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EqMag.com >> This Month >> Blue Cheer And The Temple Of Loud
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Blue Cheer and the Temple of Loud| February, 2008Long ago, in the foggy galaxy of the ’60s, strode the loudest, rudest, and heaviest blues-rock trio to roar out of the San Francisco ballroom scene. While other Frisco hippie bands sought to wrap their audiences in a fuzzy web of psychedelic bliss, Blue Cheer was pummeling listeners’ synapses into submission with gargantuan doses of volume. Bassist Dickie Peterson, guitarist Leigh Stephens, and drummer Paul Whaley had just one bona fide hit—a belligerent cover of “Summertime Blues” off 1968’s Vincebus Eruptum—but the band definitely struck one hell of a deafening chord, and is credited with being an originator of heavy metal and grunge. Despite various personnel changes throughout the years, Blue Cheer is still active today. Original members Peterson and Whaley are back in the fold, along with guitarist Duck McDonald, who produced the band’s most recent release, 2007’s What Doesn’t Kill You… [Rainman/Evangeline]. Of course, many acts have battled for the title of “World’s Loudest Rock Band” since Blue Cheer first assaulted eardrums during the twilight of the Summer of Love. But the band’s iconic stature as blaring blues devils remains, and McDonald is keeping the guitars loud and proud. Is there any secret gear you use to unleash the guitar volume? How do you typically set the mics on the amps? Given the high volume levels you put out, is it possible to track basics with everyone in the same room without risking massive signal bleed? How loud is it when you do your guitar overdubs? I’m assuming you’re not a guy who uses Master Volume knobs? I sense a recurring theme, here. . . . Do you have to make any sonic adjustments to ensure the lows are properly translated? What about compression? Does the recording medium affect the low end in any way? What is your view on getting an old-school guitar sound these days? Is there an overriding production concept you carry through as you try to make a classic Blue Cheer record? The Art Of Control“Playing loud isn’t about turning up your amps louder than anyone else,” says Dickie Peterson, the original bassist and vocalist for Blue Cheer. “You have to know how to find musical uses for the feedback and overtones, and you have to control the beast. Here’s a story from the old days that illustrates what I’m talking about. Back in the ’60s or ’70s, we’d be on a bill with some band, and they’d say something like, “We’re gonna blow Blue Cheer away. We’re gonna play even louder than them.” And they’d come out and crank up their amps, and they’d sound horrible. This was because they didn’t adapt their performance to the higher volume. They played the normal way they played, and the volume just turned all their parts into mush. You see, volume is part of the sound, and you have to incorporate it into your style as much as you’d work out your vocal approach, guitar tones, and everything else. It took a lot of experimenting until we learned how to play loud, and the main thing we discovered was that you have to play almost nothing. You have to be deliberate, play as few notes as possible, and give the overtones room to ring out. It’s definitely a less-is-more world when you’re cranked up, and you really have to make the things you do play count.” |
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