Gigged and did hundreds of sessions with a DS-1 for years, as did pretty much everyone else back then. Sounded great. Never heard anyone criticising it until internet guitar forums happened and it became the 'accepted wisdom' that it sucked.
I love the concept of revisiting older, influential gear and looking at in the context of what else was going on musically and culturally upon release. This was quite illuminating. I hope you do more of these kinds of videos in the future!
When PGS asked me to demo the DS-1 years back I honestly didn’t want to! I soon discovered similar things: Deluxe at edge of breakup and tone at 10..sweet!! 👍🏻👍🏻
Afternoon. I own this pedal. Used in conjunction with Fender Tele and a Fender 68 princeton Reissue 12 watt. Similar settings as the deluxe for best tone?
Any thoughts on the custom 78 by mxr? That crunch setting sounds great, a la keeley mod... digitrch hothead gets pretty close with it's independent bass and treble settings.
Have a DS2 on my board and a Bandit in the rehearsal space. Spent 10 minutes last rehearsal wondering why it sounded like farting through a blanket, until I realised the power soak on the bandit was all the way up
@@KriegdenSeekrabben do you mean the trans tube knob? Are you saying it sounded better with it turned way down? Having trouble getting my red stripe to sound good.
I've been trying to learn some jazz triad stuff this week. When Mick had the Jem going my wife walked behind me and casually murmered "that ain't jazz" as she passed 😂
I have had a long romance with this pedal. An Ibanez RG220, a Boss DS1, and the cheapest 4x12 and head (I believe it was a barely working, beat to hell Peavey) I could find was my first stage rig. Over the years, things changed but the DS1 always stayed. I've used it as a boost for solos, basic rhythm tracks and as a bass distortion. It truly is a damn awesome pedal. Great video, guys! As a side note: Type O Negative's frontman/bassist, Peter Steele, got his bass tone from a Boss DD3 (digital delay) into a CH1 (chorus) into a DS1 and then an EQ before the amp.
Fascinating. I was gobsmacked by how nicely it cleaned up when you backed off the guitar volume or played with a lighter touch. Didn't expect it to be so dynamic.
I absolutely love my DS1.. it took me a while to really understand how to properly use it, and videos like yours.. Now i can't go without it, especially for more subtle distortion, it sounds amazing..
You've talked about gain stacking with overdrives before but this is the first time you've done it with distortions and it sounded awesome. That last 20 minutes is what I watch this show for. (Dan- if you've not tried the DS1 into your Hampstead yet then you're in for a treat, especially at lower gain.)
IKR? The DS-1 into the Rat was rock ‘n roll! Got me thinking maybe the DS-1 should be before at least 1 or 2 overdrives. (Currently distortions are post ODs)
Fascinating about the pedal design as being part of an ecosystem to pair with an appropriate Amp's tone characteristics. That provides a lot of insight into how to run the DS-1 to get the desired results. Thanks
I just got one again after 25 years of not owning one, and it's got a *ton* of versatility, even just as a tone pedal! I got a sweet tone into my Traynor with the tone on 10 o'clock, level on 12, and distortion barely on!
Dan's face lit up that special way Mick - when you did that killer bit on the Jazzmaster. That was pretty damn fantastic. This was yet another "ear opening" mind blowing episode. You have done it again.
That was Mick actually discovering shoegaze :) It's not about reverb into distortion, it's about complete fascination with the sound your equipment is making...
Just watched this on my lunch break, went home, dialed in a little crunch on my amp, and kicked in my neglected DS-1, and WOW. This a sound I've been looking for lately for my cover band. Perfect for those 70s hard rock tunes.
I’ve been telling people the ds-1 has an edge and a bite to it that I love. To watch this video and hear it reiterated is awesome! Great tones. Great show. And amazing dynamics gents. Thanks so much!
Once upon a time I was in a relatively successful pop-punk band and the three pedals I had on the deck in front of me were a DS1, a Metal Zone, and a Boss Flanger. That sounds like it should be a joke but I promise it's not. I used the DS1 as a boost for lead, stacked it into the metal zone when I wanted to get really wild, and the flanger because flangers are fucking awesome.
