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MXR Slash Octave Fuzz signature pedal unveiled

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Jim Dunlop has unveiled a new Slash signature pedal, the MXR Slash Octave Fuzz, and you can see it in action in the video above.

The analogue pedal features separate Sub Octave and Octave Up Fuzz 'voices', the first of which can be run dry or switched into the 70s-style 'shag' fuzz circuit.

There's also the option to run the pedal as a straight fuzz unit and to separately blend both the Sub Octave and Octave Up effects into your tone via dedicated control knobs.

In addition, the MXR Slash Octave Fuzz pedal comes emblazoned in the by now customary Slash 'R N Fn' R' graphics and features true-bypass switching. There's no word on exact price or arrival date yet.

Read more about MXR Slash Octave Fuzz signature pedal unveiled at MusicRadar.com



VIDEO: Joe Satriani, Sammy Hagar play Ronnie Montrose tribute

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The next thing to a Montrose reunion took place last Friday (27 April) in San Francisco, when Sammy Hagar joined fellow original members Denny Carmassi and Bill Church for a tribute concert for the late Ronnie Montrose. Guitar superstar (and Hagar's Chickenfoot bandmate) Joe Satriani assumed axe duties for the evening.

"One of my top priorities this year was a Montrose reunion," Hagar said in March. "Ronnie and I planned to do it in Cabo in October. I am so sad it won't happen, but on April 27th, Joe Satriani, Denny Carmassi, Bill Church and I are going to play the hell out of some Montrose!"

Called A Concert For Ronnie Montrose - A Celebration Of His Life In Music, the show featured Hagar and the band performing Montrose's debut album in its entirety. (See above video of Bad Motor Scooter and below video of Rock Candy.)

Ronnie Montrose committed suicide on 3 March. In recent years, the veteran guitarist battled cancer. Prior to his death, he was said to be drinking heavily and suffering from depression.

Read more about VIDEO: Joe Satriani, Sammy Hagar play Ronnie Montrose tribute at MusicRadar.com


Cool and classic basses: Epiphone Rivoli

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When Gibson bought out the Epiphone Company in 1957 it allowed the company to bypass its rather foolish decision to only supply Gibson instruments to 'vetted' music stores in each town. Epiphone allowed them to supply many more.

The EB-2 bass was doing well so it made sense to bring out the virtually identical Epiphone Rivoli just a year later using the same parts. Like the EB-2 the first models had banjo-style tuners with plastic pegs and the pickup resided under a black plastic cover. Both were changed in due course, as was the bridge, which was upgraded to a more adjustable unit.

Read our full Epiphone Rivoli profile here.

Read more about Cool and classic basses: Epiphone Rivoli at MusicRadar.com


New music tech gear of the month: review round-up (May 2012)

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gear of the month

Every month, MusicRadar's industry-leading sister magazines - Guitarist, Computer Music, Total Guitar, Rhythm and Future Music - publish the best independent and in-depth music-making gear reviews.

We've collated the latest plug-ins, hardware, iOS apps and other products to have fallen under the watchful eyes of the Computer Music and Future Music test teams. All the gear on show here was originally reviewed in Computer Music issues 177/178 and Future Music issue 252.

Scroll on for this month's top picks and click through to read each product's full review. First up: Toontrack's EZkeys Grand Piano

Read more about New music tech gear of the month: review round-up (May 2012) at MusicRadar.com


BIMM announce Peter Grant Memorial Scholarship

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BIMM Principal Vaseema Hamilton explains, "BIMM have created this scholarship in memory of the one of the most influential figures of the modern music industry."

The scholarship will be linked to the Music Industry Management BAHons qualification being run at BIMM Bristol from September 2012. This course as with all BIMM programmes is vocational and designed to act as a springboard into employment.

Mark Clayden BIMM Bristol College Manager explains, "We have designed the Music Industry Management BAHons to support up and coming young professionals eager to make their mark in the music industry. Training students in all areas of this ever changing industry including: Live Event Management, Retail, Promotion, Record Labels, A&R, Working With Musicians, Finances and Music Law."

Touched and honoured

Peter Grant's daughter, Helen Grant, added, "My father would have been both touched and honoured that this scholarship has been created in his name. He was a great inspiration to many people in the business, not only on the management front, but in the way he looked after his artists in his own, infamous way! A charismatic personality coupled with great humor, means he is never far away. This is a long overdue accolade. Never forgotten"

Peter Grant, best known as the manager of Led Zeppelin, also worked closely with Bo Diddley, The Everly Brothers, Little Richard, Chuck Berry, Gene Vincent, the Animals and the Yardbirds, to name a few. In 1996, The Music Managers Forum (MMF) award for outstanding achievement in management was renamed the Peter Grant Award, in his honour.

