@@xx05jurtossure, but there’s a thing called endorsement, it’s been a part of musical equipment sales for over a century. Any musician that says “I play this” sell more stuff. I’m highlighting Ed’s love of the equipment and people that make it, without him playing the endorsement pay cheque game, which many artists will do.
I look at it as nsm the number of pedals, but the number of knobs.If it has a digital read out, or has saved pre sets , I'm probably not going to use it, - outside of a studio, anyway. As far as portability goes, I discovered that several small boards are better than the monstrosities on several levels.From a purely logical viewpoint, it makes zero sense to cram all those sensitive electronics in one heavy space.The other upside is that you can insert volume pedals and wahs in between the boards,- again, both of which make no sense to put on the board.
Thanks for the reference to “I’m In Love With A German Film Star”. Nice to know it influenced you when you were 14! FYI it was recorded at Polydor Studios, Stratford Place, Oxford Street, London by in-house engineer Peter Wilson in late 1980. I used a ‘62 Fender Jaguar through a Roland Jazz Chorus 120 amp, Morley swell pedal and Maestro Echoplex unit. I multi-tracked it to 3 stereo channels. No other effects were used except for the amp’s inbuilt chorus and a vocoder triggered by the bass drum. The name of the band was The Passions and it went top 25 in February 1981. Cheers, Clive Timperley.
I've always admired Ed for being in one of the most popular and influential bands to ever exist, yet he seems like he could walk the streets and no one would bat an eyelid. You could imagine bumping into him on a dog walk and chatting as the dogs sniff each other, or shooting the breeze outside the school gates as you wait to pickup the kids. Even fans would probably rather hang out than rush straight into asking about string gauges and amp settings (I presume) because he might answer your questions, but you'll never hang out again. He gets the best of both worlds in that respect: on Tuesday he rocks out in Osaka to 60,000 fans screaming his songs, and on Wednesday he casually strolls round Iceland picking up Turkey Drummers and no one bothers him. He also seems like he's got change for the toilet, would let you go in front of him if you only had a few items and he had a trolley full, and gives way for drivers during rush hour.
The nicest guy, met him on the Overground on the way to a Brentford game, even mentioned that I loved his last run out on the Pedal Show. Not often you meet your hero's and they are actually good people!
@@nocode881increased demand and preorders for the 636P should allow us to invest in our manufacturing and develop a less expensive version (something we’ve wanted to do for a long time). Running a UK business employing 12 people and training a new generation of techs (and giving them time to develop new ideas) is expensive. I would much prefer to be in a position where we can charge less for our products and see them in more people’s hands.
I was in the same class as Dan, in year 6 when he was in Australia. Such a spin out to see him in the UK, working with one of my music heroes 42 years later!
This is great because you are revealing to us what some of the pros use and how they are using it! If not for you, we wouldn't have this peek into Ed's or Noel's etc pedalboard processes and gear. Very interesting and inspiring! Thanks Dan!
Brilliant!!!! I love and appreciate Ed sharing how he creates such a beautiful soundscape!!!! You can hear the passion in everything he says!!!! Thank you
Love this, fascinating stuff. Im a lifelong Radiohead fan, always loved Ed and Jonnys sounds live. Really cool to see and hear his take on how he crafts his sounds and pedalboard! =)
Ed is such a great guy. So this means another EOB album is in the works? Awesome. Fascinating video. What great work you guys do to help people explore new sounds.
Thanks Gents! Love both of you; love your synergy in this collaboration. Ed's work--all of it--mesmerizes. If you would please, carry on with the hard work that art requires. The both of you keep crushing it again and again. BTW, Ed's signature guitar sets the standard for SOTA design.
Speak for yourself, Ed! I knew exactly what I was doing with my gear at age 25, back in 1993. I had a Rickenbacker 330, an Epiphone Emperor F, an Ampeg VH-140C stereo 2x12 combo, and a string of Boss pedals, the HM-2 Heavy Metal, EH-2 Enhancer, PN-2 Tremolo/Pan, CE-3 Chorus, PS-2 Digital Pitch Shifter/Delay, and RV-2 Digital Reverb. That was my rig for Dear Dark Head.