My set up now consists of Boss Delay, Boss Flanger, DS-1, Metalzone, Big Muff Pi Bass, Rat, and a funky weird Fuzz Moo. Mostly old school. The DS-1 & Metalzone together can create epic metal sounds. I run all this thru chorus and reverb fx on my rig. All these new fangled pedals are just trying to copy these originals, anyway.
Hi Ed, I know it's an old video, gigged for years with an MT-2 and a 'Super Chorus', both from Boss. No one complained about the sound. I used it, opening for Marilyn Manson, in front of 20K persons, in one of the most prestigious venues in Lisbon (Coliseu). For people buying boutique pedals (that cost the price of a car), they just can't accept that a second hand, 40€ pedal, can do the thing, when properly used, and sound great! Boss made it affordable, for every guitarist, to have some sort of effect (sturdy and practical). I used to switch several at once, to alternate sounds, so, I do enjoy the format. Still use them today. Part of my rig is just > Volume (passive,Boss FV 50h), MT-2 and Chorus (CH-1 or CS-5), all Boss. At home, been using Chorus pedals as 'splitter'. Recently, have added an DD-3, and an SP compressor. All I need to gig, easy to transport, reliable. Budget 150 bucks. Sometimes I play in the street too, electric guitar.Same rig. ps I do pass any kind of guitar thru, and adapt (tweek a bit) it to the type of guitar. And Yes, I do have all sorts of Distortions/Overdrives, for different flavours. With a little attention and time, with the Metal Zone, I can, almost, replicate the charazcteristics of any Distortion. The DS-1 beeing the most coomon Distortion of that era, not everyone understanded how to use it, ence the ' bunch of bees' reputation. Just oofered one to a begginer guitarist (one of the original japanese ones, blue label I believe...). Take care and sorry for my English...
@@jancreighton yeah, I believe he plays with the distortion and the tone all the way down, but it adds that perfect tiny bit of sparkle and grit. I think he uses a humbucker like a hot rail in the bridge.
That guy is a wonderful player, yea some kind of Hotrail pickup. Plays through a DR but uses a holy grail for verb (and a healthy dose of El Capistan as well I think)
I usually stack overdrives , an OD-3 with either an SD1 or Blues Driver. But to add a DS1 every now and then ,just makes me appreciate how Boss have made it possible for everyone to rock.The other pedals I love are the EVH 5150 , a RAT Deucetone and the EHX Glove. Not really expensive but plenty for me. Thanks for another informative show.
What I heard in this show was an enormous library of shoegazing distortion sounds! The pedal is killer, definitely will find myself one! Awesome show, guys! Cheers
My first band was in a saloon in central Mexico. Our median age was 17. My rig was a Gibson L6-S through a DS-1 into a Music Man amp. It was the wrong tone for the Woodstock-era classic rock we played (except for ‘Born to be Wild’), but I made it work! It may have made my right hand sound better for life, trying to minimize the bite of that pedal.
It seems the one pattern I notice with a lot of fuzz and early distortion devices that people claim are horrible or overrated, is that they do not understand these pedals are happiest in front of a tube amp that is either right on the edge of breaking up naturally or slightly overdriven.
Lads! I bought a 2021 custom shop 51 tele heavy relic this week!!! I can't believe how stunning it is. Thanks for the inspiration and the entertainment!
Dang, you could’ve bought a clean one, let me borrow it for twenty years and then I would’ve gave it back to you with the most honest wear you could get.
Congrats....I just picked up one of those lmtd ed's CS Troposphere hard tail Strats Absolutely love it It's a 56 replica aged really nice Great stuff they are doing and man they are gonna sound so good in 20 or 30 year's from now Building great guitars out there now
Mick, Dan.... you would have the same revelation and grins if you put the early 80's SD-1 in the very same context... a semi-cranked/cranked amp and it is really hard to beat !! Thank you for giving the DS-1 the recognition and love it deserves !! :-)
Killer show. That last bit with you guys just hammering through with different guitars and exploring for your and our enjoyment/edification was pretty cool.
