Re: Rockman X100
Yep, and I still have it, with the AC adapter, headphones, etc., although I never tried it on batteries. Back when the X-100 was new, in the early 80's, I think, they were the rage for practice. I remember the first time I heard one. I was at a friend's house, and another of his friends came over with a guitar case. He pulled out an electric, plugged in two sets of headphones, and went around the room jamming on some Steve Miller song, Big Jetliner, I think, and when I heard it, I thought it was amazing, since I had just begun playing a few years earlier. So, as soon as I had the money saved, I bought one. I ran it into the rear of a Roland DEP-5 multi-effects processor that did three (WOW!) effects at once, and it set me back $800 in 1987 dollars. Things have come a long way.
You could get some good sounds, high gain, with the screw on the back set to the max, and the chorus off. Want to hear what can be done with one in the studio? Listen to Jeff Beck on Rod Steward's "People Get Ready." One of the all-time great solos in my book. I read in Guitar Player interview with Beck (cover story,) where he stated, "That solo was just my Strat straight into the Rockman, and then into the board." He recorded the solo last before Rod laid down the vocals. Obviously, the engineers played with that signal, but that was the front end--Beck's fingertips, his Strat, the Rockman, and a cable into the board. Man, it rips. Of course, it's Jeff Beck. What would one expect? That was the last tour he did with Rod. Rod drug him all across America and Europe to play one solo on one song during the whole concert. Beck stated he was so completely bored halfway through the tour that he told Rod he needed more to do, or he was going home. I guess Rod had no other use for JEFF BECK on his tour, so he went home. I guess Rod hired someone else to play Beck's part in "People Get Ready," which was probably the show closer since it was so popular at the time of that tour. Rod made a mistake, but probably saved a load of money.
I remember being quite surprised when I read that, since I'd had my X-100 and New-American Strat ( first one made in 1985 after CBS sold in March of that year) for quite a while when I read that, and I'd never gotten a sound like that out of it for lead. Of course, I'm not Jeff Beck either. I still have the guitar and the Rockman (just found it all in a box when I moved into a new house.)
I've always wondered what happened to that signal once it left his Rockman though. Something had to be processed somewhere. The solo just sings. He changes key up a half step in the middle of the solo. He stated he did that so, "Rod could just take off." It's right before he starts vocalizing and doing what Rod does at the end of that song. Good stuff. Go listen to it. You will not regret it if you like searing leads with lots of dynamics, and using fingers instead of picks.
I was taking Classical lessons, fingerpicking, of course, so I used my fingers on the electric. Skin can give a lot more dynamics, without that plastic snap of a pick, and then there's always the nails--God's pick of choice. Down strokes mostly, but when they're good and strong, alternating and upstrokes are a snap. That's how Jeff gets all those crazy sounds. They're in his fingers.
If you want to take a walk on the 80's side, then you have to have one of these. The sounds you can get out of it, especially when mixed with sounds you love today, and then levels set in the mix, where I blend up to eight stereo setups, well, you can get any sound you hear in your head. Pardon me Blackstar, but that's really the only way to get the sound you hear in your head. Take all your favorite setups for lead. Track them all, and mix, mix, mix. It's like cooking a recipe. Only you know what spices taste good to you, and you blend them until you get what you want. To disregard the sound of a well-recorded real Scholz Rockman X-100, not the Dunlop knock-offs, would be like cooking without salt or pepper. Add a dose to your sound. It has it's own two-channel place on my board--always!