Fantastic insight in to Ed's playing and knowledge - also the mark of a real incredible live performer (which of course he is) clearly it allows him to intuitively have access to the detail of all his sound textures and guitar voicing - brilliant thanks so much
The Passions! "I'm in Love with a German Film Star" is a '60s Jaguar into an Echoplex into a JC120 :). I only know because they kindly put it in the liner notes of the Cherry Red reissue.
I remember having a decent view of Ed's effects board when I saw Radiohead in 2018 and realized that half of his guitar parts memorization must've been focused on his feet rather than his hands.
I had an Arion Tubulator but my very second pedal was the DD3- and it's still sitting on my shelf. My Dad bought it for me so hard to part with. This is where the similarities between myself and Ed end, of course.
I'm *guessing* it's because Dan likes to keep GigRig-heavy videos away from TPS to prevent it coming off as an advertisement. Surely, regular viewers wouldn't think twice about that being a conflict, but I get the sense that they're hesitant to mix the two out of abundance of caution! :)
Great interview with Ed and so insightful of how he works, I’m so glad he explained about using less gear and then getting to know your gear you’re using inside out, which is what I’ve always done and think it’s essential if you want to be a great musician, songwriter, producer and a creative guitarist with their own individual guitar sound. Delving into the heart, body and brain of especially your amps and pedals for myself makes you understand, gives you the knowledge, creativeness and production skills to designing great sounds and gives you the knowledge, understanding and skills to know what you achieve if you fully understand how all the internal editing features and parameters of anything works and then how sounds and effects then react when linked with other pedals and gear. In my world this has always been a huge part of my music production, writing, designing your individual sounds, editing parameters and know what I’m doing, being so into sound synthesis and know how to achieve a desired sound cos you know how all your gear works so well for me is really satisfying. I do get really wound up by so many guitarist who just want & expect to plug directly into any instrument, amp, pedal, etc wanting it to sound amazing immediately and like their favourite guitarists without tweaking, editing and getting to know your gear inside out is laziness.
Always love seeing the both of you talking about gear, there is an obvious chemistry, you talk the same language. Can't wait for the next TPS episode with Ed !
Somewhat surprised to see the DD-3 tucked away under the riser, as I would have assumed he'd be pretty hands-on with the knobs (and the glitchy hold function), less set-and-forget.
These guys are class act, Ed has the true English Gentleman poise as Sir George Martin or Johnny Marr... and a great sound smith... and Daniel... you too are great company with the expertise and talent to work and hang with the best... best to both of you and COOL BOARD!! thanks for sharing..
I wonder if the Microcosm was the watershed moment where pedals, for the first time, did too much. We all bought them and revelled in that mosaic mode etc. but is it really your own music? Ed going back to basics with simple, functional pedals to make way for the player’s expression makes me wonder if many others are doing the same….
I truly don't know how you keep your shit together talking to Ed (or any of his bandmates), what goes through your head when playing guitar in front of him? I'd burst 😁💥
Ed is one of my biggest inspirations in guitar. He can rock out just as soon as blow your mind with otherworldly sounds with a simple delay and looper. Clearly, he appreciates effects and those that make them as not just tools but inspiring functional art.
What an incredible opportunity to get to come along for this journey. So cool to get to watch this process and the way Ed thinks about his gear and pedals.
These sounds…..man these sounds. Long time Perry fan and just picked up some Sly and the Family Stone lps….killer sounds. It’s got to be difficult to wrestle these sounds from arena to studio. It’s been genius to watch Ed tame the chaos that’s symphonic. Cheers to all the joy he has brought me; the inner emotions I’ve been allowed to feel .
Ed is quite possibly the most inspiring guitarist ever. I would love to able to sit and chat with him (like he does with Mr. Marr) about sounds. My board has a dyna comp mini, whammy ricochet, hudson broadcast dual (he mentioned it being great in a vid with soungas and Adrian Utley), boss fv-500l, dl4 and a memory man patch on my dd-500, all because of this wonderful human being. I also have an RE-20 and SD-1 and ehx small stone for some of Jonny's sound. I absolutely love Ed's solo work, but I do hope another Radiohead album will come soon.
What a treat to listen to both of you geeking out on the early digital sounds. I remember evryone hating on digital because "analog is better" which, I thought, was just snobbish.