Back in the earlier 80's the D.S.-1 through the Sovtec Mig-50 into a 4-12 cab was a huge HUGE sound!! It was dubbed the Mamaloosha tone! You got all your dynamics by using your guitars volume and pickup selector. So easy!!! Great job covering this wonderfully under rated pedal!!! I promise to buy some of your shirts and other gear soon, now that I know you rely on it for these very informative videos! I've learned SO MUCH from you two guys I couldn't thank you enough!!!
DS-1 was my first ever guitar pedal, it taught me what a pedal can do and how to mix it with your amp. I absolutely love it and still have it. I don't know why people hate on it so much, I think it's just the price of its success.
I was struggling with this pedal initially but then I always felt there has to be something missing here. All my guitar heroes have used this thing for some of the best tones I've ever heard. I got myself a new amp which and I started using my amps a bit distorted and all of my pedals started to make sense. My big muff started singing and the DS1 took me to the 80s and back. Completely changed how I looked at my gain pedals.
I bought a DS-1 based on its sound through a solid state amp in the store. Got home, put it into my Deluxe Reverb and got the same results you guys did-SUPER underwhelming. I suspected it had to do with SS vs. Tube, but I couldn’t find anything remotely close to confirming that till I came upon this episode comparing it between the two for an hour. EXACTLY what I needed. I can now confidently return my DS-1 knowing that I don’t have the best amp for it at the moment. (Unfortunately, I can’t turn up to 6-7 w/o royally pissing off the neighbors in my flat.) THANKS GUYS!
My favourite part of your videos, exemplified beautifully in this one, is where you enter the quiet part after playing and become mutually meditative, like you’ve just taken communion. :-) great watch guys. Thank you.
The Jem Jr. returns!! I love that Mick "can't play it" yet sounds glorious every time with it. What a fantastic sounding episode. I do have to say WTF though. Here I am looking for an old DS1 to buy and mod, and now Dan goes and announces to the world how good they are for modding. I guess it will cost more to find now, haha. Part 2 of this episode should be the Keeley, Analogman, and JHS modded versions compared with the originals. Cheers guys, I hope the first experience day went well today.
Guys, I know this comment is two years late, but I love how you talk about the knobs on the DS-1 (and other pedals) as interactive. For example, that the volume knob is not just the volume, it can be a tone shaper. I think understanding how all three knobs work together on a simple pedal like that is really crucial. Thank you for that insight.
Great video. Really insightful. I love the DS-1. It's been part of my rig for years. I have one I bought in the late nineties. It sounds great into most clean amps I've had. The break up and decay are a classic sound for a lot less money than many other pedals on the market that don't really get there. I can get from AC/DC to BB King with it and everything in between. Wonderful piece of kit.
You both are awesome players! In case no one else has mentioned, you BOTH play extremeley well your both VERY different players so you compliment each other perfectly. This show is THE most entertaining pedalshow on EARTH 🌎
All you have to do is look in a few old soda boxes, shake your accoustic guitar upside down, look in your friends attic. You'll probably find 4 of them. I got mine from some guy getting out of the navy for 25 bucks. God it's so good too.
Fun stupidity: I gutted my ds1 and recasted it with an extra foot switch for a synth mod. Then made a ds1 in the old ds1 case. lpb input buffer and sho for the output buffer. It rips!
My first pedal ever. Bought new in 1985. Played it through the solid state stereo my dad gave me, and an DIY MDF cab and 12” Jansen speaker. Life changing.
It’s a fantastic piece of equipment and we’re all lucky to have one. It’s like a blank canvas, once you find the inspiration and a bit of technique it becomes invaluable.
It’s. what you like or it isn’t. I bought a new one a few weeks ago from Sweetwater, and it sounds EXACTLY like the one I bought when they first came out. The DS-1 is one of the few things on Planet Earth you can depend on to be what you expect it to be.
Truly magic tones in a pedal that so many people would overlook for something more boutique. Personally I’m excited for another orange colored dual overdrive that I’ve finally saved up enough cash for!!
