Hello friends and welcome to ask Zack today we have a field trip down at exact


0:17

tone Solutions cuz I wanted to talk about you know kind of the tone suck and


0:24

tone Obsession because this is one of the things that in interviews or talking


0:30

with friends you know that that kind of comes up a lot and they'll talk about how something is you know tone sucking


0:37

or it's boosting their s you know when when it's a delay pedal that's boosting or cutting and different things like


0:43

that and so kind of wanted to have a discussion and I felt like if we were going to do this properly we need to


0:49

have someone that could uh really kind of put it in more concrete


0:54

understandable terms instead of Voodoo or you know just the uh kind of lame you know the uh pedantic ter terminology is


1:04

that fair is that fair yeah I mean I mean we'll see right yeah so I'm always afraid it's it's always slightly


1:10

unsatisfying when I have this conversation with folks because even as we've discussed it in the past it can


1:17

kind of feel like you're just kind of going around the mountain again and again and again and uh so we'll see if


1:24

if we can bring any sort of resolution okay to to uh to this thing yeah maybe


1:30

there doesn't need to be a resolution maybe there just needs to be understanding yeah that would be good I'd love to


1:36

understand so you know just to kind of give the the nickel version of ton suck you know if you if you go back to


1:43

like uh you know effects made in the 70s like a old script logo din comp you know


1:50

if you bypassed the thing it sounded terrible because it would just you know


1:55

it sounded dark and uh and of course it made you probably to leave the effect on


2:00

and not turn it off right uh so then we get uh buffered bypass and then we then


2:06

we get into you know true bypass which are kind of you know I guess the two different main ways of kind of trying to


2:12

address this now when would you say is the peak of true bypass as the historian


2:18

that you are oh okay because I remember like nobody talked about it nobody talked about it and it feels like maybe


2:25

in the odish like that became like a huge deal where you were doing yourself


2:32

your family your ancestors a disservice if you did not have true bypass I I


2:38

would that's absolutely true I would say by the late 90s it it started with the boutique


2:44

companies and I think part of it was a uh you know a cost thing I think you


2:51

know maybe it was in the design of circuit I don't know what do you think about that where it seemed like they


2:57

started using these switches and touting that cuz I mean fullone and others were touting true bypass and using those type


3:04

of mechanical switches as early as like 95 or such and they were and they were


3:10

selling these things but uh yeah and as far as circuits go I wonder I never


3:17

really thought about it until just now but those once those three pole double throw switches came available which made


3:25

True bypass with indication really easy right now is if just like a DIY home


3:31

brewing these things you don't need to know anything about uh like fet


3:36

switching or you know analog switches that used to come in like a monolithic


3:42

package or flipflops or you whether discreet like what the boss has or you


3:49

know actual integrated flip-flops like the Nobles has like you could just ditch all that stuff which would be hard to do


3:57

like not on a circuit board and not with some understanding and so I want like cynical


4:03

me kind of wonders if well we don't know how to do buffer


4:08

bypass uh we do know how to do true bypass now because I can just draw a


4:13

wiring diagram and do it so I get the benefit it's a there's a double benefit


4:18

I can kind of put down what was which might be more even more technically


4:24

difficult in some ways and I can tout this thing as the as the a better option


4:31

yeah I I think there's an element to that of of the uh the kind of uh


4:36

explosion of true bypass and how everyone started asking you know by the late 90s everyone was asking is it true


4:42

Bypass or not and and we still get that yeah yeah and and so I guess


4:49

uh now you know everyone a lot a lot of guys have done like little tests and


4:55

stuff like that like I've done you know testing where you have a a sizable board maybe it's 10 to 12 pedals and you have


5:01

them where it's all true Bypass or you have it where it's all buffered and both of them when you get to that level of


5:08

extremism it's problematic MH because when you have 10 to 12 true bypass


5:15

pedals they're all off and nothing is acting in any way shape or form as a buffer MH uh by being on whether it's an


5:24

overdrive or a delay or what have you uh yeah I mean there's a lot of capacitance


5:29

and uh and and and it's an odd thing it's not great uh and then if you have


5:34

that many buffers if you have 12 buffers and of course um sometimes it's it's


5:42

weird you know depending it was even more weird when all the buffers were made by the same manufacturer and it


