
GONZO-X
Well-known member
boston
tom scholz
The early Boston tone was driven by Marshall amps cranked wide open. Of course, Tom also used a number of other devices, many of which were homemade (including the "Doubler" which later became the "Stereo Chorus") or modified, to get his tone and effects. Once he got the tone, he had to record it and then be able to reproduce it live.
Onstage, Scholz controls his effects from a pedal board, which, along with individual on/off switches for each effect, also features the "kitchen sink" - a switch that turns everything on ("for those times when they start picking up bottles"). The guitar is first fed into a homemade preamp which has an active high-end boost, to allow Tom to get away with using all his other inline effects without overpowering noise. "Most of those devices are designed to take much larger input signals than even the most powerful guitars put out," Scholz explains. "If you kick up the signal in front by 3 or 4dB, and start boosting the high-end at around 2kHz around 6dB per octave, you can get the signal-to-noise ratio down to a usable level."
"After the preamp," he continues, "I have a 6-band MXR Graphic Equalizer that runs on batteries- which in itself is noisier than hell, but sounds all right after it's preamped. I have a wah-wah pedal, but I often use the MXR to simulate the wah-wah sound."
tom scholz
The early Boston tone was driven by Marshall amps cranked wide open. Of course, Tom also used a number of other devices, many of which were homemade (including the "Doubler" which later became the "Stereo Chorus") or modified, to get his tone and effects. Once he got the tone, he had to record it and then be able to reproduce it live.
Onstage, Scholz controls his effects from a pedal board, which, along with individual on/off switches for each effect, also features the "kitchen sink" - a switch that turns everything on ("for those times when they start picking up bottles"). The guitar is first fed into a homemade preamp which has an active high-end boost, to allow Tom to get away with using all his other inline effects without overpowering noise. "Most of those devices are designed to take much larger input signals than even the most powerful guitars put out," Scholz explains. "If you kick up the signal in front by 3 or 4dB, and start boosting the high-end at around 2kHz around 6dB per octave, you can get the signal-to-noise ratio down to a usable level."
"After the preamp," he continues, "I have a 6-band MXR Graphic Equalizer that runs on batteries- which in itself is noisier than hell, but sounds all right after it's preamped. I have a wah-wah pedal, but I often use the MXR to simulate the wah-wah sound."