The Peter Grant Memorial Scholarship will cover approx £16,000 of course fees across the three year undergraduate programme.

To find out how to apply for The Peter Grant Memorial Scholarship call 0844 2 646 666, email info@bimm.co.ukor visit www.bimm.co.uk/bristol

Read more about BIMM announce Peter Grant Memorial Scholarship at MusicRadar.com


RØDE Rocks international band competition announced

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PRESS RELEASE: RØDE Microphones is very excited to announce today's launch of 'RØDE Rocks' - an international band competition designed to locate and showcase the best in independent, unsigned talent around the world and reward them with an all expenses paid recording session in Hollywood with renowned producer Alain Johannes, as well as studio prize packs consisting of microphones and speakers.

To enter 'RØDE Rocks', artists need to record an original composition of more than two minutes in length and then create an accompanying video that features at least one RØDE microphone. After uploading the video to YouTube the artist simply needs to visit www.roderocks.com and submit their details along with a link to the video. At the end of June 2012 a panel of guest judges including Matt Sorum (Guns n' Roses, Velvet Revolver, The Cult), David Catching (Queens of the Stone Age, Eagles of Death Metal), Howlin' Pelle Almqvist (The Hives), James Lavelle (UNKLE, MoWax), Band of Horses, Gareth Liddiard (The Drones), Har Mar Superstar, Deuce and Warpaint will reduce the number of entrants to ten fi nalists, and those videos will be showcased on the RØDE website for a two week period in which all visitors will be invited to vote for their favourite performance.

First prize winners will receive return fl ights to Los Angeles, California to record at the famous Record Plant studios in Hollywood, with superstar producer Alain Johannes. Johannes is one of rock's most in-demand collaborators, following his work with artists such as Chris Cornell, Queens of the Stone Age, Arctic Monkeys, Mark Lanegan, Them Crooked Vultures and more. Providing additional production and engineering support during the recording session will be John Merchant (Barbra Streisand, Michael Jackson, R.Kelly, Celine Dion, Lenny Kravitz, Phil Ramone) and Grammy Award winner Francis Buckley (Quincy Jones, Aerosmith, Alanis Morisette, Paula Abdul, LL Cool J, Black Flag). Additionally the winning artist(s) will receive vocal training throughout the sessions from SLS certifi ed instructor Robert 'RAab' Stevenson (Kelly Rowland, Justin Timberlake, Rihanna, Jennifer Hudson, The Singing Offi ce). The resulting recording will be professionally mixed and mastered, and provided to the winning artist to release as they see fit.

Second and third prize winners will each receive a studio prize pack consisting of a number of studio and live performance microphones and studio monitors from Event, totalling over US$15,000 in value.

"A quick tour of the most popular independent YouTube artists will show that RØDE is already the microphone of choice for showcasing these incredible talents" commented Damien Wilson, RØDE's Global Sales & Marketing Director. "We're very excited about the 'RØDE ROCKS' competition being the connector between these great independent talents and some of the music industry's fi nest artists, producers and engineers, as well as offering the winner a once-in-a-lifetime, money-can't-buy recording experience!"

RØDE Rocks judge and rock n' roll icon David Catching was blown away at the scale of the prizes. "You better have immense talent to win this chance of working with Alain, John, Francis and RØDE at Record Plant, because you'll be involved with the best of the best and coolest of the cool! This combination of bad assery is a dream come true!" he exclaimed.

"I wish I wasn't a judge, cause I'd give my right arm to be recording with these awesome men, on these amazing mics at this legendary studio! Give it your best, because that's what you'll get in return!"

Full terms and conditions are available on the competition website. Visit www.roderocks.com now to enter!

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Information taken from official press release, for more visit Rode Rocks

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Read more about RØDE Rocks international band competition announced at MusicRadar.com


Arturia announces Hybrid Madness promotion

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PRESS RELEASE: Between May 1st and June 30th 2012, any customer registering a new Arturia Hybrid keyboard instrument will be able to choose and download up to four full software instruments free, from Arturia. And, if they register a Spark Creative Drum Machine System, they will be able to download the full V-Collection 2 package for free!

Customers purchasing the 32 Key "The Factory" (or higher) Analog Experience keyboard will, as part of the standard package, receive the Analog Experience software containing 3500 playable sounds based on Arturia's classic analogue synth recreations. And if you own the full version of the instrument a particular preset is based on, you'll be able to open up the full version and tweak to your hearts content!