5:48

seemed like compounding yeah it seemed to compound the issue of where certain


5:54

frequencies were hyped more and it just didn't it seems like it's really


6:01

difficult to have a truly flat buffer yeah I I think


6:07

it's I think looking at it on paper it's not too


6:13

hard um one thing that I think often gets overlooked and maybe you were talking


6:20

about this before maybe it's just another conversation we had before the sometimes it's not just


6:26

frequency range like the the R1 and the MOs dorion you're passing through fets


6:34

that are being used as switches and I think one of the reasons why uh some reh


6:43

houses of those people I mean because we've had our guys come in and be like I had this rehoused and they wrecked it


6:50

and what they did was they pulled out all those switching fets and replace them with a piece of wire uh which


6:56

should be one for one you look this this fed is acting like a switch


7:02

and when the pedal is on it should be closed so I'm just going to jump that with a piece of wire the problem is is


7:08

that the fet isn't a perfect switch particularly as you are shoving signal


7:15

through it so it might be flat frequency wise in their frequency band of Interest which is which is not you know super


7:22

wide band for guitar but the fet's distorting and so you hear that and you


7:28

might inter interpret that if it's kind of distorting in the mid-range you might hear that as a limiting of mid-range and


7:36

or a boosting of base and high because those aren't getting limited because


7:42

basically you've got a multiband compressor at that point and so this thing for small signals is flat but as


7:51

you start to hit it with more signal it's doing this multiband compression thing and at the very least ay


7:59

uh it sounds like it's hyping something and I think if you if you did that in particular if you had a string of those


8:07

together you would hear that effect compounded totally yeah you at the end of the day


8:13

everything affects everything to an extent and and so it yeah it's like the


8:20

you know CU I've messed with mooran pedals a lot over the last 15 years and I've played through a lot of the


8:25

different copies and such and if makes a difference if you have it true Bypass or


8:32

not or whether it's got the the the same type of you know switching and buffer in


8:38

there it changes the sound of the petal and so some might like it better but it doesn't sound like the original when you


8:44

true bypass it anymore yeah it yeah I would say you can true like when we true


8:49

bypass those we basically trick the pedal into being on in its original state and then


8:58

all we do is basically you could think of the pedal as being in a true bypass Loop


9:04

inside of itself right but the circuit itself you're still running through for better and worse you're running through


9:12

all this stuff that really is ostensibly just there for switching except it never


9:17

switches again for the rest of its life and that's the better way of doing it because you're able to preserve the real


9:22

sound of it yet you're able to completely bypass it yeah yeah and so that that was you know that seemed


9:30

as we were looking at the problem where guys were bringing things in and saying hey this doesn't sound the same anymore


9:38

some of these things and I maybe we'll get more into this later some of these tone suck things they we have to deal


9:45

with like the psychology of it so one of the reasons we do what we do for things


9:52

like reh houses or even other things I think it applies to that is to remove if


9:58

I deliver something something to you aoran and you say man this sounds


10:03

different I need to be able to give an account for what we did and at the very


10:10

least reassure you that I don't know how that could be right cuz we didn't change


10:16

you're running through all the same stuff so hypothetically you don't like running through the new Jacks with this


10:23

switch with this mechanical switch but that would have to be it and maybe that's enough to sort of of quell well


10:31

okay I guess it really can't be yeah that different and so that can be


10:36

helpful especially if somebody ships Us in something from Japan we and we mod it


10:42

and we send it back and they're like well it it changed and I'm like well we change if it did we changed it the


10:50

absolute minimum to be able to give it the function that it has you're the


10:55

Corpus the the core of what that thing is we left completely untouched yeah and


11:02

we just kind of remoted it in in one sense or the or the other so that sort


11:09

of preor is sometimes necessary depending on the client and


11:15

how sensitive they are to even the


11:20

concept of change because like as we've talked about that suspicion that something is


11:27

different can be just as Insidious as something actually changing yes and and


11:35

that's one of the important lessons that I've learned you know from you and Joe


11:40

Glazer and and people that work on any aspects aspect of musician's gear is


11:46

that the psychology of it is really important because you're really treating the person as much as you are the gear


11:54

mhm so going back to like the crude testing that I did with you know all


12:00

true bypass pedals and all uh buffered pedals one of the things I noticed with


12:07

the all buffered setup was it seemed like the tone didn't really get bad but


12:14

it changed the way the guitar felt as you played it and I know that's getting like way off into the ether some but


12:21

some of that's explained by what you were talking about when the the buffer is is doing different things and you're


12:27

getting a compression or a lack there of and it goes from feeling where it has a


12:33

compression to it or softness to it or maybe it's an EQ thing where you're hearing frequencies that you weren't


