Posts Tagged ‘Head’
The Northstar Session Recording Guitars 65 Amps Colour Boost Schreyer Audio Sage 28 Head
Matthew Szlachetka (guitar/ vocals) & Kane mcgee (Drums/ Vocals) recording guitar parts for the song “Who You Were” which will be on one of The Northstar Session’s upcoming 3 eps this year. Gear: ’56 Relic Custom Shop Strat 65 Amps Colour Boost Pedal Vintage Ibanez AD-9 Analog Delay Pedal Schreyer Audio Sage 28 Head & 2×12 cab (w/ Weber Silver Bell Speakers) Stay tuned for more recording clips and release dates for The Northstar Session’s 3 eps this year @: www.myspace.com/thenorthstarsession
Share and Enjoy: This is a preview of The Northstar Session Recording Guitars 65 Amps Colour Boost Schreyer Audio Sage 28 Head. Read the full post (86 words, 13 images, estimated 21 secs reading time)Machine Head (album)
Powered by Max Banner Ads I want to introduct something about Anti Skid Button Flooring. Provide safe skid free environment with colour& style Where good traction and long wearability are important the poly anti-skid is the ideal flooring manufactured with premier’s multi-layer technology. The super tough vinyl wear abrasion layer at the top is deeply embossed and retains color& wear far longer than any rubber and single ply sheet floorings. Poly antiskid is highly suited for handling heavy traffic with extra grip for walking/movement. It is designed for a long life with high wear and tear resistance
This is a preview of Machine Head (album). Read the full post (660 words, 14 images, estimated 2:38 mins reading time)Haunted Lighthouses – Owls Head Light, Owls Head, Maine
The booming lime trade of the 1820′s on Maine’s midcoast led to the construction of a lighthouse on Owls Head, an area located at the entrance to Rockland Harbor, Maine. In 1825, President John Quincy Adams authorized the building of a lighthouse on a promontory south of Rockland Harbor in Penobscot Bay.
This is a preview of Haunted Lighthouses – Owls Head Light, Owls Head, Maine. Read the full post (937 words, 13 images, estimated 3:45 mins reading time)Album Review – The Rolling Stones, Goats Head Soup (1973)
Powered by Max Banner Ads Coming on the heels of the Rolling Stones’ most acclaimed album Exile On Main Street and a four album winning streak, Goats Head Soup had the deck stacked against it from the beginning as the reviews were less than enthusiastic with some critics proclaiming it the band’s worst album since 1967′s Their Satanic Majesties Request. First off, Their Satanic Majesties Request was not a bad album, and neither is Goats Head Soup. As a matter fact, it is very good-and on top of this it shows Mick Jagger and Keith Richards going in different directions, as Jagger is ascending up the celebrity A-list while Richards is slipping deeper into drug addiction.
This is a preview of Album Review – The Rolling Stones, Goats Head Soup (1973). Read the full post (382 words, 14 images, estimated 1:32 mins reading time)