
Jackson Introduces the American Series Soloist SL3
A high-performance American-made flagship electric guitar, crafted for speed and produced for the heaviest players.Starting with the classic Speed Neck profile from beloved Jackson Soloists of decades past, the profile has been suped up to include masterfully rolled edges for maximum comfort. Complimenting this profile is a compound radius that starts at 12” at the nut and flattens to 16” at the 12th fret to promote screaming bends and intricate finger work as players move up the neck. Player-focused features like Luminlay side dots to illuminate the fretboard on the darkest of stages and quick access truss rod adjustment to make easy neck relief adjustments ensure the Soloist is optimized for speed and precision.The “Concorde” six-on-a-side headstock visually represents the precision of the instrument with its razor-sharp profile. The model is laden with quality features usually found only in custom domestic builds or import models including a Floyd Rose 1500 and neck-through construction. Offering four finishes — Riviera Blue, Platinum Pearl, Black Gloss and Slime Green Satin.The American Series Soloist | Jackson GuitarsMSRP: $2,499.99 – $2,599.99. For more information, visit jacksonguitars.com.
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BLACK STAR RIDERS Share New Single 'Pay Dirt'
The new BLACK STAR RIDERS album, titled “Wrong Side Of Paradise”, will be released on Friday, January 20, 2023 via Earache Records. The LP’s latest single, “Pay Dirt”, can be streamed below.
BLACK STAR RIDERS frontman Ricky Warwick states: “We are overjoyed to be able to give you another track from…

Netherheaven
A gleaming model of consistency, REVOCATION have spent the last 20 years establishing themselves as one of the most ferociously ripping metal bands of the modern era. Rooted in death metal and thrash, but by no means terminally tethered to either, lethal virtuoso David Davidson’s crew stand apart th…
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TESTAMENT Recruits SEVEN SPIRES Drummer CHRIS DOVAS For First Six Shows Of 'The Bay Strikes Back Tour'
SEVEN SPIRES drummer Chris Dovas will sit behind the kit for TESTAMENT on the first six shows of the summer/fall leg of “The Bay Strikes Back Tour”. He will be filling in for regular TESTAMENT drummer Dave Lombardo, who is unable to make the dates due to a scheduling conflict with the MISFITS.
On Tu…

Q&A: Wolf Hoffmann On Accept As a Six-Piece Band and Returning To America
The Accept legend talks to Decibel about returning to the United States this month with three guitarists, what he learned when he traded a guitar for a camera, and more.
The post Q&A: Wolf Hoffmann On Accept As a Six-Piece Band and Returning To America appeared first on Decibel Magazine.

Catalinbread Soft Focus Reverb Demo | PG Plays
Watch John Bohlinger take orbit on the back of the new ‘verb pedal based on the iconic patch of the Yamaha FX500 unit.This page contains affiliate links that help to support Premier Guitar financially.Catalinbread Soft Focus ReverbClassic ’90s shoegaze got its name from guitarists who seemed to fixate on their shoes, but in reality were fixated on complex pedalboards that typified the genre’s thick, washy walls of sound. The Catalinbread Soft Focus Shoegaze Reverb channels this legacy, but cuts down on the required footwork with reverb, chorus, modulation, and enticing octave-up reverb all represented in one compact device. The Soft Focus is based on the extensive analysis of a quintessential rackmount multi-effect patch that shows up on numerous shoegaze classics, including Slowdive’s Souvlaki. In true Catalinbread fashion, the developers went the extra mile to improve the patch’s design with a mix knob, a lower noise floor, and an improved signal quality with the effect bypassed.
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STEVE VAI's First 30 Years Are Focus Of New Documentary
Filmmaker Alan Berry has released a 77-minute documentary covering the life of legendary guitarist Steve Vai from 1960 to 1990. You can now check it out below.
“Steve Vai The Documentary: His First 30 Years (1960-1990)” contains hundreds of Vai-centric facts and stories that even the most ardent fan…

