As a touring guitarist in the 80's my rig consisted of a Les Paul into a JCM 800 with a Boss EQ and a DM-2 Delay. The only big racks I was interested in were in the front row:)
I love how Michael Angelo also immediately runs through his signal chain and brags about being in stereo..... and then immediately goes into a seizure with a whammy bar.
7:32 still to this day, this is the 1st guitar that comes to my mind, when I hear the word guitar. Still the most gorgeous guitars that have ever been built ☺
Hands down one of the most entertaining videos I've seen in months!! Vintage gear, reaction shots and a healthy dose of grease!! Please do a part 2 RJ!!
When the steve lukather starlicks video came out, I, aged about 15 or 16, went and bought an emg 85. I still have it, it sounds nothing like a modern 85, and it absolutely rages.
These rigs are hysterical. Your reaction shots are great. I like this format and if you can find more topics like this, you should make more. Props for that Uncle Larry shirt.
Mr. Bouchard - I'm betting you've seen a few insane rigs in your time....Also some of the drum setups from the 70s and 80s could be pretty intense also.
I absolutely LOVE Steve Lukather’s playing. He probably my all time favorite guitarist. But that little diddy he did at 8:45 is what we used to call a coke twitch. Kinda like a goosebump shiver. Hey, I’m not knocking him for it. It was the 80’s man! For many of us it was winter all year long. You know....always “snowing”. I remember watching this video when it came out and we used to laugh because all through it you would hear him do his “second wave sniffle”. So happy he (and a lot of us) cleaned ourselves up since.
I got a wicked Jackson 1 unit rack pre amp from the 80's. got 2 pre amp tubes and a button on the front that says SHRED! Couldnt ask for anything more in life!
At the height of my rig in the 80s, I had two 18 space racks full of processors, eqs, delays, reverb units, Dunlop rack wah system, and a midi switching system. Eight Peavey Butcher 4x12s, and eight Peavey Butcher heads. I had 10 guitars onstage, a Yamaha DX7 with soundbank, electric acousting on a seperate stand, and a custOM mini B.C.Rich Mockingbird mounted on a mic stand set up for slide. Damn, I really miss the 80s...
I saw one in the 90s where Billy Gibbons said he goes on tour with a pretty minimalist rig, but at every stop he checks out the local pawn shops and guitar stores and by the end of the tour he's got all kinds of new pedals and guitars
Having started on guitar in the early 80s, this clip was really a scream! The vintage strat all hacked to bit to fit all this insane amount of stuff - wild! The Bradshaw gigs were insane! Over the top! Really loved the video - great choice! Very fun to watch and to remind us of the 80's excess.
Luke with that Valley Arts guitar and all that grease, not to mention the killer opening jam he played on his Star Licks lesson was so badass! Fun video R.J. nice to relive the golden years, I think my back still hurts from hauling my rig around back in the day!
Lukather's is the total LA session archetype. He was like the proving ground that so many others followed. I can't say that it was my favorite thing, but it is THE thing. Brad Gillis' tone on "Speak of the Devil" is insanely good. It has that stereo'd sound to it. The guys as Atomic Guitar Works in Phoenix were still installing the wireless units into his guitars within the last 10 years! They did the same for Joel when he was in Night Ranger. Michael Angelo can't have had as much bread as either of the other guys, hence the pedals. Side Note - remember when Vai came out with the 2-necked heart guitar in a David Lee Roth video? We were all like, Michael Angelo has GOT to be PISSED!!! Love this vid!
I did the studio set ups for Luke in the 80's and 90's. It was Bob Bradshaws fault... It was ever evolving.. We had issues often... Luke and issues don't mix.
We need more of these!! This was great. It brings back memories of watching the old 80s dudes rigs in the clubs growing up back in the mid 2000s. Made me want rackmounts and stacks...Now I'm getting ready to sell my 120w head and 4x12 for a 50w and 2x12. How times have changed.
Love this new format, RJ! Please do more. Michael Angelo's hair stole the show for me, but if I had to pick a favorite piece of gear it has to be the tri-chorus. I had the Keeley Dyno My Roto with a tri-chorus mode on it that instantly put me in the 80s, but now regretting selling it after watching this.
RJ's reaction on micheal angelo's dive bomb is the face of my Filipino mom when I told her i dont want to be a nurse and proceeded to say "ar u stooped?"