Find Arturia Analog Experience products at the following dealers.

How do I claim, and which products can I claim free?

Software is available for selection after registering your hybrid product, and will be provided via download from Arturia. To make a claim, visit this link: More info and claims.

Products available for claim with Hybrid Keyboards (quantity depends on keyboard purchased): ARP2600V, CS-80V, Jupiter-8V, Minimoog V, Moog Modular V, Oberheim SEM-V, Prophet-V/VS, Spark Vintage Drum Machines.

Products contained in V-Collection 2 (free with Spark) includes Minimoog V, Moog Modular V, CS-80V, ARP2600V, Prophet V/VS, Jupiter 8V, Analog Laboratory.

What products qualify, and how many products can I claim?

Buy 25 Key / Analog Experience The Player (includes 1000 playable sounds).
Get 1 Software Instrument Free.

Buy 32 Key / Analog Experience The Factory (includes 3500 playable sounds).
Get 2 Software Instruments Free.

Buy 49 Key / Analog Experience The Laboratory (includes 3500 playable sounds).
Get 3 Software Instruments Free.

Buy 61 Key / Analog Experience The Laboratory (includes 3500 playable sounds).
Get 4 Software Instruments Free.

Buy Spark Creative Drum Machine System.
Get V-Collection 2 Synthesizer Anthology Free.

The Analog Experience Hybrid Keyboard range combine a premium aluminium keyboard with dedicated control of the included Analog Factory software, allowing all sounds to be dramatically modified instantaneously and making this hybrid ensemble stand apart from any other instrument.

The keyboard itself can work as a controller for any third-party software or hardware instrument. A premium MIDI keyboard, offering smooth key-action, aftertouch, aluminium casing and an array of real time controls.

Combining the power of analog synthesis, physical modelling and samples, through the intuitive workflow of a hardware drum machine, Spark is a highly creative beat production center. With a complete library including vintage drum machines, electronic analog kits, acoustic & physical drums, Spark is your weapon of choice to create unique grooves whether you are producing in the studio or performing on stage.

The Analog Experience range is now available from Arturia dealers in the UK. To find your nearest dealer, please just click here!

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Information taken from official press release, for more visit Arturia

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Read more about Arturia announces Hybrid Madness promotion at MusicRadar.com


Fender introduces new additions to revamped Pawn Shop Series

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Fender gave us a sneak preview of the new Pawn Shop models in a teaser photo earlier today. We promised you more news as we had it and now we've got the official press release. Scroll down to find out about new models including the Jaguarillo, Offset Special and Reverse Jaguar bass.

Click here for a gallery of the new Fender Pawn Shop guitars

Fender Pawn Shop Series press release

The guitars that "never were but should have been" return with new eccentric models. Fender introduces four new, out-of-the-ordinary models to its innovative Pawn Shop series – the Pawn Shop Offset Special, Pawn Shop Jaguarillo, Pawn Shop Fender Mustang Special, and the line's first-ever bass guitar, the Pawn Shop Reverse Jaguar Bass. These stylish models offer bold personality, striking looks and daring tones.

The Pawn Shop Jaguarillo guitar hot-rods traditional Jaguar design through the roof with a scorching HSS configuration in which all three pickups –two standard Stratocaster single-coils and an Atomic humbucking bridge pickup – are angled for enhanced bass and treble response.

With a standout design that calls for double-take reactions, the Pawn Shop Reverse Jaguar Bass features a "reverse" body and "reverse" headstocks, new pickguard shape, two Reverse Jaguar humbucking pickups and a streamlined control layout of a single three-way pickup toggle switch and two knobs (volume and tone).

A guitar from the past and the future, the Pawn Shop Offset Special guitar is one of Fender's most offbeat designs ever. Features include a semi-hollow double-cutaway body with an f hole and sleek offset waist, a pair of large JZHB humbucking pickups with three-way toggle switching and an Adjusto-Matic bridge with vintage-style floating tremolo tailpiece.

The enormously popular Pawn Shop Mustang Special returns with a brand new 3-Color Sunburst finish, expanding colour choices for players of all tastes. Features include a rosewood fretboard with modern 9.5 radius and medium jumbo frets, pickup toggle switch, three-way coil selector slide switch for each humbucking pickup (enabling 15 different tonal options), mint green pickguard, '70s-style hard-tail Stratocaster bridge, vintage-style tuners and strap buttons, and deluxe gig bag.