12:40

hearing before and that changes the way it feels when you're playing yeah so


12:45

like those buffers like a lot of those buffers are just like a um like a transistor like a single


12:53

transistor buffer and that's going to have some sort of harmonic Distortion


12:58

right and when you I maybe this is it I've not


13:04

measured it uh to to verify but as you


13:09

if you think of harmonic Distortion as sort of spreading the energy out over over the Spectrum as you do that I think


13:17

you can lead to sort of softness because if you like I remember one uh Pedal


13:22

company they were doing some wave shaping things where they could kind of they could give you a ton of second


13:28

order by design the second order Distortion and in our we've been told by tube purists and all that like second


13:34

order is great but if you take that and you add a ton of second order it's


13:39

basically is an octaver and it everything starts to feel softer and so


13:45

if you if you take that same harmonic structure that harmonic Distortion


13:50

repeat it again and again and again and again even though it's slight in the one case it's it's multiplicative right so


13:58

you're applying the same function to that signal over and over and over again


14:04

and so then you're hyping what the the little thing that it did that


14:09

0.1% you multiply that by 10 times and now you've got one part in 100 and I


14:14

think people the more you do that the more people are able to detect yeah you


14:20

know that difference so that makes sense I think it it is really tough and when I first met uh Greg here he really he he


14:29

does such a good job of uh cuz I had no sense of like feel I


14:36

was strictly like a sound because I'm not a like a real player if it sounded


14:42

right that was good enough and then as I started interacting with players who were much much better than I was and


14:49

began to realize that feel was a thing and then working with Greg who would show me like listen this is what this is


14:57

doing and then playing the lp and then you can kind of annex somebody else's feel and get a sense like that's a real


15:04

thing like people should feel secure and like like don't don't let anybody tell


15:10

you like feels not real cuz it is and it's a and it's a real part of you know


15:18

it's a dynamic thing typically although EQ can really change perceived feel cuz


15:26

if I take the if I slam the highend out of something it's going to feel softer


15:32

cuz it's not going to feel as fast or as clicky or cuz I just took like this and


15:38

now all of a sudden it feels that in articulation can kind of translate to


15:44

your right hand like it doesn't feel like it's responding the same and that's a feel thing yeah and yeah and that


15:51

makes total sense because sometimes when you think oh this doesn't feel the same and you think that something's going on


15:59

with something killing the signal or compressing it or what have you and


16:05

really it can be purely an EQ thing where it's just because it's it's hyping


16:12

uh the highend or something it feels harder yeah or if it's cutting the high end all of a sudden it feels softer yeah


16:18

and it's interesting like purely an EQ thing that's it's that's the strange thing about these systems is it's almost


16:24

never purely anything yeah it's not we want it to be right yeah we want it to


16:29

be like oh you've got the wrong X Swap this piece out and then the stars align


16:36

and everything starts looking again or working again but because everything is sort of I maybe we were talking about


16:43

this before it's like Play-Doh and you've got these different colors and you start mashing them together you


16:50

can't really tease out anymore what's doing what I mean you can like in the


16:57

same way the colors like well the blue and the red like the the blue is making


17:03

it more purpley like you can do that but you can't tease it out yeah and and have


17:10

yeah it's kind of stuck in there now and if you try to extricate it you're going to change what it is and in some ways I


17:18

feel like that's kind of a bummer cuz it feels kind of like hopeless like you can't change anything but in the other


17:26

in some other ways I feel like it kind of is what it is and then that way you can just kind of Let It Go like okay I


17:33

like this it is what it is yeah and I think part of this goes back to


17:39

the a lot of the true bypass marketing and such was that you know it's like


17:45

when you turn it off it sounds like you're plugged straight into the amp mhm and with a switch and two extra Jacks


17:52

right exactly it it is changing things but it was it seemed like it was more


17:57

subtle especially when when you were doing a test where it was one p mhm so


18:03

and I think what it comes down to is that you know you're you're never as


18:08

soon as you start inserting anything between the guitar and the amp it changes things and so it's like if you


18:14

want the sound of a guitar plugged straight into an amp well you have to have the guitar plugged straight into the amp yes and there's no way around


18:22

it yes yeah yeah I mean I think technically that's true and again it's kind of


18:28

bummer cuz it's like well then I can't have anything you just every person every player has to