Oh no - back in the day (all this were fields) when our rhythm guitarist bought a DD2 the whole 5 piece gathered round and wanted to stroke it, change the batteries after 15 minutes and whisper 'digital' to each other with wonder. It was years later, when digital became cheap (mainly multieffects), that digital lost its shine.
Glad that there is a talkative Radiohead member
Ed's unemployed in radiohead so he has time. (this is an absolute joke and Ed's contribution cannot be overstated)
only thom is an antisocial one. jonny is just shy but he is talkative, he just talks less he prefers to take action.
Haha.
It's evident to me that Ed's personality and strength of character played an essential role in Radiohead's mega international success.
Ed didn’t need to do this. He’s such a nice dude, he’s there supporting the technicians and designers that help make his sound. WHAT A LEGEND
I think Dan and Mick just hang with their mates at this stage ! I know what you mean though.
100%. He knows he's elevating them and helping them out by doing these spots. Rad dude.
@@sabrosapurr😊
@@xx05jurtossure, but there’s a thing called endorsement, it’s been a part of musical equipment sales for over a century. Any musician that says “I play this” sell more stuff. I’m highlighting Ed’s love of the equipment and people that make it, without him playing the endorsement pay cheque game, which many artists will do.
no not weird, he could have done it in private and not been in a video of it for the public.@@xx05jurtos
I love how you and Ed are now just like old friends, beautiful!
He’s such a wonderful guy, truly grateful for his friendship
As a guitarist who loves pedals and a huge Radiohead fan, this made my day
What a surprisingly small, simple, and elegant selection of pedals.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Single Blues driver into amp vibes.
String straight into the cup kind of guy.
I look at it as nsm the number of pedals, but the number of knobs.If it has a digital read out, or has saved pre sets , I'm probably not going to use it, - outside of a studio, anyway.
As far as portability goes, I discovered that several small boards are better than the monstrosities on several levels.From a purely logical viewpoint, it makes zero sense to cram all those sensitive electronics in one heavy space.The other upside is that you can insert volume pedals and wahs in between the boards,- again, both of which make no sense to put on the board.
Its almost as if the songs are the most important part 😂
Ed seriously does bring on that aural ambience in Radiohead. That solo album of his is... wow. I'm extremally excited for the 2nd one. Awesome video.
Thanks for the reference to “I’m In Love With A German Film Star”. Nice to know it influenced you when you were 14! FYI it was recorded at Polydor Studios, Stratford Place, Oxford Street, London by in-house engineer Peter Wilson in late 1980. I used a ‘62 Fender Jaguar through a Roland Jazz Chorus 120 amp, Morley swell pedal and Maestro Echoplex unit. I multi-tracked it to 3 stereo channels. No other effects were used except for the amp’s inbuilt chorus and a vocoder triggered by the bass drum. The name of the band was The Passions and it went top 25 in February 1981. Cheers, Clive Timperley.
That’s awesome Clive, thanks so much 🤓🙏
Amazing record
Great song! And cool to hear how you created the guitar part.
Noel AND Ed in the same week!
And BOTH mention Johnny Marr’s influence. Hoping he’s next on!
@@TelecasterMaster1 That would be the Holy Trifecta!
@@TelecasterMaster1 wouldn’t mind the other Jonny on there as well.
Such a humble man, an absolute gift to have him share his time and knowledge with us thank you for making this happen again!!!
The 3 of these(now) are gold for us Radiohead freaks who also are gear freaks as well. Ed’s such a great guy
I learn so much from the videos with Ed. Incredible knowledge.
Yeah, he’s amazing
Yes
he IS the pedal guru.
Question: how many are there? I’ve seen the Pedal Show one and now two of these. Are there more? Thanks!
I've always admired Ed for being in one of the most popular and influential bands to ever exist, yet he seems like he could walk the streets and no one would bat an eyelid. You could imagine bumping into him on a dog walk and chatting as the dogs sniff each other, or shooting the breeze outside the school gates as you wait to pickup the kids. Even fans would probably rather hang out than rush straight into asking about string gauges and amp settings (I presume) because he might answer your questions, but you'll never hang out again.