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Information taken from official press release, for more visit Fender

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Read more about Fender introduces new additions to revamped Pawn Shop Series at MusicRadar.com



VIDEO REVIEW: Roland Jupiter-50

Joe Bonamassa talks new album Driving Towards The Daylight track-by-track

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"Some albums fight you. You get stuck on something – a sound, a solo, a song – and before you know it, you're having a knock-down-drag-out brawl with yourself. Not that the sound of struggle is a bad thing; in fact, most of the time it makes for great music. But you don't want to beat up on yourself for no reason.

"Driving Towards The Daylight fell into place pretty easily. It was kind of just meant to be. We did it in two sections – one in August of 2011 and another in February of this year. We did a lot of recording at the Studio at The Palms in Las Vegas. It had been seven years since I did an album there, and the vibe was great – I could tell from the first downbeat that everything was going to sound amazing.

Read more about Joe Bonamassa talks new album Driving Towards The Daylight track-by-track at MusicRadar.com


Reason Rack Extensions: more details revealed

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Propellerhead has revealed a little more about its new Rack Extensions (Re) format. Announced prior to Musikmesse 2012, this will be supported in Reason 6.5 and Reason Essentials 1.5 when they're launched in the second quarter of 2012.

To begin with, we now have audio examples of Radical Piano, the new instrument that comes from Propellerhead itself.

The company has also confirmed that it'll have a couple of other devices in the Rack Extensions store from day one: Pulsar LGM-1, which is both a dual LFO and synth; and Polar, a harmonizer/pitch shifter.

What's not currently clear is whether these devices will be included with Reason 6.5 and Reason Essentials 1.5 (the updates to these are free) or if they'll be optional, paid-for add-ons.

If it's the latter, you could argue that users will only have to pay for what they want, but it may also lead some to wonder if we'll continue to see built-in devices appearing in Reason updates in the future.

Third-party developers who've confirmed that they're working on Rack Extensions include u-he, Softube, Rob Papen, FXpansion, GForce Software, Sugar Bytes, Korg and Sonic Charge.

Find out more about Rack Extensions on the Propellerhead website.

Read more about Reason Rack Extensions: more details revealed at MusicRadar.com


VST/AU plug-in instrument/effect round-up: Week 43

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Arturia gave us the Wurlitzer V and Native Instruments Instruments unveiled Skanner XT, but these aren't the only plug-in releases from the past week or so. Read on for the best of the rest.

Also make sure you check out these regularly updated features:

The 20 best VST plug-in synths in the world today

The 14 best VST plug-in drum machines in the world today

If you've got a new PC or Mac plug-in, make sure you let us know about it by emailing musicradar.pressreleases@futurenet.com with all the details.

NEXT: Subsonic Labs Wolfram

Read more about VST/AU plug-in instrument/effect round-up: Week 43 at MusicRadar.com


IN PRAISE OF: EVH 5150 III Head

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When Eddie Van Halen bailed on his 13-year endorsee relationship with Peavey in 2004, he walked away with the rights to the name of the 5150 amp and his Wolfgang guitar.

Three years later, he unveiled rebooted versions of both products under his own EVH brand, backed up by the manufacturing expertise of Fender.

The freshly baked backline was christened the 5150 III, a three-channel, 100-watt slab of shock and awe loaded with eight 12AX7 preamp and four 6L6 power valves. While most 'III' aficionados will confess that the amp's clean sound is nothing to get moist about, we can't bring ourselves to give a toss about that. The EVH is all about the harmonically rich gain.

Yes, it's loud enough to weld your eyes to the back of your skull, but there's classic Eddie tone in there, too. "There is a difference between being just loud and having what I call a warm, brown sound," commented Eddie on what he expects from his backline.

Eddie has used '5150', the LAPD code for the criminally insane, as the name of his recording studio in Studio City, California, a 1986 Van Halen album, and his Peavey signature amp, launched back in 1991.

The 5150 and 5150 II heads were designed by electronics boffin James Brown, who now puts a soldering iron to noble use building his respected Amptweaker stompboxes. James and Eddie did such a cracking job on the 5150 models that when the latter left Peavey's artist roster the amps were simply rebranded as the 6505 and 6505+ in honour of the brand's 40th anniversary ('65 to '05, natch).

Still going strong, the 6505 and 6505+ are basically the same spec as the original 5150 and 5150 II, with some cosmetic tweaks. Anyway, Eddie moved on and the EVH 5150 III head is great simply because the man who spec'd it still cares about tone.

The amp is currently proving its mettle on tour in support of the new Van Halen album A Different Kind of Truth, but don't forget, Eddie made the 5150 III for you, too.