18:36

kind of decide how nuts do you want to be about this and and and being nuts is


18:43

okay to a degree but I think like one of the things we we have to make it you


18:50

know kind of make these compromises and decision as players and such is it okay


18:55

what do I have to have if I'm just you know what do I have to have for the that I'm playing yes you know and so if you


19:02

have to have a lot of different gags and a bunch of different sounds well then you kind of got to have some kind of


19:07

multi effect unit or a bunch of pedals or whatever it is and you just kind of have to work with it you know we we were


19:13

talking on the phone the other day and uh I was talking about you know a situation that you know from 20 plus


19:19

years ago where during my time you know working with Brad Paisley you know we


19:25

started obsessing over okay which one of the wireless units sounds just like uh cable you know


19:32

pluged straight into the amp and basically there wasn't anything especially then yeah especially then and


19:38

we had we had you know what was at the time topof the line you know Wireless units by Sennheiser andure and at the


19:46

end of the day because Brad was never going to do a show without a wireless cuz he you know


19:54

he goes all over the stage and there was one time where um we were we were playing near a military base and um


20:03

there was like we were it was like even before the show I knew we were screwed because there was only like one or two


20:09

frequencies that were working right and I knew it and so I had 100t cable and I


20:16

I knew I was going to get screwed and so of course about the second or third song


20:21

100t of table that tell was about to get screwed too exactly so so uh it it ended


20:29

up that about probably two or three songs in of course the guitar went out you know the W you know the frequency


20:36

got got stomped on and so you know he picks the guitar up like this and uh and


20:42

I go over there and I take you know and I unplug the wireless and plug in the 100 foot cable and then he thinks it's


20:49

fun to start you know going around Mike stands and things like that and uh and he's laughing the whole time right so


20:57

but but again I tell that story just to say that there's there's so many times where you


21:03

have things that you have to have and you just kind of have to you know compromise with it and then this


21:09

obsession over over tone and things like that is really part of in a lot of these


21:15

guys not all of them but in a lot of them it's the same Obsession that made


21:21

them the great guitar players they are yes and so it's just like the way they're going to be over prepared for


21:27

the gig and they're to know everything backwards and forwards you know they're also being just as methodical when it


21:35

comes to their their rig and that they're going to be like oh this delay pedal is giving me a 3% boost when I


21:43

turn it on or worse it's giving me you know a 5% cut or something like that


21:48

when I turn it on or this tuner I think I'm losing you know 3% or whatever it is


21:55

but there's these little things that that and so then they spend all this time finding okay what tuner can I live


22:03

with because I have to have a tuner or am I not going to use a tuner and I'm going to use one of those clip on tuners on the guitar I'm going to I remember JD


22:09

did that a ton back when he was like Gable and the Marshall yeah like the tuner was there to be plugged in later


22:18

like when you needed it cuz it screwed things up yeah it's like the uh uh I


22:23

think there's a you know like an internet meme where someone's talking about uh you know D trucks and uh and


22:30

and he had this you know one of those old cord rack tuners on top of his amp and and uh guys ask him how do you get


22:37

your signal to the tuner and he unplugs the guitar from the an he plugs into the


22:42

tuner and then he unplugs it from the tuner and plugs it into the amp y so there is part of this that's just kind


22:49

of normal and part of kind of the same Obsession that makes someone but there's always times where it it it can go too


22:57

far yeah like I was I was thinking about it this morning coming in they're in the


23:03

same way that like if you're talking about like physically getting ready for


23:11

like a sporting of like if you play soccer or football or baseball or something like that that sort of


23:16

obsession that you would have with understanding the sport and in preparing


23:21

for it and like getting your body physically ready there's a lot of that that drives a lot of good behaviors


23:28

right but then you've got like this body dmor dysmorphia where every time you


23:34

look in the mirror you're like like I just can't see myself for who I am and


23:39

that manifests in all sorts of deleterious ways so I think there's a lot of people out there who have sort of


23:45

rig dysmorphia yeah and they look down at their rig and be like man if I could just get this thing then I would be


23:54

happy and then they get that thing and they're not happy cuz it moves on to some other thing it's like oh you know


24:00

if I could just spend I I've got to have wireless but if you know if I can't get


24:06

eight grand together for a sure aent I mean that would really do it like if if if I could just get to that level or if


24:12

I could get this amplifier and so there's this same sort of mental perversion of what could be a


24:20

helpful drive to really pay attention really care know your parts know you


24:27

know the tamber that you're going for but then you just get bogged down in


24:32

this very critical unproductively critical sort of way of looking at uh


24:39

your world to the point where now you're not even playing right so like you've stopped playing yeah because you're


