The Brittnees (rock band)

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We had to re-record some guitar parts today. The reason was simple: the first takes were uncool now AFTER mixing the whole thing. So back to the beginning and re-think - it came out good - now it’s moving our asses (and that’s what’s it all about … well, mostly ;)). We’ll try to keep you up to date but we are working, playing singing, recording too get more stuff that excites us and we’re not easy to …
loveRobin

We had to re-record some guitar parts today. The reason was simple: the first takes were uncool now AFTER mixing the whole thing. So back to the beginning and re-think - it came out good - now it’s moving our asses (and that’s what’s it all about … well, mostly ;)). We’ll try to keep you up to date but we are working, playing singing, recording too get more stuff that excites us and we’re not easy to …

love
Robin

The core of the The Brittnees guitar sound:A Vox AC30 from 1971, a 1964 Fender Tremolux, a 1992 Marshall 1959SLP reissue, recapped with the help from metropolous amplification to match 1967 Plexi standards. A Diezel VH-4 and an Orange cabinet loaded with a Celestion G12H-100 and a Celestion Heritage Greenback. To tame the Fender, Vox and Marshall we use an Ultimate Attenuator from Magus Innovations.

The core of the The Brittnees guitar sound:
A Vox AC30 from 1971, a 1964 Fender Tremolux, a 1992 Marshall 1959SLP reissue, recapped with the help from metropolous amplification to match 1967 Plexi standards. A Diezel VH-4 and an Orange cabinet loaded with a Celestion G12H-100 and a Celestion Heritage Greenback. To tame the Fender, Vox and Marshall we use an Ultimate Attenuator from Magus Innovations.

watch Robin playing the guitar part form the song ‘Shu Shu’

Camera: Canon HV20
Signal Path:
Bridge Humbucker (Stock)
Gibson LP SG Standard V.O.S. (252nd SG Standard reissue produced in 2006)
Analogman Beano Boost
VOX AC30 Top Boost (1971)
Shure SM57
AMS-Neve 1073DPD
ProTools HD3