Two Degrees of Separation
Mar 17, 2010 Guitar & Gear
What do Stev Skye and David Gilmour have in common?
Well, lots of things. Both play guitar. Both prefer Fender Stratocasters. Both have home studios.
Both have a Neve console in their home studios. David Gilmour’s Neve sound board is in his famous house boat studio, the Astoria, which is where the interview with him (above) took place.
Unfortunately, Stev was having some issues with his Neve lately.
And here’s where it gets really, really interesting. . .
To get it all ironed out, a man named Robin Porter came out to have a look at the Neve console in Stev’s studio. Robin Porter is the guy who actually designed the board that Stev has in his studio. He’s also the guy who added a similar Neve console to the Astoria studio so that David Gilmour could capture his epic sounds in all their splendor.
Having Robin Porter come out to fix your Neve is pretty much like having Carroll Shelby come out to have a look under the hood of your Shelby Cobra, should you be one of the fortunate few to own one.
It’s epic in its own right, in fact.
The good news is that the Stev Neve (hey, that rhymes!) is up and running now thanks to Robin and actual music is being recorded with it at long last. That also means we’re getting things rolling again here at Eye On The Skye, so stay tuned!
In the meantime, here’s another look at the Astoria studio, with a bit of Shakespeare, Gilmour style. . .
Tags: David Gilmour, Fender Stratocaster, Neve, stev skye, Stev Skye Studio
Stev Skye guitar FX
Dec 22, 2009 Guitar & Gear
(Continued from my conversation with Stev Skye regarding his guitar and gear).
“When you play, I hear Jimi Hendrix and Stevie Ray Vaughan influences more than any others. I’m not saying I hear you playing them, if that makes sense, but I definitely feel their influences when you play.”
“Absolutely. I would agree that those two more than any others have influenced my playing and my sound.”
“So how do you find that sound? How do you know it’s yours?” I ask.
“Well, it varies from song to song, but I hear it in my head and I try to match what I hear. It’s pretty much all up there (pointing to his head) so I just try to replicate what I hear in my mind.”
“Makes sense,” I say. “So then how do you reproduce a certain sound, once you think you have it? I mean, is it hard to remember what you played, how you played it and all the settings between the guitar, the amp and all the effects, etc.?”
“Well, I have four main ‘sounds’ that I stick to for the most part (he starts to demonstrate). I have the total clean sound (plays), then the overdrive sound (plays again) which is more of a ‘gritty’ sound. Then I have the rhythm distortion sound (plays) which is tighter sounding and finally, I have the louder more distorted ballistic atomic sound that I use in my solos.”
To achieve his sound, Stev uses a combination of guitar pedal FX along with his custom Two-Rock amp. Here is Stev Skye’s Signal Chain:
Boss CH-1 SUPER Chorus Pedal Standard
Vox V847A Wah Pedal Standard
Fulltone MDV2 Mini DejaVibe 2 Guitar Effects Pedal Cream (made with original Univibe parts)
MXR M169 Carbon Copy Analog Delay Guitar Effects Pedal Standard
Ibanez TS9 Tube Screamer Effects Pedal Original Reissue Standard (Modified by Robert Keeley)
Fulltone OCD Overdrive Obsessive Compulsive Drive Standard Distortion Pedal
As I mentioned, Stev uses a custom designed guitar amp from Two-Rock. The amp is a 100-watt Custom Reverb Signature Model Version 2, all tube, handmade for specifically for Stev by Two-Rock. We’ll get into more details on the Two-Rock amp in another post!
Tags: Boss CH-1 SUPER Chorus Pedal, Distortion Pedal, Fender Stratocaster, Fulltone Deja Vibe 2 Univibe, Fulltone OCD Overdrive Obsessive Compulsive Drive, Guitar Center, Guitar inspiration, Ibanez TS9 Tube Screamer Effects Pedal, Jimi Hendrix, MXR M169 Carbon Copy Analog Delay Guitar Effects Pedal, Robert Keeley, stev skye, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Two-Rock Guitar Amp, Vox Wah Pedal
Stev Skye Sonic Blue ’56 Fender Stratocaster
Dec 7, 2009 Guitar & Gear, Stëv Skye
Stev and yours truly (holySmith!) got together to talk about guitar equipment at his place the other night. We each poured a GUINNESS and cracked open a brand new package of Vienna Finger cookies while we talked – and yes, GUINNESS and Vienna Fingers go exceptionally well together, FYI.
To start, he gave me a rundown of his current pedal board which we’ll cover in another post soon. The star of this post, however, is the newest addition to the Stev Skye guitar collection – another ’56 Strat from the Fender Custom Shop. This one’s a pale blue beauty that we’ll call “Sonic Blue” given it’s classic Fender color and she sounds every bit as good as she looks.
As a side note, Stev has been amassing an insane amount of new gear, which has three significant implications:
- Stev’s studio will now be the ultimate power in the music making universe.
- We’ll have loads of new gear to write about here on the fan site.
- His purchases are more than likely enough to bring an end the nation-wide economic crisis we’ve been mired in since 2007! Hooray global-scale economic recovery!