This was awesome! I still have my 2 1989 Westones with reverse headstocks that I airbrushed and played gigs with. Good times. This was awesome to watch. I had the George Lynch video for sure, maybe a couple others too. Remember those cassette tapes that broke down the guitar solos at half speed so you could learn to play them? I had lots of those, mostly Van Halen, and that was how I learned to play Eruption. I think I some for Dokken too. Great memories!
George Lynch is a toolbag. He had a fit, berated, publicly humiliated and generally abused his stage crew, threw down his guitar and walked out of a show, because he was having a technical difficulty with his rig. He still owes me $23.
11:45 Those Korg Modular pedal boards are so ridiculously 80's that I have to have one. I do think the idea of being able to move effects around in order is something that was a great idea back then.
LOL That was a fantastic video! I hope there's more to come! I mean, you should make it a series please! Bring back that phenomenal 80's gear and vibe!
This was the best video yet. I was instantly back just out of High School attempting to learn all I could about guitar, and totally remember watching these instructional videos. There was a really good Eric Johnson one (the 1st of a few) that had crazy cool hair as well as a good gear section. Thanks for doing these, they are great.
Seen MAB right before Covid and he can still play extremely well. I used to run some rack stuff back then (Fender Super 60, Digitech 256XL, ect...) then went back to combos. My first Rivera M60 4x10 was mindblowing, but that was early 90s. Now I'm back to small Fender Princeton Reverbs and a couple pedals like back in the 70s. Full circle I guess...
I've been away a few weeks and it's great to see that you've now passed 100k subscribers. I've been a fan since you only had about 25k. Congratulations dude, well done
I still have a promotional sustaniac pack with a flexi demo record from 1989. This was before they had the drop in pickup. It was cumbersome and had a fat cable you had to run down the back of the guitar, down the neck and to the headstock.
I bought my first electric guitar rig in 1991. It was all rack stuff, but it was actually pretty compact and simple. I had an ADA Microtube 100 power amp, a Rocktron mAXE preamp and an ART DR-X multieffects processor. I had two ADA vertical half stacks with 50 watt Celestions in them (2X12 in each one) and I ran the whole thing in stereo. That was my bedroom practice rig, lol. About 10 years later I added an ADA MP-1 that I bought used. The first time I went to a guy’s house to jam I brought the whole rig with me. The 4 rack units were in a road case, and it weighed about 85 pounds all together. As the drummer and bassist helped me to haul everything down to the basement they looked at me like I probably needed a drug test, lol.
I remeber that old advertisement/documentary video from VHS some shop (I think in California) did in the 80's. They were building these huge custom racks, based around Mesa/Boogie gear. They had all bells and whistles, some of them were as big as Gilmore's rig, some of them even had rackmount CRT monitors in them. Totally over the top but also totally awesome. I wish I was able to track that video down.
In the 80th i used to play a Vintage Stratocaster through a Silverface Twin Reverb with a Rat, now i bought a Rocktron VooDu Valve, a Transistor Poweramp and a Hamer Special FM, greetings from Germany
I keep telling myself to pull out my old ‘80s rack, but I also keep forgetting to do it.😂 Most of what’s in it are stereo, studio effects that can also be used onstage, but it does have two guitar-specific effects: an old Rockman in its somewhat rare rack mount. The other is a Digitech GSP-5 that I bought to use in the band I was in while stationed in Korea. The latter truly has all the “sounds of the 80s” guitar tones, but that Rockman just has that “Boston tone” that Tom Scholtz created. It’s not only unmistakable, it’s unavoidable when you plug into one. SO much fun!!
They were better magazines then. I have lots of 80s and early 90s guitar world and guitar player ,they are the best . I find them unreadable these days ,more+like coffee table books
I have a Boss katana head and 2x12 cab, with a tuner and crybaby wah in front, and a GAFC footswitch to turn my chorus/flange/delay/reverb on and off. No rack required
6:25 "Somebody's gotta move this" I remember in Lukather's memoirs he said something to the effect of "the cartage guys must have made a killing on us", regarding the fees to have that stuff moved from arena to arena.
