Joe Bonamassa thinks Eddie Van Halen wouldn’t have been as “cool” if he’d used a Quad Cortex instead of vintage analogue gear: “People hear with their eyes”

Joe Bonamassa thinks Eddie Van Halen wouldn’t have been as “cool” if he’d used a Quad Cortex instead of vintage analogue gear: “People hear with their eyes”

Joe Bonamassa has been questioning if modern gear looks as cool as good old fashioned analogue rigs, and believes people “hear with their eyes” to a certain extent.
The blues guitarist and gear obsessive’s home gear museum, known as Nerdville, holds thousands of rare and vintage gear gems, with over 600 guitars. The collection has grown so much that he’s even slowing down to avoid reaching “a saturation point”.

READ MORE: “You’re not going to get any sustain”: Analog Man legend Mike Piera thinks people who use digital amps and in-ear monitors are missing out on a huge part of guitar tone

With such an avid love of gear, Bonamassa may be somewhat biased, but he poses an interesting question, and he’s not alone in quizzing how smaller and modernised set ups can sometimes take away from the visual aspect of putting on a gig or affect the sound overall.
During his appearance on the No Cover Charge podcast, he uses Eddie Van Halen as an example: “Instead of a 68 plexi with a laydown transformer, a Univox [EC-80A Tape Echo], and MXR Phase 45, a [Marshall] basket weave cabinet, and a Boogie Bodies Strat, imagine if the same Eddie Van Halen showed up with a Neural [Quad Cortex] and a Suhr.”
He asks, “Is it as cool? I’m not knocking John Suhr, I’m not knocking Neural… Great invention, but I just pose the question. People hear with their eyes. It’s the whole thing.”

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Interestingly, not all artists believe smaller rigs impact the visual aspect of live shows. Chad Zaemisch, guitar tech for James Hetfield of Metallica, actually feels that a large wall of amps is not missed at their shows. In an interview with Guitar World, Zaemisch explained how their one-off Freeze ‘Em All concert in Antarctica in 2013 caused their transition.
“We were kind of forced to come up with a solution for playing a show in Antarctica where we couldn’t have speakers. For environmental reasons, they didn’t want any noise pollution. Matt Picone from Fractal came and got all our sounds started. It was definitely a learning curve for us and the band, but once we got through that, everybody started to look at how convenient it was.”
He went on to add, “Everybody’s all about content these days, and not a lot of people want to watch a band stand in front of their amp line with nothing else going on. Now we can use large video screens. It opens up a lot more opportunities to do different things.”
The post Joe Bonamassa thinks Eddie Van Halen wouldn’t have been as “cool” if he’d used a Quad Cortex instead of vintage analogue gear: “People hear with their eyes” appeared first on Guitar.com | All Things Guitar.

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