So there we were. Stev started firing up the new Two Rock amp (again, more on that in another post) and getting his pedals ready to rock. It was like Yoda sitting there with Luke Skywalker, ready to impart his knowledge and show him the ways of the Force.
“Much to learn, you still have,” Stev says to me. “Fenders are the most temperamental guitars. But they are the most toneful to play. They have the most character.”
“All of my Strats are ‘56 Strats,” he continued, pointing to the darker blue “Skye Strat” that was resting comfortably on the couch. [That’d be the Strat pictured in the website header images, BTW. –Ed.]
He drew the new Sonic Blue from the case, plugged it in and continued, “It’s a really thin body,” showing me the back of the guitar. Flipping it back to the ready-position, he twanged a string and said, “I have the strings set higher than a normal Fender – for that ‘snap’. (He snaps the strings.) You hear that?”
“Yep, I hear it.”
He does it again, for effect.
“This guitar has a compound radius – nine-and-a-half-inches at the nut to 12-inches at the heel.”
“Impressive,” I say, not really knowing what the F he was talking about.
“Most impressive,” he says. Then he explained that the compound radius basically gives him more versatility when playing a variety of styles, particularly when he goes into those screaming uber-fast solos.
“OK, here’s a question,” I say. “Let’s pretend I am standing in the music store – say at the Guitar Center here in Phoenix since they seem to have the widest selection of guitars at the most competitive prices, not to mention a friendly, knowledgeable staff [First plug’s free, GC! – Ed.] – and I am looking at a wall of Fender Stratocasters. . .What is the difference between the $100 Strat, the $500 Strat, the Gilmour Black Strat for $4k and the $17,000 Stevie Ray Vaughan Strat? What’s the difference between any of those and yours, for example?”
“A good question,” Stev says. “One thing is the quality of the wood that’s used to make the neck and the body. Mine, for example, is made from super-lightweight swamp ash wood for the body [as opposed to ‘swamp ass’ just so we’re clear –Ed.]. It’s a single-piece body like the original Fenders from the Fifties. The neck on this one is a one-piece rock maple – which is an especially hard wood – and it’s quarter-sawn,” he says, then he jams for a minute to demonstrate the sweet, sweet tones.
“The big difference in the price range of the guitars is due to a number of factors,” The Stev continued, “but mostly because the higher-end guitars are handmade. Also, after you play these for a long time, you come to understand that the marriage between the body and neck is SO important. Those are major factors in the tone and the overall sound, and that impacts the price tags.”
“Makes perfect sense to me,” I say. “I guess if you just look at them and you don’t actually play them to compare, you’d never really know. All you can really see is the difference in paint colors.”
“Oh, and the paint is actually another factor,” Stev says. “I have a nitrocellulose finish on all my guitars – ‘nitro’ for short – it’s a thin lacquer that breathes and ages well.”
He scoots over closer to me, laying the Strat across his lap and says, “my nut is made from bone. It’s all-natural.”
“Seriously dude? I love you like a brother and all, but I’m not here to talk about your boner and your nuts.” I say.
“No, dude. The ‘nut’ (pointing to the white piece at the top of the neck) is this white piece up here. It’s made of bone and that gives a much more natural sound. Some are made from plastic and other stuff, but bone sounds the best. And they’re pretty expensive.”
“Boney nuts ain’t cheap,” I concur, relieved that we had not, in fact, descended to Creepyville with that last exchange.
“On the neck here, you see these fret wires?” he asks, pointing to the fretted neck. “I use Dunlop 6000 fret wires, which are sometimes referred to as ‘railroad ties’. They’re higher up off the neck which makes them more difficult to play, but they give you a much better tone.”
He twangs and snaps and bends a few notes to illustrate what he means.
“Then you have all the different components and electronics – all of which can be customized or upgraded to some degree, like these pickups. These are handmade pickups, similar to fat ‘50s pickups – these aren’t Fat ‘50s exactly, but similar in terms of how they sound. They are overwound to make them hotter for the ‘50s tone.
“Really, the key things are finding a guitar with good wood, a good marriage between the neck and body, and good craftsmanship. It’s hard to find a good one. You can play a hundred Strats and maybe find one that’s a good one, at least for me.”
“Interesting, indeed. So what about the strings?”
“Nine-gauge strings are standard on most guitars. I used to use 11-gauge strings, but I dropped down to 10-guage both to save my fingers during consecutive days of long rehearsals and to get more of that ‘snap’.”
He snaps the strings for effect again. “You hear that?”
“Yep, I hear it.”
He does it again for effect.
“Jimi (Hendrix) used 10-gauge and Stevie Ray (Vaughan) used 13-gauge in the studio, but lower gauge strings when he played live.”
“And speaking of, I tune to E-flat. It’s easier on the fingers especially when you’re playing six or more hours a day. Jimi and SRV tuned to E-flat for the same reasons,” he explained.
After making a comment about how this was starting to feel more like an Inside the Actors Studio interview than an excuse to hang out, talk shop and drink GUINNESS, I switch the conversation over to his guitar influences and the creative side of things. . .
Which we’ll continue in another post! Stay tuned!
Tags: '56 Fender Stratocaster, '56 Strat, Fender Stratocaster, Guitar Center, holysmith!, Jimi Hendrix, stev skye, Stevie Ray Vaughan