He gets the best of both worlds in that respect: on Tuesday he rocks out in Osaka to 60,000 fans screaming his songs, and on Wednesday he casually strolls round Iceland picking up Turkey Drummers and no one bothers him.
He also seems like he's got change for the toilet, would let you go in front of him if you only had a few items and he had a trolley full, and gives way for drivers during rush hour.
I guess it is simply a way of speaking . but wait does he have a place in Iceland .. I'm Icelander you know..?
@@Atlas65I think that was just a figure of speech lol
@@Atlas65Iceland Is a UK chain of supermarkets😂
The nicest guy, met him on the Overground on the way to a Brentford game, even mentioned that I loved his last run out on the Pedal Show. Not often you meet your hero's and they are actually good people!
Thank you both for the support - it means a great deal
Yes, because now you can do the Soundgas two step and double the price of the pedal.
@@nocode881increased demand and preorders for the 636P should allow us to invest in our manufacturing and develop a less expensive version (something we’ve wanted to do for a long time). Running a UK business employing 12 people and training a new generation of techs (and giving them time to develop new ideas) is expensive. I would much prefer to be in a position where we can charge less for our products and see them in more people’s hands.
@@Soundgasgonna check you guys out
Cheers Dan. Ed is just awesome. Love to see him back on TPS again too.
Soon 🤓👍
@@TheGigRigDaniel YEEEESSSS!! His last episode is the best TPS episode easily. I watch it all the time
I could listen to Ed for hours. Such a relaxed guy.
Yes, yes, absolutely , yes yes, definitely, totally,
beautiful , yes, yes, I love that, yes, amazing, simply amazing, yes
I was in the same class as Dan, in year 6 when he was in Australia. Such a spin out to see him in the UK, working with one of my music heroes 42 years later!
😂 5:45 “bye” big swanky pedal board …”Ruthless” love it
Ed is awesome.. to me hes like the mood bringer on radiohead… like a soundtrack of a movie 🎉
I’ve had Ed’s signature Fender now for 3 years and absolutely love it!
Yep, me too, what a fantastic guitar 🙏
Always a pleasure listening to Ed talk about pedals
This is great because you are revealing to us what some of the pros use and how they are using it! If not for you, we wouldn't have this peek into Ed's or Noel's etc pedalboard processes and gear. Very interesting and inspiring! Thanks Dan!
You are so welcome! 🙏
Brilliant!!!! I love and appreciate Ed sharing how he creates such a beautiful soundscape!!!! You can hear the passion in everything he says!!!! Thank you
OMG! One of my favorite guitarists! I'm so glad he did another video with you. So insightful into his gear and sound!
This is so I good I can't wait to get home from work so I can grab my guitar and play.
Ed, Dan, & Preamps for life :)
Love this, fascinating stuff. Im a lifelong Radiohead fan, always loved Ed and Jonnys sounds live. Really cool to see and hear his take on how he crafts his sounds and pedalboard! =)
Amazing work! And so generous of Ed to take the time to be a part of this! And wow what a board!
Thank you for this, this was very inspiring. Ed is such a nice guy, as talented as he is modest.
How cool to get to hear Ed giving an insight into his sound journey!
Ed is such a great guy. So this means another EOB album is in the works? Awesome. Fascinating video. What great work you guys do to help people explore new sounds.
Thanks Gents! Love both of you; love your synergy in this collaboration. Ed's work--all of it--mesmerizes. If you would please, carry on with the hard work that art requires. The both of you keep crushing it again and again. BTW, Ed's signature guitar sets the standard for SOTA design.
Ed O’Brien is pure class. What a homie.
U2 were reassuringly loud.
I also saw Radiohead in a pub in 1992 and then on Pablo Honey tour.They were nice and heavy.
Stay loud.
Speak for yourself, Ed! I knew exactly what I was doing with my gear at age 25, back in 1993. I had a Rickenbacker 330, an Epiphone Emperor F, an Ampeg VH-140C stereo 2x12 combo, and a string of Boss pedals, the HM-2 Heavy Metal, EH-2 Enhancer, PN-2 Tremolo/Pan, CE-3 Chorus, PS-2 Digital Pitch Shifter/Delay, and RV-2 Digital Reverb. That was my rig for Dear Dark Head.