24:45

worried like oh you know I was going to play today but instead I'm going to redo my board for the 18th time this month


24:54

and and you never play anymore yeah and and that's really the the kind of


24:59

extreme example of the where the the tone Obsession becomes unhealthy when it


25:05

becomes I'm spending so much more time obsessed over my tone when part of being


25:11

able to get a good sound is practicing and playing and gigging and things like that and so it's it's one of these


25:16

things where you almost want to try to have some kind of balance with it where you kind of you know where you expect


25:23

the obsession you know great maybe maybe just it is Obsession I think into like


25:31

again cynically I like what we do here at XTS


25:36

depends on the sort of striving that the average guitar player goes through


25:43

absolutely we need you folks out there to want to do a new rig if everybody was


25:49

happy with everything that they had forever nobody would make new pedals nobody would buy new pedals nobody would


25:55

need new rigs built we wouldn't need to talk about it on YouTube no we we'd all we'd all become accountants we' all we'd


26:02

all just be be happy and full full of joy right we would be happy I probably


26:07

that's probably a good thing we would all be happy and accountants but now we're but we don't know how to account


26:14

so uh we do this and we're willing to be miserable so so part of you know one of


26:22

the one of the things that's uh that you know and I'm sure you run into this also


26:27

is that you know I've done a lot of interviews and I'm around a lot of guitar players all the time and and so


26:34

you're always getting this this stuff is always being discussed and and one of


26:39

the things one of the problems is is that once you hear something you can't unhear it yes and so there's times when


26:47

you are just blissfully going along and you kind of even know that you have a


26:53

pedal that's doing something funky but you're just kind like I have on my board that y'all built built on both of them I


27:00

have a line six Echo Park on there and so it's true bypass but as soon as you turn it on the tone gets a little


27:08

thinner and it's like and I just kind of like H whatever you know I kind of knew


27:14

it but I didn't want to think but then it's like I didn't want to think I didn't want to think I was able to put it out of my mind I was able to put it


27:19

out of my mind and then and then you have friends that like uh I have a friend there's your problem right there


27:24

you have friends I've avoided that complication in my life by not having any by not having so then I have a


27:31

friend that his name rhymes with JD Simo and uh and so he's been obsessed about


27:36

tuners and so we've been talking about that and so uh yeah and and then you


27:42

know we started talking about delay puddles and things like that and so then I ended up you


27:47

know grab this so just as a a a little fun side


27:57

thing uh you know I threw this together you know over the weekend you know


28:02

because this was a uh a tuner that uh that JD felt like it was do a a better


28:09

bypass which you know well I mean I'll say JD


28:15

brought that the tuner Saga in here yeah and we listened


28:22

to tuners yeah and he's not he's not wrong right um does it matter to


28:30

everybody um I mean we've put a lot of tuners on boards and nobody's known the


28:35

difference um but we sat out there and played and how he plays what he was


28:42

playing the amp set as it was set there is a small difference and so we built


28:50

him a box to sort of switch things away this has a has a uh like a three-pole


28:55

double throw if I remember correctly so this is is the the least offensive and like when we look at those switches we


29:02

think like oh they're if you draw that switch like even this the schematic it's


29:07

got this thing that toggles between two sections and this part of the switch is supposed to be zero ohms and there's no


29:13

connection between the the one that it's not connected to in that pole but if you were to draw that in reality there'd be


29:20

capacitors going between each one and and there'd be a resistance here and


29:26

then there's a huge resistance between these two so you'd like to think of these things as sort of pure platonic


29:32

archetypal perfect things but they're not uh the but can you can you get


29:38

something that is honest enough that you can't detect it because


29:44

basically if you if you're a something and you can't identify it more than 50%


29:50

of the time then you don't know because a monkey could a monkey can get 50%


29:56

between two choices just randomly picking yeah uh so if you and we do that test here a lot we'll do it with Greg


30:03

who's got a great capacity for like oral memory and and and detection and we know


30:11

that if we get it to where none of us in the shop can can tell more than 50% of


30:16

the time then you can't tell yeah sometimes you'll get it sometimes you won't get it and once you're to that


30:22

point uh you know it's it's ambiguous enough that they're close enough that


30:28

you can't detect it now like we've talked about before that's for that one


30:33

scenario that you're testing it in maybe that's clean guitar now do you do it


30:39

again on lead on Rhythm double stops like that sort of thing yeah and then


30:45

whether you have another effect on yeah yeah all of a sudden it becomes a different thing so I just kind of put


