Jon talks guitars and production
Saint Agnes - pic Terry Tyldesley
Loving the P-90 sound
Jon is very selective in finding the right guitar gear for his fuzz-laden sound, but isn’t dazzled by the most expensive or cool-seeming kit.
My guitar is nothing that special, but it’s mine and I think that’s important, the best tools are the ones you don’t really notice you’re using. I’m so comfortable with it and it just feels right and I know how to get the best out of it. It’s an Epiphone Dot with different pickups. No idea exactly what they are as they were replaced before I bought it, but the neck humbucker has been replaced with a P-90 of some sort.
Saint Agnes - pic Terry Tyldesley
I love the P-90 sound, it sounds so metallic and open to me, it feels like you can get more subtleties in your playing out of a guitar with P-90s. In fact I’m considering putting one in the bridge position too. The nut has been replaced as well as the original plastic one broke, its now something a bit fancier, some kind of bone/horn I believe, but I don’t think it makes any noticeable sonic difference, its just better at holding it’s tuning now which is the main thing.
Epiphone Dot
It just feels right
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Fuzz pedal love
Jon has been working his way through fuzz pedals.
I try not to get too bogged down in having ‘must have’ gear as I like to think I could pretty much re-create all the sounds I need with a fairly basic setup, but I will say that I have two fuzzes that I love. One is a Zoom UF-01 Ultra Fuzz. It’s the least cool fuzz ever in terms of gear nerd points, but it’s the only one I have used that cuts through live and doesn’t just turn to mush.
Zoom Ultra Fuzz UF-01
Cuts through live and doesn’t turn to mush
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When recording however I love the Woolly Mammoth clone I managed to get hold of, it’s great for the super fizzy lead guitar stuff like on Old Bone Rattle as well as the bass on the same song. Sadly it gets totally drowned out live, that’s where my trusty old Zoom comes in.
It turns out that the Mammoth clone was made by one of Jon’s friends and when Saint Agnes have a bass player for their live shows, they play using it.
Saint Agnes - pic Terry Tyldesley
Making sure the guitars don’t clash
Jon says that he and Kitty have a big collection of stompboxes between them. One of the pedals they use a lot is the Digitech Bad Monkey, with its shades of the Ibanez Tubescreamer. It was especially useful for recording.
We used it when we needed a different tone to the RAT to help push the mid range so the guitars didn’t clash.
90% of the guitars had a RAT on them. Often used really subtly as I just love the cut and jangle it adds. It feels properly dirty without becoming impossible to hear the riff.
I’d love an Octavia pedal, something to really get Hendrixy with.
DigiTech Bad Monkey
To help push the mid range
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Pro Co RAT
I love the cut and jangle it adds
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Virtual and gigging amps
Jon and Kitty are big fans of Native Instruments Guitar Rig.
We used this as our virtual guitar amp (most of it is the Fender Twin setting or occasionally an AC30 setting) as we recorded in a tiny flat in East London so couldn’t mic an amp. We then ran various pedals through it to get our sounds. We also used Guitar Rig for the bass in the same way and in the mix put it on everything. Keys, vocals and harmonica. Guitar Rig is amazing.
Native Instruments Guitar Rig
We used this as our virtual guitar amp and in the mix put it on everything
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When it comes to gigs, Jon uses a very real Vox AC30 CC2 for his ferocious guitar sound.
Saint Agnes - pic Terry Tyldesley
I use a Vox AC30 CC2. I was just using it live, but recently we recorded some demos with it and it sounded great. It’s totally stock, I’ve not done anything to it as people often change the valves and swap the speakers in these. Maybe it’d make it better? I don’t know, I like it as it is. I use both the channels on it at the same time with it fairly driven and the reverb up on full. For cleaner sounds I turn down my guitar volume knob and for more distortion I use the zoom ultra-fuzz of an EHX lpb-1 if I need something that’s just louder. The only downside is it weighs a tonne!
Vox AC30
I use both the channels at the same time
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Every plug in was free
Saint Agnes used Cubase Elements 6 for recording, “the simplest version”. When it came to mixing their tracks, there was one rule only!
Every plug in we used was free (not pirated, genuinely free, Guitar Rig came free with our soundcard). Blockfish compressor got used a lot and a whole load of plug-ins from Variety Of Sound.
I’m a fan of limitations in mixing other wise things get ridiculous and the free stuff out there now is amazing. There are lots of cool expensive things too, but we recorded really quickly as an experiment to see what we could do with minimal computer gear.
Saint Agnes - pic Terry Tyldesley
Studio microphones
Kitty and Jon have a few microphones, but there’s one Jon’s still after.
Right now if someone bought me a Shure Green Bullet mic for my harmonica I’d not complain, nothing beats that raunchy kind of sound.
One Shure mic they already have though is the SM7B - which was their go-to mic for recording the new tracks.
We used it on all the vocals, acoustic guitars and tambourine. A Sennheiser e840 was used for double tracking Kitty’s vocals and as a second mic on the acoustic guitars.
Shure SM7B
Used it on all the vocals, acoustic guitars and tambourine
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Jon’s inspired by classic rock artists, and people who break so-called studio rules.
I’ve always loved the way Trent Reznor works in the studio, never sticking to traditional sounds and despite the music being modern he’ll often have a really trashy drumkit sound or no bass on a track; things which are anathema in most modern productions where everything is about the pristine top end and kick drums that knock you over.
The emotional intensity of NIN has always resonated with me too. Outside of that it’s the classic rock you’d expect, Hendrix, The Who, The Doors etc. Their music and legacy has survived for a reason, they were simply innovators who were better than the rest. I find that inspiring. Oh and Pantera, I grew up on metal and it must have rubbed off on me somewhere even if it’s just my refusal to smile in promo shots.
Electro-Harmonix LPB-1
For solo boosts
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Jim Dunlop Cry Baby Wah Wah Pedal
World’s best-selling pedal
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Digitech Whammy Pedal
Two octave pitch-shift in either direction, and everything in between
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Boss Tremolo TR-2
Classic tremolo effects, right under your feet.
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Marshall RF-1 Reflector
Stereo Reverb pedal with optional expression pedal input
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