The legendary divebomber summed up his attitude to developing EVH gear during an interview with Guitar World in 2007: "I do this because a lot of people ask if they can get what I use," said Eddie. "Well, what you get is identical to what I use." (EM)

EVH 5150 III Timeline

1991: Peavey launches Eddie's original 5150 head

2005: Van Halen and the 5150 name leave Peavey

2007: Eddie bounces back with the EVH 5150 III head

2011: EVH unveils a 50­watt 5150 III head

VIDEO: EVH 5150-III 50W guitar amplifier demo

Read more about IN PRAISE OF: EVH 5150 III Head at MusicRadar.com


VIDEO: Jimi Hendrix guitar tribute jam breaks Guinness World Record

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Nearly 42 years after his death, Jimi Hendrix is still breaking records. Well, sort of. Yesterday (1 May), at the 10th annual Thanks Jimi Festival in Wroclaw, Poland, over 7000 guitarists paid tribute to the late guitar icon by jamming on his classic tune Hey Joe, setting a new Guinness World Record for the Largest Guitar Ensemble.

Although we're not sure how the organizers logged the exact number (nor do we know how everybody managed to plug in), it is said that 7273 guitarists, wielding both electrics and acoustics, took part, besting the old record of 6346 that was set at the same event held in 2009.

You can check it out in the video above, and if you happen to see yourself in the crowd, consider yourself - in the words of Hendrix - "not necessarily stoned but beautiful."

Read more about VIDEO: Jimi Hendrix guitar tribute jam breaks Guinness World Record at MusicRadar.com


The Gaslight Anthem's Brian Fallon: "I wrote "45" in five minutes"

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"45", the first single from The Gaslight Anthem's new album, Handwritten (due 23 July), debuted earlier this week on Radio One and had the rare honour of being played three times.

Speaking to MusicRadar, frontman Brian Fallon said the track set the standard for the new album.

"That was the one. The one where we said – 'OK, we've got something here!'" said the singer. "I was in love with that song from the first moment. It came out in like five minutes. Then it was done. The lyrics just flew out."

Fans have already been comparing the single to the likes of prior hit Great Expectations (from The Gaslight Anthem's breakthrough record The '59 Sound) and Brian reckons they can look forward to a return the band's punkier roots.

"There's a few of those on the record – the song Howl is another one," said Fallon. "We'd been talking about how we wanted to go away and make this bluesy type of thing, but we never actually did!"

Other tracks set for the record include Too Much Blood, which has a "big, stomp-y blues riff" and Keepsake, which features a harmonica and Brian says is their "Neil Young song".

Although they're trying new ideas, the band are conscious not to travel too far down that road.

"We decided that if we're going to go in that direction and try and experiment a little, let's do some familiar stuff too. That way it's just fun [live]. We don't want to be concentrating through the whole show."

Keep an eye out for an in-depth interview with The Gaslight Anthem guitarists Brian Fallon and Alex Rosamilia in a forthcoming issue of our sister magazine, Total Guitar.

Read more about The Gaslight Anthem's Brian Fallon: "I wrote "45" in five minutes" at MusicRadar.com



Stewart Copeland on The Police, drum solos, Rush, double bass pedals and more

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For Stewart Copeland, playing "outside your instrument" is what makes music really sing. © Peter Foley/epa/Corbis

Over the course of his storied career, Stewart Copeland has tangled and tussled with band members, music execs, drum sets, film directors, polo players, and just about anybody and everything necessary for the advancement of his myriad passions and pursuits.

And the day that we speak with the legendary drummer and composer, he's engaged in another battle, albeit a more personal one: "I'm getting over a flu," he says, which is surprising because he sounds both chipper and robust. "I'm not so bad now, but my head is still full of phlegm. Hopefully, I won't make too many coughing and retching sounds."

Timing to a drummer is, of course, everything, and if one simply must get the flu, Copeland found just the right pocket: He recently wrapped a residency at Southern Methodist University's Meadows School of the Arts in Dallas, and in early July he heads to London for the UK premiere of his three-movement composition Gameien D'Drum. After that, he'll hook up with his onetime Animal Logic bandmate Stanley Clarke for a European tour.

With a resume and history as full as Copeland's, there's much to talk about. "If the subject is me, I'll be endlessly fascinated by our conversation," he jokes, and indeed, during our lengthy chat, one which covers topics such as his time in The Police, how he approached his drum solo on the David Letterman show last year (and what he thinks of solos in general), his friendship with Neil Peart (whose band, Rush, he doesn't listen to), double bass drum pedals, the concept of "playing outside the instrument," and why keeping a simple beat offers infinite possibilities, Copeland proves to be a gripping raconteur.