30:51

this together kind of as a just kind of a fun minimalist thing where it's basically you know three effects and a


30:58

and a tuner and they're all supposed to be you know pretty decent as far as the bypass is on them with the cuz I'm


31:06

assuming these are relay bypasses on the on the strans yeah yeah I mean it's like


31:11

we say pretty decent and it's like now I don't know anything anymore but yes


31:16

these are relay bypass so this switch is really just like a you know the same


31:23

like functional switch it's not a keyboard switch but just like a keyboard switch it's just closed when I press it


31:30

yeah pressing pressing this switch reroutes signals inside the body of this switch same for this switch this switch


31:37

has no audio going through it it sends basically a signal to a tiny little


31:43

computer inside that tells a relay that is handling the audio to do the thing


31:48

and that should be that should be pretty good but if if you look at a relay the


31:55

way it's physically constructed is the contact are all super close together you can have more capacitive interaction so


32:04

uh and again I don't say that to undermine anybody's uh you know faith in the


32:10

system right but just to highlight the fact that it's just a really cruel world


32:16

out there and the final Arbiter is how


32:21

how it you know how it sounds to you how it plays how it feels and that sort of


32:30

overarching philosophy of how obsessed or how much care am I going


32:38

to what's good enough yeah everybody's got to decide what's enough yeah


32:43

so let's get let's get concrete as far as like what do you guys you know recom


32:49

like when you're putting rigs together I mean do you like to have like one buffer and then everything else is going


32:55

through Loops or something like that let's say you're building a rack or you know like what what's your ideal


33:00

scenario when you're building a rig and you're thinking about buffers and loops and different things like that yeah we


33:06

actually tend not to think about it in those terms because we don't want to


33:15

necessarily apply the same methodology to everybody so this may sound like a


33:21

copout but if you come in and you want to build something our first question will be are you happy


33:28

with what you've got right and if you say yes I love this then we are going to


33:34

do everything in our power to not change anything right if you say man I feel


33:42

like when I play like it's it's like it gets a little darker and I feel like the


33:47

more stuff that I add it gets even darker I'm like okay well let's let's try a buffer yeah maybe you like that or


33:56

uh you know they'll be other things like I've got a vintage dyom and I like it


34:03

when it's not you know I feel like when I put that in the rig when I have the compressor on it's great but when I turn


34:08

it off it sounds terrible yeah okay yeah okay well that makes from experience we


34:14

have a heuristic for okay maybe we need to True bypass that or put it in a true bypass Loop if you don't want to screw


34:19

up something vintage so we try to be very responsive and and don't fix what


34:26

isn't broken and and or create a pro because potentially you're going to create a problem if they're happy with


34:31

the sound of it going through these buffers or true or whatever and then all


34:36

of a sudden you decide to fix it and all of a sudden it sounds or feels drastically different than it did before


34:43

then you've created a problem you've created an unhappy customer yeah and and then it can


34:49

be difficult to claw well one again it's the psychology thing and I know you've interacted with this before if not


34:56

directly with people you worked for I know you've heard stories where when you've built something new and you bring


35:03

it to somebody that first impression for most guitar players most artist types is


35:09

super critical if you crash and burn on that first impression it is very very


35:15

difficult to come back so we want to when we deliver something we want it to


35:21

feel like immediately like a huge win and that's not to say that tweaks don't come after the fact as people spend more


35:28

time with something and maybe you know like hey this is a little different can we try something here yeah we'll try a couple things but if if you if somebody


35:36

plugs something in it's like and they're like this is not it uh that's pretty


35:41

tough to win the day after that cuz the the seed that you know there's this


35:48

Inception of it's not going to be right yeah because it wasn't yeah so that the


35:54

psychology of that is it's it's when all this Mojo stuff becomes real is once the


36:02

player gets involved and that seed of Doubt or suspicion or even potentially


36:08

distrust comes in that all that tropical fish carbon comp true bypass Bufford all


36:15

that stuff gets crystallized into reality because if you don't feel secure


36:20

you don't play secure if you don't play secure you don't sound good and now all that Mojo stuff results in a roundabout


36:27

way through the player's brain results in them not sounding as good well now it's real yeah and it works conversely


36:34

as well if you feel like everything it's like after you've washed the car and you changed the oil you've done everything