One video you should DEFINITELY check out is the Adrian Belew "Electronic Guitar" one. He has a monster rig, and spends a good portion of the video demonstrating each effect in depth. There's even a neat stop motion clip at the beginning of him setting it all up. Lord, that Rane Splitter/Mixer took me back. I'd forgotten all about that thing. When i was doing a lot of sessions in the late 80s, we ALL went that 'parallel effects' route with the Rane. I had the 36 space rack, and 2 2-12" cabs in stereo. The usual suspects in the rack. Dan Pearce preamp, Boogie power amp, PCM 42, PCM 70, TC 2290. Yikes. Fun to look at nowadays, but i don't miss moving that stuff around ;)
Trevor Rabin’s Star Licks video came out in the early 1990’s but contained the most in depth breakdown of a Bradshaw rig I had seen up to that point in time and also the first mention of Digidesign and Pro Tools I ever heard.
About 10 years ago I was going to the NAMM show and Michael Angelo Batio was on our flight. I didn't realize who he was, I just saw lots of 80's hair. We get to the baggage claim and as we're waiting for our bag, he heads over to oversized luggage, gets a case, sits it down right behind us and opens up the double guitar. Instantly we all looked at each other and went, "It's THAT guy!"
R.J., I have that same Ibanez Luke. I believe they made the Lukather Roadstar II in 83 and 84. Mine is the 83 version a little different bridge and knob styling.
I still have an ADA MP-1, Mesa 50/50 power amp, Rocktron Intellifex, Alesis Quadraverb, Hush IIC paired with a MIDI Mate floor switcher coming out of a pair of Trace Elliot 2x12s. I haven't fired that rig up in several years, and I'm sometimes on the fence about selling it off. But then again how much would I get for it? Peanuts probably. I also still have a couple of old Ibanez Roadstar IIs- and I have to say, there's some real magic in all of that '80s gear, some intangible depth and clarity to those tones that make you just want to shred away like a banshee.
My first real guitar (the very first being a POS from Sears that my mother bought for me) was an Ibanez Roadstar II (RS-440) in dark red. After hearing Night Ranger, I knew I wanted a red guitar with a tremolo. So I paid $350 (in 1985) for a brand new Ibanez from Sam Ash Music in White Plains, NY. I didn't know it had a push/push knob to split the humbucker until my guitar teach reached over and pushed it. I guess that says a lot about the Sam Ash salesman. Anyway, the pickups were weak but the tremolo took a hell of a beating from me (trying to play like Brad Gillis) and it always stayed in tune.
Ok, I was no star or an anybody, but my band did open for Slaughter once....My rig was simple...ADA MP1, Carvin power amp (solid state) a ART rack mounted multi-effects and a Carvin 4X12 cabinet. ..... my guitar was a left handed Kramer Nightswan....I still have the Kramer...though it's beat to crap and has a right handed Nightswan neck.....long story.....but started with my drummer tripping over my guitar during practice....
@@JPTyler lol...no...he and I were the main writers in the band....he did pay for a new neck...but like an idiot, at the time I replaced the original with an ESP neck...I should just have replaced it with Kramer....well the neck I got wasn't to scale...so it created more of a mess...years later a friend found an original neck from some comp that must have bought left over stock from Kramer...he ordered it for me as a gift...but it was right handed...
In one of his interviews he goes more into the guitar. He got it in basically pieces and the original finish was sanded off. It wasn't some time capsule '62 Strat with original tags and a mint finish.
This is great! Very funny, and so true. However, I was gigging around in the 70s and we actually did have a vintage market back then. But those were the guitars from the 50s!
I remember somewhere between 1984 and 1987 Guitar Player magazine had a contest where you could win Steve Vai's rig. It included one or two guitars, a marshall stack, a Carvin stack and then two big 6 ft tall racks full of effects units.
I have a cort guitar that HAD all the buttons on it with built in effects from the '90s, I think? Somewhere along the way, the electronics died, so it's wired like a normal guitar.
As a touring guitarist in the 80's my rig consisted of a Les Paul into a JCM 800 with a Boss EQ and a DM-2 Delay. The only big racks I was interested in were in the front row:)
Really hope 9 more people like this.
There are exactly 69 likes on this top comment
As it should be
Mine was same lol.. had the eq which I also kinda used as boost and used chorus pedal I added delay later.
A solid rig for sure.
You want a medal?
I love how Michael Angelo also immediately runs through his signal chain and brags about being in stereo..... and then immediately goes into a seizure with a whammy bar.
7:32 still to this day, this is the 1st guitar that comes to my mind, when I hear the word guitar. Still the most gorgeous guitars that have ever been built ☺
Hands down one of the most entertaining videos I've seen in months!! Vintage gear, reaction shots and a healthy dose of grease!! Please do a part 2 RJ!!