First an ODR-1 Episode and now a DS-1 episode 👀!?! Two of my favorite pedals that don't get near enough love. Pinch me I'm dreaming lol😂 You guys are killing it even more than usual lately, I'm loving it! ❤
Put this in front of a TC Electronics MojoMojo pedal and the results are AMAZING! Im so glad you did this video, especially when mentioning the part about putting the DS-1 in front of a slightly saturated amp (amp aready on slight breakup). This made me think of my MojoMojo pedal which does a nice slightly starurated breakup but the pedal always seemed a bit dark and lacking an edge. well I thought, the MojoMojo is almost acting as an amp so why not try the DS-1 in front it. Well the results were spectacular! The DS-1 gave the edge and extra saturation and the MojoMojo filled out the mids and bottom end. They really complement each other. The total cost of the two pedals was a stagering $80! I run the pedals into a Peavey classic 20 mini head on the clean channel, sounds great! The DS-1 in front of my Joyo amp in a box (American and British) also sounds great!
This was truly a revelation!!! I always wondered why my sound was great when I used my UA OX at night to practice, but not so great during the day when I played through a speaker but at low volume. It’s because with the OX, I am turning the amp wide open and the EQ curve changes when the amp is really working! It’s not just which amp you just, but how you set the amp up! Thank you D&M!
Great episode! A real eye opener. DS1 was my first pedal …and I used it into clean amps, of course. But I’d be surprised if the designers really did design it for use with overdriving amps.
Enjoyable show, as always. One thing I wanted to mention, Joe Satriani famously used a DS1 for a number of years on his Silver Jubilee Marshall on a clean setting, which is how he got his lead and rhythm tones, along with two boss dds and a rack reverb unit. His lead tone on The Extremist is one of the greatest lead tones of all time.
Exactly the tone I hope to never have in this lifetime... But fun watching you both make a fantastic go of it.... however I truly love the show and you both cheers 😎👍👍
Every time I see a DS-1 at a Pawn shop, most of the time with the box, I offer them $20-25 bucks.... I have 6 now. I give them to my students as their first pedal. But most importantly is to know how to use them. DS-1 and most any amp, you just can't deny it. Yet people fight them, and BOSS in general, until they mature I think. Young, you buy because the look cool and are cheap, but you sell them cause in the long run you don't know how to use them. I am so glad you fellers covered this subject. Oh yeah, DS-1 Volume cranked, Tone Cracked and Distortion cracked driving virtually any other drive is awesome. Right now my Direct Pedal Board has a DS-1 Drive in front of a MT-2... Keep the gain down and volume high, omg.... love it. I could go on all day... I
Another informative and entertaining episode - I also owned a DS1 many, many years ago and wound up selling it because I couldn't get a sound I liked out of it...but we live and we learn.
One can never get rid of their DS-1. They’re like the tribbles in Star Trek. You put the one you have away in a cabinet or wherever you store your disused pedals, and when you come back for a rummage you find there’s like 20 DS-1s where you left the one. Seriously though, the DS-1 is a great pedal when headroom isn’t a concern. There’s a reason it sold 1.5 million units
I’ve gotten rid of two DS-1’s. One modern and one black label MIJ. Never jived with it - maybe because the mid cut is so prominent. I do, however, own a DS-2
@@gunkanjima3408 to be fair, they’re not really my thing either, but it’s not because they’re a bad or bad sounding pedal. This video perfectly demonstrates why I don’t really use the DS-1. I use clean amps like the Deluxe with loads of headroom to get the most out of the pedals I do use, so I’m not in that “sweet spot” the DS-1 loves
I know right....well Steve Vai and Joe Satch know what's what I always keep falling back on my older pedals Tried and true Nothing new has stayed on my board except for an Xotic Super Clean boost
This video is a brilliant example of pedals helping your headspace as a player. Dan was absolutely wailing, Mick threw in some Hot For Teacher licks, it was glorious. (Although as someone who was alive when Van Halen appeared on the scene, I love the DS1 sound as it's the basis for much of my beloved music).
Yep, when Dan is on a humbucker guitar his 80’s rock instincts kick in. I personally prefer the jazzbo Dan who really should pursue that more often or at least release some instrumental song form videos like Tim P or other RUclips guitar slingers.
