
Well, no surprise that I’m my #1 listened to ban Well, no surprise that I’m my #1 listened to band. Olivia Rodrigo and Taylor Swift are due to my kid, but @bugdayband ranking up there with Pearl Jam is good stuff. You should check them out. 

#spotifywrapped #kcwmmusic #rock
Grayson, aka Buddy aka Buh aka Bubs, is our sole r Grayson, aka Buddy aka Buh aka Bubs, is our sole remaining cat after all three of our senior cats succumbed to complications of their age. 

He’s a good companion and has become extra clingy since Mike’s passing in September. He sleeps with us at night and responds to “Want to get some food and go to sleep?”

He really is the best buh. 

#grayson #graycatsofinstagram #cats #catsofinstagram #graycats
Five or six years ago, I bought a Gibson Les Paul Five or six years ago, I bought a Gibson Les Paul Classic in green oceanburst. After a setup from @bigjohnsguitars it played how I’ve always wanted a Les Paul to play. 

After the honeymoon phase was over, and after recording some tracks, I wasn’t happy with the sound. It was very dark and muddy. John helped me install some new pickups, but the problem persisted. 

I eventually met and talked to the guy who runs @wtonesupply and we talked pickups. I dropped my Les Paul off and he got to work winding me some of his pickups. 

We made the trip out to Allen (which is why we ate at Portillos) to pick it up last night and I finally got a good chance to put some time into playing it. 

Problem solved. 

Our original plan deviated a bit once he had the guitar  but the choices he made has proven to be the remedy it needed. Plus, the covers he used look slick! 

With a trade finding a new home for the guitar that displaced this one as my go-to Les Paul, it’s nice to have this back in its rightful place. I can’t wait to record a song or two with it real soon. 

Finding good folks that do even better work has been something I’m very thankful for. Those individuals and the many conversations I’ve had and work they’ve done for me is something I hope every musician can experience.
It’s a @bugdayband kind of day. You should make It’s a @bugdayband kind of day. You should make it a Bug Day kind of day too. Because #guitar #altrock is good for the soul.
Remixing the first 7 songs from Volumes One and Tw Remixing the first 7 songs from Volumes One and Two is coming along. 

Some songs sound better after the first attempt, some require a tweak or two, and others require whole new parts be recorded. 

I still need to re-record “Octivation”, “Lost It All In Factory”, and “Let’s Get Behind Them” for different reasons. 

I’ve learned a lot between the beginning of this whole process and now, and you can hear the difference in the originals vs. the remix. 

Want access to listen to the remixes? DM me and let’s talk about it. I’d love to talk about the process and hear your feedback.
During the 9/13 @pearljam show, we were treated to During the 9/13 @pearljam show, we were treated to Eddie Vedder dressed up as a mirrorball and a story behind the jacket and helmet for “Wishlist”. I recorded very little during the show, but him spinning around was too good to pass up. I tried to catch it on the big screen but only caught a moment of it.
I worked out two separate trades on Sunday that in I worked out two separate trades on Sunday that involved a #strat as part of the deal. Funny thing is that the #stratocaster is not my favorite type of guitar to play, but both were interesting. This doubled the number of strats I have.

1) The red #Fender is made up of parts from Fender guitars, but I do not believe that any parts are from the same guitar. 

• The body is refinished matte red with some roadworn-ish type relicing, which is just gold underneath...maybe the original color?

• Fender Vintage Noiseless pickups with a Clapton mid-boost mod. It sounds really good. 

• Neck is from a 2013 MIM Floyd Rose Fender. It's a really nice, comfortable neck. 

• Thick solid steel block. It has excellent sustain

If I keep this one, it will get some Fender Locking Tuners

2) The black one is a #Squier Affinity Strat, but it's not a normal Affinity. It's a 1997 model, the first year they offered the Affinity line and it's a full-sized, hardwood (likely Alder) body with a 22-fret rosewood neck. It's a pretty nice neck, especially for a Squier. 

It's hefty for a strat too...it's not light like so many of the Squier Affinity line. Having that full-sized body adds some weight. 

The pickups leave a bit to be desired, which is par for the course with the Affinity line, but this guitar would make a great modding platform for someone interested in doing so. 

Heck, if that red one hadn't come through and I didn't already have two other nice strats (both Squiers, interestingly), I'd likely look to make some modifications.

----

In the end, I will take time to consider whether I like the red partscaster or my Squier Classic Vibe '60s strat more. Whichever one wins gets the Vintage Noiseless. Clapton mod, and stainless steel block (as long as it fits the Squier). 

I have some decisions to make.
New upgrade for KCWM music purposes. Next recordin New upgrade for KCWM music purposes. Next recordings will feature this 2004 Dr. Z Maz 18 Jr. 

#NAD #newampday #drz #maz18 #guitar #guitaramps
Back in '95, my grandmother bought my first real e Back in '95, my grandmother bought my first real electric guitar from a pawn shop in the small town I grew up in. I think we paid $85 for it with a hard case. 

I played that guitar a lot, its pictured with me in the Jazz Band photo from my junior year (covered in a ton of stickers...so classy), and I recorded songs with it. 

When the electronics started to die, I wasn't as knowledgeable in what could be repaired and I junked it. I sold the parts and moved on. It wasn't until years later that I realized what I'd given up and I've often priced them, but never pulled the trigger. 

Yesterday (7/19/23), this popped up on Facebook Marketplace from a local shop. At first, I thought it was interesting and didn't intend on buying it, but after giving it some thought, I went and did just that. 

This was a bit of a nostalgic purchase. If I named my guitars, this one would be called Dot or Syb (short for Sybil), after my grandmother.

This Squier Contemporary Strat (27-6800) was made from '84 - '87 in Japan. From the info I've gathered online, it's a 24.75" scale instead of the normal 25.5" Fender Scale. The pickups each have an on/off switch so you can turn all three on at the same time, and the humbucker has an on/off/coil-tap switch. The tuners are Fender-branded Gotoh. 

It has some definite wear and tear, but I don't care. 

You'll definitely be hearing this on some upcoming songs, as I intend for it to split time with the tele I use for lead parts, as I did with the modified Squier '51 it's replacing did. 

Anyone in the DFW area looking for a cool modified Squier '51? 

#guitar #fender #squier #stratocaster #strat #fenderjapan #mij #ssh #rock #kcwmmusic #dmcafreemusic #dmcafreerock #nostalgia
I need to clean up my desk a bit more but I just r I need to clean up my desk a bit more but I just replaced my two 1440p monitors with this 34” ultra wide. I’m able to see every track on the mixer of Studio One 5 and so much of Superior Drummer 3. It’s so awesome.
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