Well said!!
When the steve lukather starlicks video came out, I, aged about 15 or 16, went and bought an emg 85. I still have it, it sounds nothing like a modern 85, and it absolutely rages.
These rigs are hysterical. Your reaction shots are great. I like this format and if you can find more topics like this, you should make more. Props for that Uncle Larry shirt.
And Uncle Larry himself at 0:27 doing a rig rundown. 🤓
Mr. Bouchard - I'm betting you've seen a few insane rigs in your time....Also some of the drum setups from the 70s and 80s could be pretty intense also.
And State of the Art Back then, Bet the Cult had some Big stuff/Buck of Course, bet you had quite the Drum set then?
80's rigs, amazingly, are still unsurpassed.
I absolutely LOVE Steve Lukather’s playing. He probably my all time favorite guitarist. But that little diddy he did at 8:45 is what we used to call a coke twitch. Kinda like a goosebump shiver. Hey, I’m not knocking him for it. It was the 80’s man! For many of us it was winter all year long. You know....always “snowing”. I remember watching this video when it came out and we used to laugh because all through it you would hear him do his “second wave sniffle”. So happy he (and a lot of us) cleaned ourselves up since.
This is hilarious. Felt like I was watching an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000.
Love me some mst3k
The new Crow was way better than O.G. crow IMO
I got a wicked Jackson 1 unit rack pre amp from the 80's. got 2 pre amp tubes and a button on the front that says SHRED! Couldnt ask for anything more in life!
2 years later I still love this video. More REH and Hot Licks video reviews please!
Laughed all the way through. Badass playing by vanishing characters. Remember those racks and their mysterious lights.
At the height of my rig in the 80s, I had two 18 space racks full of processors, eqs, delays, reverb units, Dunlop rack wah system, and a midi switching system. Eight Peavey Butcher 4x12s, and eight Peavey Butcher heads. I had 10 guitars onstage, a Yamaha DX7 with soundbank, electric acousting on a seperate stand, and a custOM mini B.C.Rich Mockingbird mounted on a mic stand set up for slide. Damn, I really miss the 80s...
Holy halfstacks batman. lol.
what u do with it all
"I play 4 100 watt marshall stacks" ....just yes!!!!! Loved the video man!
Adrian Belew's gear rundown - I remember renting it! He goes through the effects, but also how he got his early 80s sounds...
I saw one in the 90s where Billy Gibbons said he goes on tour with a pretty minimalist rig, but at every stop he checks out the local pawn shops and guitar stores and by the end of the tour he's got all kinds of new pedals and guitars
Having started on guitar in the early 80s, this clip was really a scream! The vintage strat all hacked to bit to fit all this insane amount of stuff - wild! The Bradshaw gigs were insane! Over the top! Really loved the video - great choice! Very fun to watch and to remind us of the 80's excess.
Luke with that Valley Arts guitar and all that grease, not to mention the killer opening jam he played on his Star Licks lesson was so badass! Fun video R.J. nice to relive the golden years, I think my back still hurts from hauling my rig around back in the day!
Lukather's is the total LA session archetype. He was like the proving ground that so many others followed. I can't say that it was my favorite thing, but it is THE thing. Brad Gillis' tone on "Speak of the Devil" is insanely good. It has that stereo'd sound to it. The guys as Atomic Guitar Works in Phoenix were still installing the wireless units into his guitars within the last 10 years! They did the same for Joel when he was in Night Ranger. Michael Angelo can't have had as much bread as either of the other guys, hence the pedals. Side Note - remember when Vai came out with the 2-necked heart guitar in a David Lee Roth video? We were all like, Michael Angelo has GOT to be PISSED!!! Love this vid!
I did the studio set ups for Luke in the 80's and 90's. It was Bob Bradshaws fault... It was ever evolving.. We had issues often... Luke and issues don't mix.
This is by far one of the best vids out there … classic vhs videos w RJ commentary lmao such a brilliant idea …nobody else clda made this that fun !
We need more of these!! This was great. It brings back memories of watching the old 80s dudes rigs in the clubs growing up back in the mid 2000s. Made me want rackmounts and stacks...Now I'm getting ready to sell my 120w head and 4x12 for a 50w and 2x12. How times have changed.
