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Guitar World, September 1994, Brad Tolinski's interviews of Phil Taylor (Gilmour's
guitar technician).


A look behind DAVID GILMOUR'S mighty wall of sound.
"I've been working with David Gilmour for over 20 years and we've
exchanged very few cross words during that time," says guitar tech
Phil Taylor. "David is very easygoing, but he expects things to be
right -- and he is used to them being right." With his soft voice and
thoughtful expression, Taylor seems more like a gentleman's gentleman
than your typical rock technician. But his efficient, no-nonsense
manner makes it clear why he has remained a valued member of the Pink
Floyd camp for two decades. "I'm actually Pink Floyd's only full-time
technician," Taylor continues. "In addition to maintaining Dave's
equipment on the road, I designed and maintain his recording studio."
Clearly the elegant Mr. Taylor is eminently qualified to answer a
question that tears at the hearts amd minds of millions of guitarists:
How does the wizard of Floyd achieve his singing sound?
GUITAR WORLD: What is the concept behind David's road and studio
systems?
PHIL TAYLOR: He likes to start with a very clean, undistorted guitar
sound. All distortion, delays, compression, choruses and so on are
added via various effect pedals. He applies the same philosophy in
the recording studio.
GW: What does Dave use in the studio to achieve his sound?
PT: For amplification he uses a pair of Seventies 50-watt Hiwatt
combos, a pair of '59 re-issue Fender Bassmans, and a Maestro Rover
revolving speaker. Every once in a while he'll experiment with
different guitars, but his primary instrument for the last 10 years
has been his red 1984 '57 reissue Fender Stratocaster, which he also
uses on the road.
GW: Is the Strat customized in any way?
PT: Yes. It's fitted with EMG-SA active single-coil pickups, an
EMG-SPC midrange controller and an EMG-EXG expander which boosts treble
and bass. Additionally, the guitar features a cut-down tremolo arm.
GW: What about microphones?
PT: It varies, but primarily Neumann U-87's and Shure SM-57's. We've
also used a Neumann KM-86 on his rotating speaker.
GW: I notice David tends to use stomp boxes instead of rack-mounted
effects. What is his reasoning?
PT: I think his general feeling is that while rack effects tend
to cover a lot of areas, they don't cover any of them particularly
well. He feels that foot pedals such as a Big Muff tend to have more
character.
GW: How does he control his plethora of pedals on stage?
PT: He has a rack system, designed by Pete Cornish, which features a
routing system of 24 sends and returns. The effects are controlled by
a Bob Bradshaw pedalboard that turns them on and off in various preset
configurations.
GW: What is David's workhorse amp on the road?
PT: As I mentioned, he likes his initial signal to be very clean.
To achieve this he uses a mid-Seventies Alembic F2-B bass preamp and
the power stage of six 100-watt Hiwatt heads. The Alembic F2-B is a
very straightforward unit -- it has a bright switch, volume, bass,
middle and treble controls. We, however, have altered it just a little
bit. We put an extra tube in the preamp secton to give it a little more
drive, lowered the impedance in the output and changed the capacitor in
the bottom end to eliminate some of the lows, because it was very boomy
through closed-back cabinets.
His stage speaker system consists of two WEM 4x12's with Fane
Crescendo speakers, two Marshall 4x12's and three custom-made rotating
speaker cabinets we call "doppolas."
GW: How did you stumble upon the Alembic preamp? It seems a strange
choice.
PT: We bought a bunch of them back in the early Seventies for Roger
Waters's bass system. One day we decided to use one to power Dave's
Yamaha RA-200 revolving speaker system, and discovered that the amp
just generated a nice warm tone. It shouldn't really be a surprise --
it basically uses a Fender circuit.
GW: Does David operate all of his effect changes from the stage, or
do you control them from backstage?
PT: Dave performs all of his effects in real time. He likes to have
control in case something is not sounding right on stage. It allows
him to swap effects and improvise, depending on his mood. He has a
very good ear, and is continually changing his effects to get the
sound that he wants for any given show.
GW: What are some of the more exotic effects built into his rack?
PT: You remember the old Univox Uni-Vibes? I had one built into a
rack system. We even had the old logo embossed on the face plate.
We also have an old MXR DDL digital delay unit built into a rack unit.
It has a digital readout, but it's really nowhere close to being
accurate. Dave likes it because even though it's a digital unit, it
still sounds a little dirty, like a tape unit.
He also uses a Lexicon PCM-70 to store the circular delay sounds
you hear in songs like "Shine On" and "Time." Because it has a
multi-tap function, it can pretty accurately duplicate the kind of echo
Dave used to get from his old Binson echo unit. A t.c. electronic 2290
is his primary delay -- it's what he uses for most things.
Additional pedals include a Boss CS-2 Sustainer, MXR Dyna Comp, Iba-
nez CP9 Compressor-Limiter, Boss Hyperfuzz, Electro-Harmonix Big Muff,
two Chandler Industries Tube Drivers and three Boss Graphic Equalizers.
He also operates several master volume pedals: one for his 4x12
cabinets, another one for his rotating speakers, another for his voice
box and a speed control for the doppolas.
GW: How does Dave achieve the classic sound that we hear on the solos
of songs like "Comfortably Numb"?
PT: It think it's just pretty much him. He is obviously using a
couple of effects, like a Big Muff and a delay, but it really is
just his fingers, his vibrato, his choice of notes and how he sets
his effects. I find it extraordinary when people think they can copy
his sound by duplicating his gear. In reality, no matter how well
you duplicate the equipment, you will never be able to duplicate the
personality.
GW: Has he ever used a locking tremolo system on his guitar?
PT: We tried using a Kahler locking system when they first came out.
We liked it for a couple of weeks until we realized it completely
deadened the sound. David's not really a violent whammy bar user
anyway, so we really didn't need that kind of system.
GW: How many guitars does he use during the course of a performance?
PT: About seven. In addition to his Strats, he uses a Telecaster
tuned to a drop-D for "Run Like Hell," two mid-Eighties Gibson J-200
acoustics -- one tuned to standard pitch and the other tuned to
D,A,D,G,A,D for "Poles Apart" -- a Chet Atkins electric-acoustic and
two lap steels.
GW: What kind of strings does David use on his Strat?
PT: He uses a customized set of GHS Boomers. The gauges are .010,
.012, .016, .028, .038 and .048. For his acoustic guitars he uses
Ernie Ball Earthwood light gauge strings.
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