Fantastic insight in to Ed's playing and knowledge - also the mark of a real incredible live performer (which of course he is) clearly it allows him to intuitively have access to the detail of all his sound textures and guitar voicing - brilliant thanks so much
Thanks Jason, you’re so welcome 🤓🙏
I’ve watched and listened to a few things with Ed, really cool knowledgeable dude
Love this video Ed is a true master on his field
👍🏽👍🏽 Awesome Ed & Dan buddy looking forward to Ed’s studio with the board & the new solo project developing !
Two legends right here. Loved this.
He just genuinely seems like a nice guy and a total pedal nerd
The Passions! "I'm in Love with a German Film Star" is a '60s Jaguar into an Echoplex into a JC120 :). I only know because they kindly put it in the liner notes of the Cherry Red reissue.
25:10 seconds mark -- yeah, that's a signature EOB sound if I have ever heard one haha
Dan's the man. Ed is such an amazing guy. So chill and so good at sonic landscapes.
Dan is a man of many hats, whether it be the Benson & Hendrix porkpie via TPS, or in this case, the trucker’s cap of sage sonic sorcery. 👍
Man I love Ed, seems like such a genuine down to earth guy!
I remember having a decent view of Ed's effects board when I saw Radiohead in 2018 and realized that half of his guitar parts memorization must've been focused on his feet rather than his hands.
This was just a joy to watch. Seems like such a pleasant person. Great video and content.
My dream is to see an episode of TPS with The Edge 🙌🏻
This is really what i needed today. Thanks Ed!
Ed pulling a pic out of his pocket was awesome!
Wow, an incredible board. Well done Dan
Thanks Sean 🤓🙏
This is so excellent. Thank you to all involved.
I love Radiohead and all the members
Can't wait to listen to Ed's 2nd solo album
Ed is so articulate and passionate about his sound. Truly a joy to watch. Thank you so much for the video!
I had an Arion Tubulator but my very second pedal was the DD3- and it's still sitting on my shelf. My Dad bought it for me so hard to part with. This is where the similarities between myself and Ed end, of course.
Why is this not on the The Pedal Show Channel? Most of would agree we love this stuff.
This is his board build section which was too GigRig centric, but we will be interviewing Ed when he’s ready to release some new stuff. 🤓🙏
I'm *guessing* it's because Dan likes to keep GigRig-heavy videos away from TPS to prevent it coming off as an advertisement. Surely, regular viewers wouldn't think twice about that being a conflict, but I get the sense that they're hesitant to mix the two out of abundance of caution! :)
as a big radiohead fan, this video makes me really happy!
Great interview with Ed and so insightful of how he works, I’m so glad he explained about using less gear and then getting to know your gear you’re using inside out, which is what I’ve always done and think it’s essential if you want to be a great musician, songwriter, producer and a creative guitarist with their own individual guitar sound.
Delving into the heart, body and brain of especially your amps and pedals for myself makes you understand, gives you the knowledge, creativeness and production skills to designing great sounds and gives you the knowledge, understanding and skills to know what you achieve if you fully understand how all the internal editing features and parameters of anything works and then how sounds and effects then react when linked with other pedals and gear. In my world this has always been a huge part of my music production, writing, designing your individual sounds, editing parameters and know what I’m doing, being so into sound synthesis and know how to achieve a desired sound cos you know how all your gear works so well for me is really satisfying.
I do get really wound up by so many guitarist who just want & expect to plug directly into any instrument, amp, pedal, etc wanting it to sound amazing immediately and like their favourite guitarists without tweaking, editing and getting to know your gear inside out is laziness.
Always love seeing the both of you talking about gear, there is an obvious chemistry, you talk the same language. Can't wait for the next TPS episode with Ed !
Ed is such a beautifully lovely person! ❤
Somewhat surprised to see the DD-3 tucked away under the riser, as I would have assumed he'd be pretty hands-on with the knobs (and the glitchy hold function), less set-and-forget.
An episode on how to do those tricks with a looper would be very useful :) Ed episodes are the BEST!
Best content I have seen in a very long time. Thanks for taking the time and care to put it out, Dan!