Love this new format, RJ! Please do more. Michael Angelo's hair stole the show for me, but if I had to pick a favorite piece of gear it has to be the tri-chorus. I had the Keeley Dyno My Roto with a tri-chorus mode on it that instantly put me in the 80s, but now regretting selling it after watching this.
This is beyond entertaining. The commentary is gold!
RJ's reaction on micheal angelo's dive bomb is the face of my Filipino mom when I told her i dont want to be a nurse and proceeded to say "ar u stooped?"
I have never watched you before but this was masterful! You have such a dry, sarcastic, and incisive sense of humor. Well done, sir!
"The higher the hair, the closer to God". Thank you for the greatest reaction videos on UA-cam. Freaking awesome.
brad gillis doing that Zappa neck flick when he says something he is really proud of ..love it (4:22)
Bring back the 80s! No more Helix and Kempers
Nothing is more 80s than a shitload of effects going through solid-state.
This was awesome! I still have my 2 1989 Westones with reverse headstocks that I airbrushed and played gigs with. Good times. This was awesome to watch. I had the George Lynch video for sure, maybe a couple others too. Remember those cassette tapes that broke down the guitar solos at half speed so you could learn to play them? I had lots of those, mostly Van Halen, and that was how I learned to play Eruption. I think I some for Dokken too. Great memories!
Bro no George Lynch!?! Great vid!
Part 2!
@@RJRonquillo Would be cool if you would include Brian May's Star Licks tape.
George Lynch is a toolbag. He had a fit, berated, publicly humiliated and generally abused his stage crew, threw down his guitar and walked out of a show, because he was having a technical difficulty with his rig. He still owes me $23.
@@springbloom5940 when did this happen??
@@johnmarshall3903
Probably around '94?
11:45 Those Korg Modular pedal boards are so ridiculously 80's that I have to have one. I do think the idea of being able to move effects around in order is something that was a great idea back then.
Man , I lived that stuff !! This video took me back hard !! Loved it !! Thanks for the time machine moment !! Please do more like this ?!
I usually think reaction videos are lame but this one was pretty funny and well done. Keep the funny coming!
LOL That was a fantastic video! I hope there's more to come! I mean, you should make it a series please! Bring back that phenomenal 80's gear and vibe!
Really enjoyed this video, brings back memories of lusting after rack mounted gear. Please make more of this videos, cheers!
Such a smart and funny segment.... I love this breakdown
It was all about the hair! Everything else would follow 🎸
Those big rack rigs are not only expensive, space hogs, but they weigh a metric f-ton! I couldn't be paid enough to hump that about!
PLEASE MAKE MORE OF THESE
This was a very nice video to watch
Those big rigs were real fun to play with every unit back then was amazing and we were always looking for more
I’m all in for more rack content. I can’t wait for the “Get it off the floor” movement.
This was the best video yet. I was instantly back just out of High School attempting to learn all I could about guitar, and totally remember watching these instructional videos.
There was a really good Eric Johnson one (the 1st of a few) that had crazy cool hair as well as a good gear section.
Thanks for doing these, they are great.
Love it! Total flashback for me as well. Now you have to cover Rockman by Tom Scholz!
That was great. Miss those days. Definitely need some Lynch in the next one
This is an Epic Episode. Well done! The facial expressions during the whammy bar tantrum were PRICELESS!
This is awesome. My buddies and I were huge fans of the Hot Licks videos back in the day.
Seen MAB right before Covid and he can still play extremely well. I used to run some rack stuff back then (Fender Super 60, Digitech 256XL, ect...) then went back to combos. My first Rivera M60 4x10 was mindblowing, but that was early 90s. Now I'm back to small Fender Princeton Reverbs and a couple pedals like back in the 70s. Full circle I guess...
I've been away a few weeks and it's great to see that you've now passed 100k subscribers. I've been a fan since you only had about 25k. Congratulations dude, well done
This video was awesome! I remember every single one of these interviews “back in the day!”
I didn't think I was going to like this topic but this video turned out to be one of my favorites.
I like the buttons and switches in guitar idea.
Wow. What a huge giggle. Marvellous video!
You left poor Carlos Cavazo alone in the background
the world needs more of this!
Hilarious indeed. But Luke is still the man. Such a character and generational player and all around cool dude.
Lol. I don’t know who you are talking about??? He’s the biggest jerk in rock but totally awesome guitarist.
it was so much fun watching this videos. You are the best man.
You have such a great channel RJ. This video made my day.!