And this is just Part 1. Keep your eyes peeled for the conclusion of our interview with Stewart Copeland.

Last year, your good friend Neil Peart told us about a term you came up with, the 'Eric Clapton Factor,' stemming from the fact that Clapton hated not being able to go out and play the guitar casually - he felt the pressure to be brilliant all the time. Neil said you stopped playing the drums for a while for the very same reason.

"Well, it wasn't so much that. For about 10 years, I was a film composer, and I was quite consumed with that. Bashing on the drums just receded into the distance. But then, during those times when I was called upon to play something, and the chops had vanished – they were long gone – I felt a responsibility to be Eric Clapton, as in 'Eric Clapton is God,' and I didn't feel like I could deliver, and so I became very reluctant to play drums in public. Until Les Claypool called and said that it was my civic duty."

Which was the start of Oysterhead.

"Yeah. That's right."

And Oysterhead, like The Police, is a trio. What do you find so fascinating about the three-piece approach?

"It leaves a lot of room to do stuff. In fact, the trio is a good format for making a band. But actually, playing with 10 guys on stage, or 50 or 90 guys on stage, is just as much fun and can be even more fun. The trio thing is really about forming a band and having a unit, and when you have a creative collaboration, the fewer cooks the better. Just make sure they're the right cooks." [laughs]

But whatever the number of people – or cooks – it's still a matter of finding ways to fill the space.

"That's what I've been saying for years. But I have discovered that when you play with lots of guys and they're filling up the spaces, it allows you to be more economical in your own contribution. Collaboration is what it's all about. The joy of playing music is the joy of collaborating. For instance, if there are a lot of percussionists on stage, it gladdens my heart – all those 16th notes that some other guy is playing are things that I don't have to play, and I can look for other places to put the pocket."

Last year, you participated in Solos Week on the Late Show With David Letterman, as did Neil Peart. We talked with him right as he was preparing for his segment –

"Did he give you his sorry tale?"

A sorry tale? Well, he was trying to shorten the live solo he had been playing on tour to fit the time constraints for TV. In fact, he was doing some serious math…

"See, I was having the exact opposite problem: I was trying to figure out how to drag out my three chops to last long enough to be called a drum solo, as opposed to a drum break. I don't do drum solos. In fact, I've only done two in my life: one time was on Letterman, and the other was in Africa when I was performing for lions. [In a scene in his 1985 film The Rhythmatist, Copeland plays drums in a steel cage while surrounded by savage, hungry beasts.] That second time, hitting the drums as loudly as possible was the only thing that saved my skin."

So the Letterman crowd was a better audience?

"Than the lions? Yes, they were much more appreciative. The lions were a very cold audience. They ran away – which was pretty much the desired result."

It's interesting that you did the solo on Letterman; Neil said you were very "anti-drum solo."

"Mmm… not so much. I pull Neil's chain on this at every possible opportunity, of course. You know, when I was a kid, I dreamed of playing a 17-hour drum solo. Then I grew up."

Because you had to stretch the solo you played on TV, did that mean it was more improvised?

"It was composed. I figured out 'First, I'll do this bit here, then I'll go to that and do that little bit here, and then I'll go over here and do that.' And I remembered that the last time I'd composed a drum solo was in college, which entailed me stringing together my coolest chops.

"Then, as I say, I grew up and became a professional musician. Years went by, decades went by, and I was called upon to actually do a drum solo in front of an audience. It was pretty much the same process, and it took me back to that water tower on the grounds of the college."

By the way, just curious: What did you think when Rush added some Police-type elements to their music in the early '80s?

"I had only heard of it. I didn't actually listen to Rush albums, and I couldn't tell you one from the other – although Neil is a good buddy. [laughs] We agreed to disagree on certain things, and it is a measure of his greatness as a human being that he is completely over whatever my feelings might be about Rush.

"This truly is the case: He's never heard me say a wonderful thing about his band. He's read a few comments that I wish he hadn't read. In unguarded moments, things tend to slip out. Musicians tend to be snippy about one another, and I'm generally not. I generally love all music and all players.

"There was a time when bands like Rush were the epitome of what The Police were theoretically against, which was an overemphasis on musicality. Our ethos in the early days was about the primal scream and that musical technique was a distraction from that mission. There may have been a few comments that I might have made regarding Rush's position on that debate, and it is really, really to Neil's credit that he's over that debate. And we get along great."

Yet, at the same time, it's no secret that The Police packed a lot of musical sophistication into some pretty tight songs.

