Même si ça date de 2004, ça donne une bonne idée du câblage de tout ce bouzin :
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-Vernon has an impressive amount of things on stage, I remember first time I saw him was during the Mistaken Identity tour and he was surrounded by 3 "fridges" full of racks on his sides Amp behind him and pedals on the front a sort of little house.. now he got some little less things.. from where you start to connect all and how long does it takes ???
The setup changes constantly. Most recently, the setup has been guitar into a junction box that controls a VG-88, a GR-1, a GR-20, a GR-50 and a GI-20 (all Roland units). They're routed to three separate outputs: the VG-88 goes through a Line6 Filter Mod pedal, a Line6 Echo Mod pedal, a volume pedal, then to the rack which has a Filter Pro and Echo Pro unit (Line6) and a Lexicon JamMan, which are the only units being used in there right now. It then goes out in stereo to two Crate BV300H heads with a Crate 4x12 cabinet each. The GR-20 goes through a Digitech Space Station delay pedal into a 2-12 combo amp, usually a Crate. The GR-1 goes directly into a Behringer mixer, the GR-50 goes into a TC Electronics G-Force into an EMu Audity into a small Rolls mixer which goes into two channels of the Behringer. The other channels of the Rolls have a Micro Nord synth and an Evolver. The GI-20 controls two Mac laptops which have various soft synths and sequencers in them, as well as trigger the Micro Nord and Evolver. All of this get run through the Behringer, which is DI'd through the house. On the average, it takes about 1 hour and 15 minutes to get it up and running.
-Which your usual works during the show , even than change strings that seems that V brokes continuosly
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I usually only change strings after the third show. Funny enough, the only string that breaks when they do is the D (4th string), which is wound.
-Particular adjustment you do to V. guitars ??
Nothing special, really. He'll just play it and if there's something that needs adjustment, we'll take it from there. He's very hands on with his gear, which is good. Some players won't even touch their instrument until they have to.