I still have a promotional sustaniac pack with a flexi demo record from 1989. This was before they had the drop in pickup. It was cumbersome and had a fat cable you had to run down the back of the guitar, down the neck and to the headstock.
I bought my first electric guitar rig in 1991. It was all rack stuff, but it was actually pretty compact and simple. I had an ADA Microtube 100 power amp, a Rocktron mAXE preamp and an ART DR-X multieffects processor. I had two ADA vertical half stacks with 50 watt Celestions in them (2X12 in each one) and I ran the whole thing in stereo. That was my bedroom practice rig, lol. About 10 years later I added an ADA MP-1 that I bought used. The first time I went to a guy’s house to jam I brought the whole rig with me. The 4 rack units were in a road case, and it weighed about 85 pounds all together. As the drummer and bassist helped me to haul everything down to the basement they looked at me like I probably needed a drug test, lol.
I remeber that old advertisement/documentary video from VHS some shop (I think in California) did in the 80's. They were building these huge custom racks, based around Mesa/Boogie gear. They had all bells and whistles, some of them were as big as Gilmore's rig, some of them even had rackmount CRT monitors in them. Totally over the top but also totally awesome. I wish I was able to track that video down.
I love your guitar playing and now that I have seen your show, I give you the 2 thumbs up!!
In the 80th i used to play a Vintage Stratocaster through a Silverface Twin Reverb with a Rat, now i bought a Rocktron VooDu Valve, a Transistor Poweramp and a Hamer Special FM, greetings from Germany
I keep telling myself to pull out my old ‘80s rack, but I also keep forgetting to do it.😂 Most of what’s in it are stereo, studio effects that can also be used onstage, but it does have two guitar-specific effects: an old Rockman in its somewhat rare rack mount. The other is a Digitech GSP-5 that I bought to use in the band I was in while stationed in Korea. The latter truly has all the “sounds of the 80s” guitar tones, but that Rockman just has that “Boston tone” that Tom Scholtz created. It’s not only unmistakable, it’s unavoidable when you plug into one. SO much fun!!
"Someone's gotta move this!"
Tech's around the world give a standing ovation
Ah I miss the simple days browsing the guitar magazines.
Yes! Dreaming of the day when I could buy one of those Mesas or one of the 5150's...
They were better magazines then. I have lots of 80s and early 90s guitar world and guitar player ,they are the best . I find them unreadable these days ,more+like coffee table books
@@Havanacuba1985 I haven't even seen the current magazines. But yes, the 80s and early 90s were great 👍
I have a Boss katana head and 2x12 cab, with a tuner and crybaby wah in front, and a GAFC footswitch to turn my chorus/flange/delay/reverb on and off. No rack required
"Let´s take a moment to admire the hair..."
That´s a wig, my dude.
6:25 "Somebody's gotta move this" I remember in Lukather's memoirs he said something to the effect of "the cartage guys must have made a killing on us", regarding the fees to have that stuff moved from arena to arena.
Dude, gotta love that "That's What She Said" joke!
Getting greased up to slide back into the 80s for a $10,000 reverb rig! Fun stuff RJ!!
Really cool! I remember enjoying the rigs in the Jeff Watson and Steve Lynch videos in particular.
I wish I saw this video earlier. Especially being a 80s guy myself. R.J. Sir… U are very entertaining! So fun to watch this video
This video is perfect in so many ways
Ha! Ha! This was gold. I love rack shit & grew up lusting over it all in the magazines. I use a mix of some old school units & modern stomp boxes.
No one does these types of guitar videos better
Steve Clark's Gibson Les Paul XR-1, and the JCM 800 100WT - I've read that the JCM was modded, but I can't verify it. What a beautiful tone.
One video you should DEFINITELY check out is the Adrian Belew "Electronic Guitar" one. He has a monster rig, and spends a good portion of the video demonstrating each effect in depth. There's even a neat stop motion clip at the beginning of him setting it all up.
Lord, that Rane Splitter/Mixer took me back. I'd forgotten all about that thing. When i was doing a lot of sessions in the late 80s, we ALL went that 'parallel effects' route with the Rane. I had the 36 space rack, and 2 2-12" cabs in stereo. The usual suspects in the rack. Dan Pearce preamp, Boogie power amp, PCM 42, PCM 70, TC 2290. Yikes. Fun to look at nowadays, but i don't miss moving that stuff around ;)
Bro! That is slick how he has all the switches built in the body of the guitar!