"Yeah, but that was by accident."

Some years back at a drum clinic, you startled the crowd when you played nothing but a simple beat for two minutes straight. Do you feel that drummers still miss the point you were trying to put across?

"The point was that there is so much expression in the execution of a mantra-like rhythm, that when you strip it right down, the tiniest things, the most minute fluctuations of the 16th note hi-hat, have great effect. And you don't get that effect unless everything else is extremely streamlined. The point I was trying to make is that within the confines of a very strict, repetitive loop, you can really have a world of expression."

You proved as much with Every Breath You Take. For the most part, you keep the beat simple and steady, but you throw in crashes out of the blue. So many drummers can't get those moves down.

"Nor can I. I think at the last Police show, we were still arguing how to get from the chorus back into the verse."

Are you considered a lefty? You write with your left hand…

"I'm left-handed, but I play instruments right-handed. It's just more convenient that way. And because most instruments require both hands to be working real hand, I find that you have to be ambidextrous. Like most left-handed people, I am close to being fully ambidextrous."

So on the drums, you're kind of a Ringo.

"I guess. I wasn't aware that he's left-handed."

He's a lefty and plays with his kit set up for a righty.

"But see, it's a right-handed world, and for lefties, our right hand is better than the left hand on righties."

Ringo would always say that the reason his playing was so unique was that, unlike other drummers, he played with his kit set for a righty, but he would still lead with his left.

"Mmm… I think that's an interesting thing for him to say, but I don't know if it's true. He leads from his heart, which is what makes him such a good drummer. Which hand does what follows where in his solar plexus he feels the rhythm is. All hands and feet are on the same mission.

"Certainly, sometimes you lead with the left and sometimes you lead with the right, depending on what you're doing – and also which hand is more tired at any particular moment. When practicing, which is different from playing shows or playing music, you work on making both hands just as strong."

Performing at the La Mar de Musicas Festival, Spain, 2011. © JOSE ALBALALEJO/epa/Corbis

You once talked about "playing outside your instrument." When did you come up with this idea, and can you speak about what it means to you?

"It came to me when I was playing polo – you 'play outside your horse.' If you're thinking about your horse and your equestrian skills, and things like proper riding and hitting the ball, let alone playing the game and putting your horse in the right place on the field…

"See, you shouldn't even be thinking about the horse. You have to be outside the horse. Your body and horse are one. You shouldn't be thinking about riding. You have to think, 'Here's the ball. I need to get it there. I need to stop that guy from getting to the ball. Uh-oh, there's a pass and that's where I gotta be.' When you do that, you're thinking outside your horse. You're playing the game.

"Put this to music: The mechanics of playing an instrument should be furthest from your mind. You've got to think outside your instrument, play outside your instrument. You've got to think about the music: 'What is the music? Where are the other players are? What's going on? Where's the groove?' - things like that. What drum you're hitting, what your technique is – that should be completely subliminal."

When you sat down at the kit with this concept in your head, did you feel as though you played differently?

"I had always thought that way. It was only when I came up with the polo analogy that it crystallized into something that I could make into a riff when talking to people such as yourself."

A while back, you started using a double bass drum pedals.

"Yes! That little bastard in Slipknot…"

Although you seem to have gotten by just fine with a single pedal. Did you ever think of going all-out rock and playing a double bass drum kit?

"Well, I did in Curved Air, much to own personal and musical ruination. [laughs] I don't know why – maybe it was maturity as a musician or something like that – but later on, after seeing what Joey Jordison can do without losing that throb… and they also invented the double bass drum pedal using only one bass drum, which meant that the ergonomics were extremely improved… I don't know, it worked out better when I came back to that.

"I don't use the double bass pedal a lot – just for the occasional flash and effect – but there is one particular thing that it can do; it works like a paradiddle: If you've landed on your foot but you need to get back up to your snare drum, but you need two beats to get your there, you can do go, 'ba-da-bahh!' It's ergonomics.

"Now, John Bonham would have just done that with one foot because he was John Bonham. Because he was... the mountain."

Copeland (seen here in 1980) is Tama Drums' first and longest-term artist endorser. © Lynn Goldsmith/Corbis

Let's talk about The Police a bit. In the early days of the band, you had to make records fast and, one would assume, cheap. Did that youthful hunger, and the limitations you worked with, lead to a certain creativity that was different from when you had lots of time and money in the studio?