Death By Audio Space Bender Review
Death By Audio’s most esoteric pedals are regarded by some as the company’s best and most visionary. But some of DBA’s greatest creations, like the Fuzz War, are also its simplest. The new Space Bender chorus lives somewhere in the middle of that complexity spectrum. Its sounds and some facets of its functionality are often unconventional, at times elusive, and occasionally unexpected. But there are also sounds here that are redolent with moody, familiar vintage chorus and flange colors without sounding precisely like any specific vintage touchstones. This capacity for function, familiarity, and exotic textures make Space Bender a musical mood machine that can make simple ideas sound celestial or certifiably demented.Rockers Are Go!Space Bender is another beautifully executed riff on DBA’s retro-future design vernacular. As with most DBA pedals, its graphics and controls are stylish, smart, and make the Space Bender more fun to use. The three rocker switches (which evoke old Mu-Tron pedals—always a cool move) flip between low and high modulation intensity, LFO or envelope mode, or short and long delay times in the modulation line. They also streamline the user’s sound-design experience. A lot of builders might have opted for variable intensity and delay-time knobs for these functions. But DBA’s reduction of those variables to binary choices means you focus a lot more on the sensitivity and range of the depth and speed knobs. Bent at the Event HorizonAs is the case with many DBA pedals, it’s good to explore Space Bender’s sounds intuitively and expect the unexpected. Though Space Bender generates rich washes of chorus, its basic modulation voice has a perceptibly metallic edge. Lots of conventional choruses and flangers exhibit some of these metalloid overtones as chorused waveforms interact. But in the Space Bender they lend a liveliness to overtones and harmonics as a signal fades.Working with the pedal is a gas. Though flicking the switches and twisting knobs with reckless abandon is a great way to approach things, paying close attention to how the controls interact yields big dividends and is the key to tapping into the Space Bender’s expansive vocabulary at will.There are a lot of intoxicating variations on classic chorus themes in the Space Bender. My go-to (hi-intensity, +10 delay time, LFO on, depth around 9 o’clock) produced everything from 12-string-like sounds to thick BBD-style chorus to wobbly quasi-rotary sounds, depending on where I set the speed. Subtle sounds abound, too. Using the LFO setting at low intensity and at shorter delay rate, for instance, produces modulations that sound more like filter effects. They’re subtle shades that shine when driven with overdrive or boost.Switching to +10 can turn thinner, clanging chorus clusters into an orchestra of heavenly glockenspiels.It takes just one flip of a rocker switch, however, for mellow modulations to become massive. The delay switch is particularly transformative. Though the snappy echoes you hear in the +10 mode make the pedal sound and act like there’s a separate echo circuit onboard, the “delay” refers instead to the delays among the waveforms that create the phase shift and chorus effect. In +1 mode, modulations sound tightly clustered—even at slow modulation rates. But switching to +10 can turn these thinner, clanging chorus clusters into an orchestra of heavenly glockenspiels.This is also the ticket to the most vintage BBD-like sounds—particularly at modest depth settings. And the expansive echoic aspect of these voices helps the Space Bender transcend traditional chorus tones.The envelope function is the trickiest of the three switches to master. It uses your input signal to modify the delay times rather than the intensity or rate of modulation. Merely switching to the envelope settings can make modulations a little hazier and sometimes flangier, and I often left it on for those reasons rather than any dynamic interplay it enabled. Without any gain source in front of the Spacer Bender, envelope-prompted changes in delay time tend to be subtle. Adding gain makes the envelope feel much more dynamic.The VerdictThe Space Bender, in classic DBA fashion, twists the chorus effect to much more original and often mangled-sounding ends. There are loads of thick, rich modulation sounds that evoke vintage chorus and flange without imitating them, and a cornucopia of textures, from ring-modulated sounds to deep, throbbing tones that sound designers and experimental musicians will devour—particularly when paired with gain, reverb, and delay devices. The Space Bender may not be the easiest modulation pedal to master, but the path of discovering the sounds you want often leads to sounds you didn’t even know you needed. And that’s a lovely thing to experience in a musical instrument.
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Watch: Ex-MEGADETH Members DAVID ELLEFSON, JEFF YOUNG And CHRIS POLAND Begin Rehearsals For 'Kings Of Thrash' Tour
Former MEGADETH members David Ellefson (bass) and Jeff Young (guitar) recently announced the first four shows of the KINGS OF THRASH “The MEGA Years” tour. They will be joined at the dates by another former MEGADETH member, Chris Poland (guitar).
KINGS OF THRASH, which also includes drummer Fred Ach…

THE CULT Shares New Single 'A Cut Inside'
“A Cut Inside”, the new single from THE CULT, can be streamed below. The song is taken from the band’s upcoming album, “Under The Midnight Sun”, which will arrive on October 7 via Black Hill Records. The LP was produced by Tom Dalgety (PIXIES, GHOST, ROYAL BLOOD).
“Under The Midnight Sun” track list…