36:40

you do to be a good car owner and you get in that car and you're like this is is Good As It Gets that's right this is a fantastic car I love this car I'll


36:46

never sell this car but you know that uh that's there's an analog for that in


36:52

playing and you're like yeah this this is great I'm I couldn't be happier and


36:57

that's that's a good place to be and you know there's the the psychology of of having a piece of gear that breaks on


37:04

you during a gig and if it does it twice it's kind of over it can be it


37:11

can't you know unless you just love it and you're just you're just willing to to keep going after it but we've got


37:16

some guys who are in in abusive relationships with Deluxe memory men yes yes I can seems to be


37:24

that's they just keep going back to them even though it keeps it keeps hurting them real bad keeps hurting them shut


37:30

down during the the gig we've got guys who like I want to put a deluxe memory man and we're find we're buddies with


37:37

you know this client I'm like I'm like do you really want to do this I feel like like a counselor it's like listen


37:45

don't go back to him he is not treating you right you deserve better don't try


37:52

this Benson delay please this is a good man yes this w't be faithful that's


37:57

right he's going to treat you right he will not beat you during the show right so you then we start doing things like


38:04

putting him in true bypass loops and stuff like that which is something like a restraining order I guess you can you


38:10

can just dump it at at any point it's it's but yeah we so we have but I think


38:16

in general we've certainly had examples of guys and gals who've who have had


38:22

stuff that failed on them and they were like super invested in it and they've


38:27

ditched the maker like oh yeah XY and like I don't want any pedal that's made


38:33

by this company anymore and it really is kind of unfounded um because switches break and


38:39

Jacks break and and you know having an instrument you step on is going to have


38:46

issues uh but some yeah bad switch uh case in point um but it's like


38:55

you've it's once burned you're you can be like you just can't recover yeah some


39:02

people can yeah so I'll just tell this real briefly so this says bad switch on


39:08

it and that's because um I was I was doing some some work for Reggie Young's


39:14

Widow and so Reggie kind of had the feeling if anything broke if a pedal


39:20

broke he did not repair it he just he just bought another one so if a volume


39:26

pedal so was that for a or was that that was for his own like peace of mind and because he was like a


39:32

double or triple scale you know session musician it just wasn't worth it yeah it wasn't worth it and so he would just you


39:38

know when if the volume pedal had any scratchiness to it he just bought another ear Ball volume pedal if


39:43

anything went wrong he just bought another one and put it to the side well anyway when we I was helping her go


39:50

through some things and you know I saw this one and it said bad switch on it


39:55

and uh and she said you know she said if you want that you can take it and I said


40:01

okay and so was it a bad switch no it the switch wasn't bad so I don't know


40:06

you know and I and I've tried to make it not work yeah but it's it's worked every time for me so anyway I think it's a


40:12

wonder these switches work at all they are sort of a Rube Goldberg machine yes


40:19

like three contacts all slamming together around the same time and all


40:24

that even the way they go like clack clack yeah it's it's not it's not confidence inspiring well and that that


40:31

goes back to I mean weren't these designed for uh to be passing AC signal they're not even designed to be passing


40:37

delicate DC or yeah I mean who I I don't know I mean certainly their their Market


40:43

use at this point has it's got to be pedal people using most of them um I


40:50

think these were designed to be hand actuated they weren't even designed to be foot switches oh really well I certainly would believe you yeah yeah I


40:58

you know it's um it's there just so much going on in


41:03

that switch like i' I've broke them open to look at them and stuff it's like part of me is again like I said it's it's a


41:09

wonder they ever work and they're rated most of the ones that I've seen are


41:15

rated for like 10,000 hits like your keyboard will be rated at a million right um because it's such a


41:23

comparatively simple uh device so these things are going to fail uh it's just a matter of


41:31

time I don't sometimes they fail gracefully which in my mind is kind they


41:36

give you a warning yeah um sometimes they don't um you know it's


41:43

just the whole system is built on these some of them are very backwards


41:50

sort of things and we take for granted that they even doing what they're supposed to do yeah and and foot switch


41:57

can be like that like oh it's a switch it's a hard switch it's the same thing as a piece of wire um and it is for the


42:04

most part it just kind of depends on how microscopically you want to look at it or measure it


42:11

[Music] yeah so if we had to distill this conversation down and we had to uh you


42:17

know like a uh an eighth graders you know little uh little paper and you got to have the uh the closing paragraph


42:25

that's just so you know perfectly tied up it seems like there's there's a psychological aspect where you you kind