I love my ds-1. Got twin pro Junior amps and set the pedal on minimal level; tone midway and volume at 9:00. Volume on amps 6 to 7, (above that volume control starts altering tone.) Still waiting for pro Junior review! I love these amps!
I was using a bandmates rig at a rehearsal, which included a DS-1 plugged into an older Peavey solid state amp. It sounded so good I thought to myself “that’s the kind of distortion I want.” I bought myself DS-1, plugged it into my Fender Blues Deluxe and it fell totally flat. Sounded tinny and brash, which I thought was good for punk tones, but that wasn’t what I was looking for. This video helped clarify why that is. Thanks guys!
The OD-2 was my DS-1 back in the day. It was the pedal everybody hated… but the same people liked my sound enough to excitedly ask what I was using. Which was an X2N equipped Ibanez PL2550, a Marshall Lead 100 Mosfet set dead loud clean, a Boss OD-2 with the gain all the way up, tone set at 9:00, level at 3:00, a Celestion Lead series (120w speakers) loaded homemade 4x12 with the bottom holes empty. That rig sounded huge and punched like Tyson.
From my personal experience, the DS1 is very picky about where you plug It in. It does not sound good in cheap transistor amps. I used my Ds-1 to test amps. If the Ds1 sounds okay, any other pedal would sound great. But the Ds1 can sound great in some amps. I got some great tones playing in a Hot Rod Deluxe, and it goes from a mid-gain distortion to a fuzz-like pedal. So it becomes a versatile pedal that can be both distortion or a fuzz for those who don't want to spend on a fuzz. You can play "Sorrow" with one of these. Thanks for another great video.
Never was a fan of the DS1, still not crazy about it. Thoroughly enjoyed the video though! The tone you guys got with the Deluxe on 6, no pedals, Les Paul was IMO the best of all.
Two years ago I recorded a song with my band that required a 60s Kinks style riffy fuzz tone. I had no fuzz pedal at that time (aside from a broken Shin-ei Fuzz Wah) so the best I could do was use my old (late-80s) DS-1 with the tone rolled off on a Les Paul-style guitar for the rhythm and a second track where I went straight fuzz tone for lead sounds (quite Yardbirds-y as it turned out). The result was more than satisfactory. Spectacular actually. However, since the global you-know-what, I've become obsessed with fuzz and, no thanks to you two or the JHS show etc, I've spent god knows how much money on god knows how many fuzz pedals (not complaining, mind). I recently bought a CD copy of XTC's psychedelic offshoot band The Dukes of Stratosphear (where they reinvented themselves as a psychedelic band complete with mellotrons etc, trying to exactly recreate 1960s sounds). I'd always wondered what vintage fuzz the guitarist used on their recordings, but reading the liner notes it was.. guess what? Yep, a friggin' Boss DS-1. And yes, of course Dan, it's your old mate Dave Gregory. Hilarious!
I read some where that the Dukes had 2 rules for recording: 1. No equipment that was older than 1968. 2 two takes maximum. Not saying you're wrong, I eat up any new details regarding the Dukes!
@@redkingeye Yes, you're right, those were the original rules, but they had to relax them once they realised that they simply didn't own enough vintage gear. Even the Mellotron M400 that they used was not introduced until 1970. More shocking to me was the fact that they used a Roland synth for the organ sounds. (By the way, guitarist Dave Gregory -- aka Lord Cornelius Plum - used a Boss Compression Sustainer as well as the DS-1). In the liner notes they admit that they may have broken the two-take rule once or twice as well, but the band were given a five thousand pound budget to do the mini-LP and managed to give the record company a Grand back in change. The entire recording was done in less than three full days, and the band did the whole thing wearing full psychedelic garb. Bloody fantastic record. Still sounds amazing. Every single track is killer. It actually outsold the current "legitimate" XTC album at the time by quite a stretch.
@@NewFalconerRecords produced by the great John Leckie too. I read the Stone Roses wanted John to produce their debut album based on his work with the Dukes. I love XTC but the Dukes records are just so incredible. Thanks for taking time to share your knowledge my friend.