"There was certainly hunger, and the hunger was the driving force behind getting up in the morning, figuring out a studio, making that call, calling the other studio and seeing if you can haggle the price down – the mechanics of getting a band going and working and just being were driven by hunger and fear. Once we had slain those dragons and had gotten into the sacred grove of a studio, then it was all the opposite; it was joy, it was creativity, it was the reward, it was the upside.

"However, if our hunger had gotten into the sacred grove, then we would have been more commercial. Basically, we were trying to do something that was really cool. Once our rent was paid, we weren't thinking that we had to make money. In the Police room, we were doing what we thought was the coolest thing that we could do. We weren't thinking about the marketplace at all.

"Back to the hunger thing, yes, outside the band room, I was thinking, This is what we've got to do. We've got to wear this uniform. We've got to fly this flag. We have to spout this ethos to get us into a niche in the music market called punk. You know, we can get in there, we'll cut our hair, and we're jussssst about young enough to squeeze into that demographic. All that calculation – certainly. But in the band room, we just did what we thought was cool."

Andy Summers' embrace of guitar pedal effects predated The Edge by a couple of years. As a drummer, how did you work with the different spaces and sounds he created?

"He created such an orchestral effect that I just wanted to listen to it. Shut me up. What Sting played on the bass pumped me up and made me want to blaze away; it got me all excited. But then I'd hear Andy play one big fat chord that would ring out with those sounds he had... and I was just listening."

Read more about Stewart Copeland on The Police, drum solos, Rush, double bass pedals and more at MusicRadar.com


VIDEO: Can monkeys play synthesizers?

Hard Rock Cafe Guitar Amnesty returns

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The UK wing of Hard Rock Cafe has announced a second year of its excellent Guitar Amnesty initiative, which fixes up broken and unwanted guitars and donates them to disadvantaged groups.

Anyone that's got an old, unused, or broken guitar, or who has, for instance, outgrown a junior model, is invited to donate their instrument at the Hard Rock Cafes in London, Manchester and Edinburgh.

The unwanted instruments will then be fixed up by guitar tech Chris Leslie and donated to UK charity Barnado's, which works with disadvantaged children, young people and families across the country.

According to Hard Rock Cafe, it doesn't matter what condition the instrument is in as, in the worst cases, the components can still be used to fix other instruments.

Everyone who donates a guitar will receive a Hard Rock Cafe goodie bag, not to mention the warm, fuzzy feeling of a good deed done. Head to www.hardrockcafe.com for more information.

Hard rock cafe guitar amnesty

(Click image to enlarge)

Read more about Hard Rock Cafe Guitar Amnesty returns at MusicRadar.com


Cool and classic basses: Fender Transition P-Bass

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The Fender Transition P-Bass earned its name as it represented the first round of updates but didn't get quite as far as the major overhaul in 1957.

Here the slab body was given contouring in line with the newly released Stratocaster and Sunburst became an option to the regular blonde finish with custom colour choices added in 1956.

An alternative white scratchplate was also introduced that still covered most of the body and that all-important Telecaster styled headstock remained.

Sting has a couple of these from 1955 and 1957 although apparently fitted with Seymour Duncan Custom Shop Basslines Stacked single-coil pickups that help overcome some of the original pickups' shortcomings. The later model has an alder body.

Read our full Fender Transition P-Bass profile here.

Read more about Cool and classic basses: Fender Transition P-Bass at MusicRadar.com


Listen: Steve Vai's rifftastic new song, Gravity Storm

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You want to hear some monster riffing? Then check out Gravity Storm (above), the new song from Steve Vai, which will appear on his 16th solo album, The Story Of Light, to be released 14 August on the guitarist's own Favored Nations label.

The 12-song set, which continues a conceptual and cosmic narrative arc that began on Vai's 2005 release, Real Illusions: Reflections, is largely instrumental, but it does feature vocal performances by Aimee Mann, who duets with Vai on a song they co-wrote, No More Amsterdam, as well as Beverly McClellan, a season one finalist on The Voice, who appears on John The Revelator, a cover version of the Blind Willie Johnson blues standard (Johnson's acid-soaked vocals are worked into the mix).

"I'm always pursuing knowledge, I'm a seeker of spiritual equilibrium - and music is a big part of that," says Vai of the album's theme, which follows the journey of a man driven mad by grief, intertwining tragedy, revelation, enlightenment and redemption. "I've been obsessed with these kinds of ideas for years."

In the near future, Vai envisions a third set of songs that will complete the narratives that run through both The Story Of Light and Real Illusions: Reflections.

You can pre-order The Story Of Light on Steve Vai's official website.

Read more about Listen: Steve Vai's rifftastic new song, Gravity Storm at MusicRadar.com


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