rhmcfarland
New member
Did Richie Blackmore use stock Quarter Pounder pickups in his Strat? OR, were they modified in some way?
Thanks,
Randy
Thanks,
Randy
Hmm Weel I guess in Stone cold he used stock pickups, I doubt if the quater pound was out back then also I am sure he had stock pickups on the MAHINE HEAD album. Ritchie is one of my fav guitarist. He was my first guitar hero. I still cant figure out why ?why? no more Rainbowrhmcfarland said:Yeah, its a more meaty type of tone.
Interesting that he favored the AC30 for studio gigs. The lead tone on Stone Cold, for instance, is very crystalline and pure sounding. Wonder if that was a QP or regular strat pickup. I have always loved his lead tone on Pictures Of Home from Machine Head. That, again, is a Strat into a Hornby Skewes treble booster, into an AC30. Its supposedly an older, non-Top Boost version.
ArtieToo said:Wow . . . I used to do the same thing with an old Teac, thats still sitting down here below my bench now. I also used the 3-head function on it to get a really nice analog tape echo.
I didn't realize I was being innovative. I just thought I was poor. :laugh2:
Yup I was sure of that. If I am not mistaken its only off recently he has been using the QPs, of course he has used other replacement pick ups , but they were never on the first Deep Purple albums and Rainbow albums.Lewguitar said:Blackmore used a standard Strat and a 200 watt Marshall.
Lew
His signature guitar has Lace sensors as of now of recently, but I remmmber cheking out his signature strat around 2yrs ago or a year ago on the Fender website. and it had the QPs.AdmiralB said:He used QPs at least as early as '83. He can be seen with them in videos from Straight Between the Eyes, and Perfect Strangers. He used them up until the mid-'90s when he started using Bardens. His signature guitar has Lace Sensors, of all things.
The amps were Majors with the preamps cascaded, a rather crude master volume. And the tape deck as Lew mentions. Probably because Majors have less gain than 50W/100W Marshalls.
Lewguitar said:I used to do exactly the same things in the days before the Maestro Fuzz, Big Muff and all the rest even existed!
Used to use my mom's Wollensak Tape Recorder in exactly the same way as Blackmore.
Jocelyn said:His signature guitar has Lace sensors as of now of recently, but I remmmber cheking out his signature strat around 2yrs ago or a year ago on the Fender website. and it had the QPs.
BlueGuitar said:So what did your mother have to say about that? :dance:
I plugged my Silvertone 1482 into the foot pedal of my mother's sewing machine to get the famous "brown" sound many years before EVH. You could also use it to adjust the volume a little bit. It worked great until the output transformer burned up... :smack:
My next door neighbor would take his Wollensak tape recorder outside with the PA speaker turned on and use feedback to communicate with the frogs (they even talked back!) But it wasn't his mother's tape recorder- I think he stole it from school!
For overdrive I used a tremelo box I made from a kit I bought at Lafayette Electronics- you'd turn the speed all of the way down and it would boost the signal like an LPB...
Memories of the good old days, ah!
Yeah I remmeber that clearly, but I also remmeber seeing a model with just two QPs just like the one with the Lace Sensors, but then I cld be wrong too.Anyway Ritchie seems to be interested in ancient music these daysAdmiralB said:There used to be two signature guitars, a Japanese import with two QPs and a fake middle pickup which was (still is) made in Japan and basically a copy of his circa-'83 white Strat...and the USA Custom Shop neckthrough with two Lace Sensors, no middle pickup, and a Roland MIDI option.
Fender imported the Japanese one for a few years in the late '90s (and thus it appeared on their site), but you can still get them from Ishibashi.