@@redkingeye Have you seen Warren Huart's interviews with John Leckie on the Produce Like a Pro channel? Fantastic. It was the reason I sought out the CD copy of the Dukes' debut record. My vinyl copy from back in the day is completely worn out.
@@NewFalconerRecords yeah its amazing mate, there's also a video knocking around of them going back to the studio where they recorded which is really great.
42:11 THANK YOU MICK. This is how I have always described pedals, amps, guitars, pickups, speakers, cabinets,...etc to people. Like my parents and friends, really anyone who ever asked if "we need that much gear". Thank you
Great demonstration of how dynamic it can be with a Tele. You pick softly and it chimes. Go a bit harder and it crunches. Hit it even harder and it’s squishy and fuzzy. Just a blast to play.
I know all you snobs will lough out at me, but recently I just found ways to get satisfying sounds out of my cheap multi FX units (basically the lower half of the Zoom G series), but I was missing a satisfying chugging sound. You just revealed the missing piece at me; chaining a TS, some sweet drive, a D1 and a NY Muff together just gave me the missing sound I was lusting for. Thank you so much for that!
This was my first effect pedal ever -- bought new in the early / mid 80's. Sounded kind of ratty through my Kustom combo amp. I've since had the Keeley mod done to it, and the sound improved dramatically.
Wierdly i had just bought one at the beginning of this month after realizing it was Gary Moore's fave drive pedal, its my best Christmas present to myself and i'm enjoying it already!...loved this video! 👏🏻💙🇬🇧🎸🌟😎
A DS-1 boosted RAT is a thing of beauty the way you’ve got the deluxe set. Phewie!!! Yes please!!! Great episode; got me thinking of busting out an old DS-1…that was like the third pedal I had, lol. Hope everyone is well, all my LOVE!!!
i used a homemade pedal board of three boss pedals and an ernie ball volume pedal, it worked on the road for years.Into a 62 Vibrolux it was a very notable tone.
Man I haven’t owned one of these in Y E A R S. You guys just convinced me to nab one again. Got an old 18W Valco made thing that I think has enough midrange and breakup to make the ds1 a lot of fun.
I've always looked at my DS-1's as more of a fuzz style pedal than a distortion. To me they were more in common with a fuzz. I have two of them. Both sound very similar. One was my father's and he bought it new in 81. My second is one I got on a trade about 14 years ago.
Make sure you stack the two pedals, keeping both below 50% on the gain and tweak from there. I use one with nearly zero gain and the other about 25% and they are great together.
@@jvin248 oh yeah, I've stacked them before. Can get some great lead tones. Love combining my old Peavey Delta Stomp's "Octaver" setting with it as well. Monstrous sounding.
Gigged and did hundreds of sessions with a DS-1 for years, as did pretty much everyone else back then. Sounded great. Never heard anyone criticising it until internet guitar forums happened and it became the 'accepted wisdom' that it sucked.
AWESOME! Some positivity here. Thank you!
Cool. I bought one and hated it long before thegearpage existed. Maybe the criticism is due to good sounding pedals existing now?
Your friends were just being nice and didn't want to hurt your feelings... ;-)
Exactly it was good enough for Kurt Cobain but Megashred54 who still lives in moms basement and has never gigged in his life, can’t make it work!
@@Riffmaster227 hahaha! Well said 👏😉
I love the concept of revisiting older, influential gear and looking at in the context of what else was going on musically and culturally upon release. This was quite illuminating. I hope you do more of these kinds of videos in the future!
When PGS asked me to demo the DS-1 years back I honestly didn’t want to! I soon discovered similar things: Deluxe at edge of breakup and tone at 10..sweet!! 👍🏻👍🏻
Andy
🤘💀
Afternoon. I own this pedal. Used in conjunction with Fender Tele and a Fender 68 princeton Reissue 12 watt. Similar settings as the deluxe for best tone?
Any thoughts on the custom 78 by mxr? That crunch setting sounds great, a la keeley mod... digitrch hothead gets pretty close with it's independent bass and treble settings.
