Originally posted by nicktheidiotI sure can do (I can scan the article if anyone wants it/that's allowed as it was too long to type out each little info thing)
11. Dave Grohl
10. James Hetfield
9. Andy Powell (my Dad's a Wishbone Ash fan so he was happy to see him on there)
8. Rick Nielsen
7. Billy Gibbons
6. Michael Schenker
5. Marc Bolan
4. Jimi Hendrix
3. The Edge![]()
2. Lonnie Mack
1. Albert King
Originally posted by wtshnnfb01The current "Streets" guitar is a 73. It originally had a white pic guard, as Strats weren't available in all black at the time. The original "Blackie" was a 79. I think he either got it shortely before, or sometime during the recording of boy.
I dont suppose you know what year his sunburst Strat is? I have heard 57,62, or 76.
Originally posted by wtshnnfb01Check our this performance of "With A Shout". I'm pretty sure thats a SG hes playing.
[YouTube Video]
Originally posted by wtshnnfb01I wonder what he used it as a bacup for on the Vertigo Tour? Maybe for one of his other semi-hollow bodies, but it seems he coulda gotten the same models of those instead of a diffrent guitar.
Originally posted by anstratdubh1979[..]
They did play "One Tree Hill" on the last leg of the tour. Although the footage I've seen shows him using the Gretsch Country Gent.
Originally posted by WojBhoy[..]
What about that Bond Ultraglide thing, or whatever it's called? With the alternate frets built into the neckboard? I remember Edge saying that's how he get's that grindy tone to One Tree Hill?
PS - Those performances of Kite and One Tree Hill on the last leg of Vertigo were awesome!
Originally posted by anstratdubh1979[..]
One Tree Hill and Kite were fantastic on the last leg of the tour. I loved the extended guitar bit on Kite; at the end. Very emotional playing by The Edge.
The The Bond Electraglide was only used in the studio, to the best of my knowledge. I've never seen any photos of Edge using it in a live setting.
The 'key' to the Bond was Edge "abusing" it. Read the following snippet (below) from the July 1987 Guitar World for further explanation:
The following from said interview in the July 1987 Guitar World:
"I'm interested in abusing technology," he chuckles. "There's a revolutionary new guitar called Bond Electric Light (Electraglide), which is a very finely-crafted guitar without proper frets. Instead it has little serations. I tried to incorporate it into my playing armory and I found that it wasn't working, until I discovered the things you can do if you really sort of abuse it! I got fantastic results. Like the sort of heavy fuzz guitar at the end of "One Tree Hill", and the last three tracks on the middle of side two - that sound is the Bond. It's and English guitar. I don't know if they are made anymore [GW Editors note: They're not], but I got it three or four years ago [dating the guitar to around 1983/84]. Naturally, with us, we try to approach anything without preconceptions, we just control the room withouth the windows. Now, this Bond guitar, it wasn't meant to do what I do to it. Its neck is some kind of plastic, so it's more flexible than most wooden necks. I discovered that I can bend the neck so that the strings started to vibrate on the fretboard as I played, and - the guitar having no true frets - it created a different kind of effect. It was an attempt to sound obnoxious. You know, you can wind up a Marshall, and it starts to sound better the higher you go. Well, this was a transistor amp and the sound was compressed to the hilt. I had it very loud and it just kind of had that edge of a sound that you normally don't get. People complained bitterly about it!"
For a bit more on the BOND Electaglide...
http://u2-atomic-edge-gear.tripod.com/id82.html