42:32

of have to find your own uh areas where you stay on the road and don't get into


42:37

the ditch of not giving a crap and also caring so much that you're not you know


42:44

that you're only concerned about your gear and you're not concerned about the playing or or anything else yeah and


42:50

then you know what else I think that's a great place to start I think everything


42:56

does matter yeah uh to one extent or the other if I've often said you know uh a


43:05

man with an argument is never at the mercy of a man with an experience so if


43:11

somebody comes in and tells me you know this thing is this object X is doing why


43:20

I have to say okay I don't understand how that could be but let's look at it


43:26

and see see if it makes sense if if you if if it's real to you then it's real enough for us to look at so there's that


43:35

there everything is real there is a point of diminishing returns I think in


43:41

general like you said there the obsessiveness that any obsessiveness


43:49

that's productive in the sense that it sort of moves you along in your hobby of guitar or vocation of guitar uh that's


43:57

sort of driving it uh or you know giving you some ambition like for improving and


44:03

playing cuz sometimes the gear will drive that you get excited about a new piece of gear and you find yourself well


44:08

I played for three hours today because I got this new thing well that's a good thing yeah but the other side of that is


44:15

this sort of dysmorphia thing where it can be paralyzing for some folks where


44:22

what what are the settings that I should be using for this box is this the right box you know should I be doing this and


44:29

then they're not playing and they're spending time you know on Instagram or forums things like that trying to figure


44:36

out what they're doing wrong when the biggest thing that could probably use a tweak is is actually playing the stuff


44:45

and so for for those folks I would just exhort to you know there is a point


44:51

where you can you can let this go and there's a bunch of counter examples out


44:57

there of guys playing what is probably quantitatively crap gear just


45:02

garbage and uh and they sound great doing it yeah and so I do I need this is


45:10

this bringing me joy or is this you know kind of bringing me pain is this is this


45:16

breeding content or discontent and so I think the obsession thing to actually sum it up and not


45:23

draun on about it it's good as long as it's productive thebody feels like this is making guitar


45:30

kind of suck for me I'm enjoying this less I think it's probably time to make


45:36

an adjustment uh and and make a make a change because that always kind of stinks to because we'll have famous


45:43

people come in and they're at some point they're not having fun at all anymore


45:50

and it's just about this problem of guitar and and all that and that's


45:57

that's what I feel like we're here we're here to make that problem go away so it can strictly be fun yeah so you go and


46:05

do shows and and and be happy and and give those people that are watching a vacation yeah CU that's what they're


46:11

there for they didn't pay hundreds of dollars to to have a a disgruntled uh you know musician just mad about mad


46:18

about everything yeah yeah it doesn't make it doesn't make sense and I get and we've talked about this before we


46:25

work uh uh with a lot of folks who are doing this for a living which


46:32

necessarily invites compromise like I was thinking this morning like I


46:38

remember uh Tim Pierce was telling us is like what a thing s what a pedal what an


46:44

amp sounds like in a room is irrelevant to me all that all that matters what's


46:49

real is when I put a mic on it and record it what does it sound like I


46:54

don't basically I don't know what it sound sounds like until I do that because that's his Target application


47:01

and that's fair yeah and so if you if you're playing live and it's got to be miked it's what it is in the PA have you


47:08

know what it is in your ears because that's a huge wrinkle that and and not


47:14

ideal you know monitoring thing we've we've already made these huge


47:20

compromises that doesn't mean that we shouldn't care but I think it does frame like it gives us boundaries for


47:29

what are we going to what are we really going to examine here so like if somebody could write it off and be like


47:35

well it's you know I'm listening on inar monitors I don't know why I'm bothering at all you know I don't know why I'm


47:42

picking spending so much time picking amps or or whatever and I I think I don't think that's true no and and and


47:50

no matter whether using wedges or or in ear or whatever you know it's it's having that holistic approach of like


47:57

how do I make it sound where you know I can be happy with it you know where does it maybe it doesn't sound like it does


48:03

when I sitting in front of the amp you know playing but I'm able to find a good sound that I can listen to and I can


48:11

work with it and I can be creative with it instead of being obsessing the whole time this doesn't sound like when I'm


48:17

sitting in front of the amp with my just you know my ears yeah yeah yeah yeah


48:22

totally yeah well guys thank you so much for watching thank thank you to Barry and all the guys at exact a pleasure


48:29

always always good to have you here it's it's a it's a treat thank you thank you right bye-bye