@@albertplaysguitar Is the MXR custom 78 based on the ds-1?
I really wanted to see you plug into a Peavey Bandit at bedroom levels with the gain dimed on the DS1.
Have a DS2 on my board and a Bandit in the rehearsal space. Spent 10 minutes last rehearsal wondering why it sounded like farting through a blanket, until I realised the power soak on the bandit was all the way up
🤣
@@KriegdenSeekrabben do you mean the trans tube knob? Are you saying it sounded better with it turned way down? Having trouble getting my red stripe to sound good.
@@fairweatherfriends. That knob, yes. And no, ir sounded absolutely dreadful with the knob down, it's best to keep it up all the way
Are you attacking me?
I've been trying to learn some jazz triad stuff this week. When Mick had the Jem going my wife walked behind me and casually murmered "that ain't jazz" as she passed 😂
😂🤣
I have had a long romance with this pedal. An Ibanez RG220, a Boss DS1, and the cheapest 4x12 and head (I believe it was a barely working, beat to hell Peavey) I could find was my first stage rig. Over the years, things changed but the DS1 always stayed. I've used it as a boost for solos, basic rhythm tracks and as a bass distortion. It truly is a damn awesome pedal. Great video, guys!
As a side note: Type O Negative's frontman/bassist, Peter Steele, got his bass tone from a Boss DD3 (digital delay) into a CH1 (chorus) into a DS1 and then an EQ before the amp.
Fascinating. I was gobsmacked by how nicely it cleaned up when you backed off the guitar volume or played with a lighter touch. Didn't expect it to be so dynamic.
You just taught me that I don't need pedals. I need solid amps. Awesome video. And I do love my DS-1 - the first pedal I ever bought.
I absolutely love my DS1.. it took me a while to really understand how to properly use it, and videos like yours.. Now i can't go without it, especially for more subtle distortion, it sounds amazing..
I’m becoming addicted to this channel, These Fellas are Awesome! Love the History and the relative meaning of the timing of things.
You've talked about gain stacking with overdrives before but this is the first time you've done it with distortions and it sounded awesome. That last 20 minutes is what I watch this show for. (Dan- if you've not tried the DS1 into your Hampstead yet then you're in for a treat, especially at lower gain.)
IKR? The DS-1 into the Rat was rock ‘n roll! Got me thinking maybe the DS-1 should be before at least 1 or 2 overdrives. (Currently distortions are post ODs)
I prefer stacking distortion pedals at lower gains. Something about the clarity!
Gain-staging with Compressors is where its at if you can keep the noise floor down.
Fascinating about the pedal design as being part of an ecosystem to pair with an appropriate Amp's tone characteristics. That provides a lot of insight into how to run the DS-1 to get the desired results. Thanks
I just got one again after 25 years of not owning one, and it's got a *ton* of versatility, even just as a tone pedal! I got a sweet tone into my Traynor with the tone on 10 o'clock, level on 12, and distortion barely on!
Mick's delivery of hand signals to identify the amp volume always cracks me up. So official and serious! Great tones in here gentlemen!
Dan's face lit up that special way Mick - when you did that killer bit on the Jazzmaster. That was pretty damn fantastic. This was yet another "ear opening" mind blowing episode. You have done it again.
That was Mick actually discovering shoegaze :) It's not about reverb into distortion, it's about complete fascination with the sound your equipment is making...
This could be my favorite TPS to date...we all have a DS-1, so cool to see it broken down like this..great show Mick and Dan
Just watched this on my lunch break, went home, dialed in a little crunch on my amp, and kicked in my neglected DS-1, and WOW. This a sound I've been looking for lately for my cover band. Perfect for those 70s hard rock tunes.
Yaya!
I’ve been telling people the ds-1 has an edge and a bite to it that I love. To watch this video and hear it reiterated is awesome! Great tones. Great show. And amazing dynamics gents. Thanks so much!
Odd that I bought my first DS-1 a few days ago, and then I see this video in my feed. Brilliant, guys! Thanks for this.
