EQ Magazine - January 2008 - (Page 42) GUITAR TRAX THE GYM CLASS HEROES’ GUIDE TO HIP-HOP GUITAR Ever since Run-D.M.C.’s “Rock Box” blasted airwaves as one of the first rap singles to incorporate heavy-as-a-freight-train guitar riffs (courtesy of Eddie Martinez) in 1984, urban dance music and electric guitars have enjoyed a raucous alliance. Sometimes that partnership has involved actual performances (as in Martinez’s case), and, other times, it has embraced sampling of pre-existing guitar parts. But whether the “live” or “Memorex” approach has taken the popular lead throughout the years, the very nature of constructing a stylistic hybrid—such as rap-rock—places some creative heat on both instrumentalists and producers. For the guitarist, playing over rap or hip-hop music typically requires parts and tones that propel the rhythm, but steer relatively clear of the sonic space and impact of the all-important groove. To dance amidst the driving rhythms unleashed by his popular hip-hop crew Gym Class Heroes, Disashi Lumumba-Kasongo takes an almost emo approach, eschewing obvious rock riffery in favor of ambient arpeggios, old-school wah chatter, and shimmering single-note lines. On the group’s most recent release, As Cruel As School Children, Lumumba-Kasongo also displays a tremendous amount of musical empathy as he slyly darts in and out of classic soul, R&B, lounge, rock, and pop motifs. Your parts are so clean, light, and bouyant—what tools do you use to craft those guitar sounds? Since 2000, my main guitar has been a Parker Fly—although I also used a Gibson SG and a Fender Stratocaster on the album. The Fly is really light, so it’s a great guitar to gig with, and it’s also extremely playable. As the name signifies, it kind of flies as you play it. Before I joined Gym Class, I played a lot of rock and roll through Marshall amps because they drive really well. But I needed something different for this band, so I switched to Orange amps and cabinets. The clean tones on the Orange are so crisp that I feel like every note I play is kind of shouting out at the audience. I don’t have too much going on as far as effects go. I used to use a Boss RC-2 Loop Station to trigger a couple of samples—like on the song “Papercuts” [from 2005’s The Papercut Chronicles]—and a Boss delay, but I ended up switching to the Line 6 PODxt Live. It’s a pedalboard version of the POD, and it’s really convenient because I can tweak all the sounds I need, and then name the preset. For example, I’ll just have my “Papercuts” program that will bring up all these delays. It’s a super intuitive and versatile pedal. It’s really fantastic. I also went from using a .010 set of D’Addario or Ernie Ball strings to a .012 set. I like the resistance of the heavier strings—they hold back a bit more. It was definitely brutal on my fingers for like a week or so [laughs], but all you have to do is play a whole bunch, and you get used to it real quick. Considering your rock and roll past, what was the main challenge of incorporating guitar into a hip-hop rhythm section? Well, it’s always kind of a mind trip playing with other bands. I was definitely used to rocking out with the distortion full up, but that approach didn’t really work with Gym Class because it was too dense and messy. Those kinds of tones just ate up everything. I quickly realized that if I wanted to make it work with Gym Class, I’d have to play pretty much 95 percent clean tones. So that was the first challenge—playing without distortion. But that actually forced me to become a better guitar player, because there’s nowhere to hide when you’re playing a straight-up clean tone—every note is clearly heard. Another benefit was that I fell in love with more expressive chords, such as minor sevenths. I never experimented much with other chords before because I was stuck with power chords. Playing clean opened up my brain in really surprising ways. Did any particular sounds inspire you while you were developing your clean tones? I really got into the Cardigans a lot. The band’s melodies are beautiful, and the songwriting is amazing. They also have good rhythm-guitar parts, and they use these fairly clean and breezy guitar tones. They’re not a crazy lead-based band, but I definitely respect what they’re doing. Playing conventional rock guitar typically means dealing with a fairly straight 4/4 drum-kit groove. But hip-hop rhythms often involve layers of live drumming, samples, and sequences with top-line percussion that’s quite syncopated. Did you have to reorient your internal clock to nail the rhythmic accents just right? Well, that wasn’t too hard for me, actually. Even though I played in rock bands before, I listened to a lot of hip-hop and dance-oriented music. Also, my parents were really into Afro-Cuban music, so I already had a little bit of background in terms of rhythm. A lot of rock music is rhythmically driven, as well. Listen to Jimi Hendrix or Stevie Ray Vaughan—they’re pushing and pulling the beat in subtly different ways. It’s not all bam-bam-bam-bam. True—but making a transition from, say, old-school blues-rock to hip-hop seems a bit more difficult than just critically listening to Stevie Ray. Well, yeah. I’d say that you have to cut back on your parts, but you have to cut back in the right way. For me, a big part of the whole process was listening to the music, and saying, “Okay, what’s the right thing to do in this specific part right now?” I had to pay close attention to the kick drum and the bass—because those are the things that are really holding it down—and play around them. You have to nail the feel. It’s kind of a lot of pressure, because while you may not be playing as complex parts as you might in a straight rock band, the parts you do play have to be seriously locked to the song’s groove. I found I could get away with being a bit sloppier when I was playing rock. Do you miss stepping on a fuzz box and blasting it out raw? I can still do that—the tone just has to fit. But I will say, for me, it’s harder to imply emotion when the majority of the parts are a clean guitar or an acoustic guitar. I had to learn a lot about developing the right tones to fit the song. It’s hard to be explicit about what I did, other than that I was doing some very subtle tonal shadings to change up the emotional impact of various parts. A strummed part might go totally clean or with a bit of an edge, and a melody line might get by Michael Molenda 42 EQ JANUARY 2008 www.eqmag.com http://www.eqmag.