Hey hon, Ed O'Brien said i needed a digital delay, a compressor, and a Roland drum machine. You know, Father's Day is coming up... Dads love pedals.
Lovely fella and brilliant musician.
can't wait to hear it in action!
These guys are class act, Ed has the true English Gentleman poise as Sir George Martin or Johnny Marr... and a great sound smith... and Daniel... you too are great company with the expertise and talent to work and hang with the best... best to both of you and COOL BOARD!! thanks for sharing..
Thanks Charlie 🤓🙏
I wonder if the Microcosm was the watershed moment where pedals, for the first time, did too much. We all bought them and revelled in that mosaic mode etc. but is it really your own music? Ed going back to basics with simple, functional pedals to make way for the player’s expression makes me wonder if many others are doing the same….
One hopes, but I don’t think it’ll happen anytime soon - eapecially with the rise of AI and the general public preferring that pitch-perfect sound.
idk how i haven’t seen this!!
I truly don't know how you keep your shit together talking to Ed (or any of his bandmates), what goes through your head when playing guitar in front of him? I'd burst 😁💥
Awesome! Great job Dan!!
Oh man this is cool. Listening to Ed is just epic.
Ed is one of my biggest inspirations in guitar. He can rock out just as soon as blow your mind with otherworldly sounds with a simple delay and looper. Clearly, he appreciates effects and those that make them as not just tools but inspiring functional art.
Note to self, do NOT edit your comment for a simple grammatical error when it’s already hearted. 🤔
Really classy board love the vibe. Push those amps!
Absolutely fantastic video guys, thank you, very much
Never get bored of watching build rigs Dan.
Well... that was amazing!
Nothing but respect for Ed
What an incredible opportunity to get to come along for this journey. So cool to get to watch this process and the way Ed thinks about his gear and pedals.
That’s a great start to my day. Such an epic build
Cheers Scott 🤓🙏
These sounds…..man these sounds. Long time Perry fan and just picked up some Sly and the Family Stone lps….killer sounds. It’s got to be difficult to wrestle these sounds from arena to studio.
It’s been genius to watch Ed tame the chaos that’s symphonic. Cheers to all the joy he has brought me; the inner emotions I’ve been allowed to feel .
Ed is quite possibly the most inspiring guitarist ever. I would love to able to sit and chat with him (like he does with Mr. Marr) about sounds. My board has a dyna comp mini, whammy ricochet, hudson broadcast dual (he mentioned it being great in a vid with soungas and Adrian Utley), boss fv-500l, dl4 and a memory man patch on my dd-500, all because of this wonderful human being. I also have an RE-20 and SD-1 and ehx small stone for some of Jonny's sound. I absolutely love Ed's solo work, but I do hope another Radiohead album will come soon.
Very,Very Interesting.
Absolutely amazing build and the news drop (to me anyway) of new EOB material was as welcome as a well structured Flake in my ice cream.
What an incredible video
Beautiful build! I love watching these 😊
I did not want this to end. Wonderful, friend!
All the roads lead to Mr. Marr...
@thegigrig I hoped that you would offer those elements in your shop which you use to lift some of the pedals to a higher level around 23:14
We get these made for certain builds but yes, that’s a great idea. Thanks 🙏
Oh my Lord!..... Noel....now Ed!!!!!.... I am feeling spoilt!. ;)
*Eeeeeeedddddddd*
Hey Dan, if you remember, what was going on at 27:00? Sounds fantastic.
Didn't think I coukd like Ed anymore than I do. . I was wrong. ❤
The nicest man on earth happens to play guitar for Radiohead 😍
Thanx for sharing pedal wisdom…!
Dude !!! Thank you !!!!
You bet! 🤓🙏
great video as always! I just wish we got to hear ed play
Killer board!!! Also always get excited when I have pedals he has chosen. 😮
What a treat to listen to both of you geeking out on the early digital sounds. I remember evryone hating on digital because "analog is better" which, I thought, was just snobbish.
Oh no - back in the day (all this were fields) when our rhythm guitarist bought a DD2 the whole 5 piece gathered round and wanted to stroke it, change the batteries after 15 minutes and whisper 'digital' to each other with wonder.
It was years later, when digital became cheap (mainly multieffects), that digital lost its shine.