Guitar Nerd Moment, or It’s a Small World

A couple of days ago I posted a picture of one of my guitars that had a caption mentioning Eric Clapton’s “woman tone”.  I don’t think I mentioned anything about why I was thinking of that.

First, Eric Clapton in the 1960’s is a tone chasing guitarist’s role model.  Give him a Gibson guitar and a Marshal amplifier and he will make sounds that, if you are smart, you’re going to want to copy.  He was innovative and experimental and inspiring.  Eric Clapton in the 1970’s and 80’s is the exact opposite.  I don’t know of anyone who has ever listened to Money and Cigarettes and said, ooh I wanna sound like that!

Anyway, when Eric was in his 20’s he was probably a little full of himself (people called him god) and sometimes he would do things that were a little over the top.  One of those things, in my book at least, was naming one of his guitar tones.  Yup.  In 1967 while playing with Cream he used a tonal technique on the Disraeli Gears album that he called “woman tone”.  Why?  I don’t know.  It was probably something that in today’s social climate would probably sound unbelievably sexist.  I don’t know why and I don’t want to know why.

Probably the best known usage is in the guitar solo from Sunshine of Your Love, which also bears a remarkable resemblance to the melody from Strangers in the Night, but I digress:

Anyway, achieving “woman tone” is pretty simple and even a chump like me can do it.  I don’t often, but every so often the spirit of Disraeli Gears will take me and I’ll use it.  A few nights ago I was sitting in my room adding lead guitar parts to a couple of RPM songs and without realizing I was going there, I totally went there.  One eight bar (or so) solo used the ol’ “woman tone”.

Today there was a “wow, what a small world” moment for me.  That Pedal Show, the youtube show that I watch pretty religiously every week and has taught me more about making my guitar sound less shitty than any other source I’ve come across in my 34 years of playing, put out a new episode called “12 Ways to User Your Guitar’s Controls”.  One of those 12 ways to uses your guitars controls was “woman tone”.

I am using a lot of quotation marks in this post, and I am using the incorrect punctuation for all of them.  Suck it, grammar!

The “woman tone” discussion starts at 13:30 and it sounds better when Mick does it on his ES-335 than when I do it on my Les Paul.

As for the rest of the episode, I had already come up with most of the two-humbucker tricks on my own back in the 80’s.  The single coil stuff doesn’t really apply to me as I only own one guitar with single coils and if it weren’t for COVID-19 I would have sold it by now.  I use the trick with using the pickup switch and the two volume knobs to go from clean to dirty all the time, and the mixing the two pickups together thing once in a while.  The kill switch?  I drive Lizardfish nuts with that whenever the opportunity arrises.

Anyway, I just thought it was funny that I recorded a little “woman tone” this week and then saw a tutorial on using it.  It’s a small world after all.

In closing, Clapton used it on the leads on this song too.  It’s not nearly as popular a song, but it’s a personal favorite.

Gear Inspiration

Man, youtube… every once in a while you’ll see something and it will just click for you.

I just watched an episode of That Pedal Show where they talk about delay pedals.  I have a really nice digital delay on my pedal board right now, a Wampler Faux Tape Echo, and I have been using the crap out of it.  I use it’s tap tempo switch and it’s subdivision switch and I get dotted eighth note delays and I make all sorts of groovy The Edge style rhythmic patters and it’s just so much damn fun.

It’s a great delay pedal but it doesn’t really do oscillation.  Oscillation is when the pedal feeds back on itself and makes all sorts of glorious noise.  If you mess with the delay time control it changes the pitch of the noise and makes it even gloriouser.  I have a really cheap analog delay that I am not currently using.  It’s from one of those generic, low cost, Chinese companies.  Donner, I think?  A Donner Yellow Fall?  I think that’s what it’s called.  After watching this video I am going to put it on the board too so that I can have noisy fun and still have the digital tap tempo and subdivision stuff.

In all my years of playing electric guitar I’ve almost always had a delay pedal, but I’ve never been a delay pedal guy.  Now I have all this youtube silliness to inspire me to do new and different (and yes, goofy and noisy) things.

Thanks, That Pedal Show!

 

Guitar Tone School

I have learned more about making my guitar sound un-shitty from these two guys over the last couple of months than in all the reading and playing and studying and experimenting I’ve done with electric guitars since 1987.