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of EQ Magazine - January 2008 EQ Magazine - January 2008 Contents Talk Box Sounding Board Robbers On High Street Rafter RTX Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings Toolbox Rahim Dimmu Borgir Wu-Tang Clan Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians Guitar Trax Bass Management Key Issues Drumheads Vocal Cords Mix Bus Cheat Sheet Cakewalk Sonar 7 IK Multimedia Virtual Instruments Yamaha MSP7 Shure KSM137/SL K+H O 300 & O 800 Sonica Livetracker Apple Logic Studio Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track EQ Magazine - January 2008 EQ Magazine - January 2008 - EQ Magazine - January 2008 (Page Cover1) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - EQ Magazine - January 2008 (Page Cover2) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - EQ Magazine - January 2008 (Page 1) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - EQ Magazine - January 2008 (Page 2) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Contents (Page 3) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Talk Box (Page 4) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Talk Box (Page 5) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Sounding Board (Page 6) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Sounding Board (Page 7) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Robbers On High Street (Page 8) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Robbers On High Street (Page 9) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Rafter (Page 10) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Rafter (Page 11) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - RTX (Page 12) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - RTX (Page 13) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings (Page 14) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings (Page 15) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Toolbox (Page 16) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Toolbox (Page 17) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Rahim (Page 18) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Rahim (Page 19) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Dimmu Borgir (Page 20) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Dimmu Borgir (Page 21) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Dimmu Borgir (Page 22) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Dimmu Borgir (Page 23) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 24) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 25) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 26) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 27) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 28) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 29) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 30) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 31) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 32) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Wu-Tang Clan (Page 33) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 34) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 35) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 36) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 37) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 38) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 39) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 40) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Special Feature! Mastering for Musicians (Page 41) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Guitar Trax (Page 42) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Guitar Trax (Page 43) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Bass Management (Page 44) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Bass Management (Page 45) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Key Issues (Page 46) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Key Issues (Page 47) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Drumheads (Page 48) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Drumheads (Page 49) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Vocal Cords (Page 50) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Vocal Cords (Page 51) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Mix Bus (Page 52) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Mix Bus (Page 53) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Cheat Sheet (Page 54) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Cheat Sheet (Page 55) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Cakewalk Sonar 7 (Page 56) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - IK Multimedia Virtual Instruments (Page 57) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Yamaha MSP7 (Page 58) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Yamaha MSP7 (Page 59) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Shure KSM137/SL (Page 60) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Shure KSM137/SL (Page 61) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - K+H O 300 & O 800 (Page 62) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - K+H O 300 & O 800 (Page 63) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Sonica Livetracker (Page 64) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Sonica Livetracker (Page 65) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Apple Logic Studio (Page 66) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Apple Logic Studio (Page 67) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Apple Logic Studio (Page 68) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Apple Logic Studio (Page 69) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 70) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 71) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 72) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 73) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 74) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 75) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 76) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 77) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 78) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 79) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page 80) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page Cover3) EQ Magazine - January 2008 - Novation XioSynth 25, Audio-Technica ATH-M50, Samson G-Track (Page Cover4)
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