© 2009 Luke Anthony
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Fender Deluxe Stratocaster (Sunburst)
Classic instrument. Incredibly comfortable to play, and extremely versatile.
Fender Blues Deluxe Amplifier (Limited Edition Tweed)
Vintage sounding tube amplifier. Famously crystal clear clean sound to act as a “blank canvvas” through which to run your chosen pedal combination.
Pedal Board
Guitar > Dunlop Cry Baby Wah > MXR Dyna Comp > Boss BD-
T-
Guitar > Pedals > Amplifier

Jim Dunlop Cry Baby Wah 535Q
The classic wah pedal with silver knob on the top right to adjust the intensity of the wah sound. I always run it on full intensity
MXR Dyna Comp
Seminal compression pedal used by such tone “gods” as Dave Gilmour. Although this isn’t a vintage one made between ‘74 and ’77 (I’m not made of money!), but still sounds great.
Boss BD-
A recent addition to the board. Looking for that ballsy SRV blues sound, and this does it perfectly. The Keeley Mod transforms what is already a great pedal to a fantastic one. Robert Keeley replaces some of the cheaper parts with better quality ones. You can now buy his pedals direct from the UK.
Ibanez TS-
The first pedal I bought, and it has served me well. I use it mainly for heavier solos and when I need a fuller overdrive sound. No need for a Keeley Mod on this one, I think.
Voodoo Lab Sparkle Drive
I tried this out once in guitar shop in Chicago, and was amazed at the sound. You can blend the clean sound with the distortion which creates a sound as close to the sweet sound of a Two Rock amplifier without having to spend £1000s.
Fulltone Deja Vibe
Multi use pedal. Either creates that Hendrix “Band of Gypsies” sounds as heard on songs like “Machine Gun”, or you can use the tremolo function for a cool sounding “wobbley” sound of the sort Richard Thompson uses.
Ibanez AD9 Delay
This is a great analogue delay pedal which I use for slapback delay a la some of the bluesy Led Zepplin.
T-
Another very recent addition which I found on eBay. I don’t think they make them any more, but they produce the most amazing warm and long delay, which I will use much of the time to make the sound generally “warmer”.