Trevor Rabin’s Star Licks video came out in the early 1990’s but contained the most in depth breakdown of a Bradshaw rig I had seen up to that point in time and also the first mention of Digidesign and Pro Tools I ever heard.
I love grease 😻
Larry Carlton had a great rig rundown in his first hot licks VHS tape,he demonstrated the Dumble and the Dumbulator!!!!!!!!
OMG R.J., your camera takes are killing me. So f-ing funny. More of that please! ROFL!!!
About 10 years ago I was going to the NAMM show and Michael Angelo Batio was on our flight. I didn't realize who he was, I just saw lots of 80's hair. We get to the baggage claim and as we're waiting for our bag, he heads over to oversized luggage, gets a case, sits it down right behind us and opens up the double guitar. Instantly we all looked at each other and went, "It's THAT guy!"
Having been a teen in the 80s I live for this stuff . It’s 1990 but I just bought a Boss SE50 half rack size stereo effects unit
Love it!!!! This was the time I started as well, great work man!!!👍
I love and use rack gear and pedals. It can be complex and modular/portable. Very overlooked these days.
R.J., I have that same Ibanez Luke. I believe they made the Lukather Roadstar II in 83 and 84. Mine is the 83 version a little different bridge and knob styling.
Love the idea of effects switching with buttons on the guitar. I’ve always wanted to try a Livid guitar wing.
I still have an ADA MP-1, Mesa 50/50 power amp, Rocktron Intellifex, Alesis Quadraverb, Hush IIC paired with a MIDI Mate floor switcher coming out of a pair of Trace Elliot 2x12s. I haven't fired that rig up in several years, and I'm sometimes on the fence about selling it off. But then again how much would I get for it? Peanuts probably. I also still have a couple of old Ibanez Roadstar IIs- and I have to say, there's some real magic in all of that '80s gear, some intangible depth and clarity to those tones that make you just want to shred away like a banshee.
My first real guitar (the very first being a POS from Sears that my mother bought for me) was an Ibanez Roadstar II (RS-440) in dark red. After hearing Night Ranger, I knew I wanted a red guitar with a tremolo. So I paid $350 (in 1985) for a brand new Ibanez from Sam Ash Music in White Plains, NY. I didn't know it had a push/push knob to split the humbucker until my guitar teach reached over and pushed it. I guess that says a lot about the Sam Ash salesman. Anyway, the pickups were weak but the tremolo took a hell of a beating from me (trying to play like Brad Gillis) and it always stayed in tune.
Ok, I was no star or an anybody, but my band did open for Slaughter once....My rig was simple...ADA MP1, Carvin power amp (solid state) a ART rack mounted multi-effects and a Carvin 4X12 cabinet. ..... my guitar was a left handed Kramer Nightswan....I still have the Kramer...though it's beat to crap and has a right handed Nightswan neck.....long story.....but started with my drummer tripping over my guitar during practice....
Annnnnndddddd you fired the drummer, right?😶
@@JPTyler lol...no...he and I were the main writers in the band....he did pay for a new neck...but like an idiot, at the time I replaced the original with an ESP neck...I should just have replaced it with Kramer....well the neck I got wasn't to scale...so it created more of a mess...years later a friend found an original neck from some comp that must have bought left over stock from Kramer...he ordered it for me as a gift...but it was right handed...
In one of his interviews he goes more into the guitar. He got it in basically pieces and the original finish was sanded off. It wasn't some time capsule '62 Strat with original tags and a mint finish.
This is great! Very funny, and so true. However, I was gigging around in the 70s and we actually did have a vintage market back then. But those were the guitars from the 50s!
I remember somewhere between 1984 and 1987 Guitar Player magazine had a contest where you could win Steve Vai's rig. It included one or two guitars, a marshall stack, a Carvin stack and then two big 6 ft tall racks full of effects units.
Funny overdubs, good shit.🤘🏽🎸🔊🔊🎛🎙🎚🎼
I have a cort guitar that HAD all the buttons on it with built in effects from the '90s, I think? Somewhere along the way, the electronics died, so it's wired like a normal guitar.
11:38
After the word "Four Hundred Watt..."
I choked... Then LOL
...wtf haha
"He needs some milk." Best. Line. Ever.
Super cool man. More like this for sure.
mid 80's I was on stage playing keys next to a guy with a dual Mesa Boogie stack... still waiting for the hearing to return in my right ear