Once upon a time I was in a relatively successful pop-punk band and the three pedals I had on the deck in front of me were a DS1, a Metal Zone, and a Boss Flanger. That sounds like it should be a joke but I promise it's not.
I used the DS1 as a boost for lead, stacked it into the metal zone when I wanted to get really wild, and the flanger because flangers are fucking awesome.
Sounds fun bro
Love this
My set up now consists of Boss Delay, Boss Flanger, DS-1, Metalzone, Big Muff Pi Bass, Rat, and a funky weird Fuzz Moo. Mostly old school. The DS-1 & Metalzone together can create epic metal sounds. I run all this thru chorus and reverb fx on my rig. All these new fangled pedals are just trying to copy these originals, anyway.
Hi Ed, I know it's an old video, gigged for years with an MT-2 and a 'Super Chorus', both from Boss. No one complained about the sound. I used it, opening for Marilyn Manson, in front of 20K persons, in one of the most prestigious venues in Lisbon (Coliseu).
For people buying boutique pedals (that cost the price of a car), they just can't accept that a second hand, 40€ pedal, can do the thing, when properly used, and sound great!
Boss made it affordable, for every guitarist, to have some sort of effect (sturdy and practical). I used to switch several at once, to alternate sounds, so, I do enjoy the format. Still use them today. Part of my rig is just > Volume (passive,Boss FV 50h), MT-2 and Chorus (CH-1 or CS-5), all Boss. At home, been using Chorus pedals as 'splitter'. Recently, have added an DD-3, and an SP compressor.
All I need to gig, easy to transport, reliable. Budget 150 bucks. Sometimes I play in the street too, electric guitar.Same rig.
ps I do pass any kind of guitar thru, and adapt (tweek a bit) it to the type of guitar. And Yes, I do have all sorts of Distortions/Overdrives, for different flavours. With a little attention and time, with the Metal Zone, I can, almost, replicate the charazcteristics of any Distortion.
The DS-1 beeing the most coomon Distortion of that era, not everyone understanded how to use it, ence the ' bunch of bees' reputation. Just oofered one to a begginer guitarist (one of the original japanese ones, blue label I believe...).
Take care and sorry for my English...
*150 bucks . Not really, more like 300, but you get the point.
Khruangbin’s guitar player’s tone is a Strat into DS-1in to a Deluxe Reverb. It’s amazing and blew my mind when I saw his rig rundown
touché - just what I was thinking. Mark Speer I think you call him - wow does he have tone
@@jancreighton yeah, I believe he plays with the distortion and the tone all the way down, but it adds that perfect tiny bit of sparkle and grit. I think he uses a humbucker like a hot rail in the bridge.
That guy is a wonderful player, yea some kind of Hotrail pickup. Plays through a DR but uses a holy grail for verb (and a healthy dose of El Capistan as well I think)
@@paulitik7 all three pickups in his strat are Dimarzio.
with a permanently cocked wah in the mix.
I usually stack overdrives , an OD-3 with either an SD1 or Blues Driver. But to add a DS1 every now and then ,just makes me appreciate how Boss have made it possible for everyone to rock.The other pedals I love are the EVH 5150 , a RAT Deucetone and the EHX Glove. Not really expensive but plenty for me. Thanks for another informative show.
What I heard in this show was an enormous library of shoegazing distortion sounds! The pedal is killer, definitely will find myself one!
Awesome show, guys! Cheers
My first band was in a saloon in central Mexico. Our median age was 17. My rig was a Gibson L6-S through a DS-1 into a Music Man amp. It was the wrong tone for the Woodstock-era classic rock we played (except for ‘Born to be Wild’), but I made it work! It may have made my right hand sound better for life, trying to minimize the bite of that pedal.
It seems the one pattern I notice with a lot of fuzz and early distortion devices that people claim are horrible or overrated, is that they do not understand these pedals are happiest in front of a tube amp that is either right on the edge of breaking up naturally or slightly overdriven.
Lads! I bought a 2021 custom shop 51 tele heavy relic this week!!! I can't believe how stunning it is. Thanks for the inspiration and the entertainment!
Dang, you could’ve bought a clean one, let me borrow it for twenty years and then I would’ve gave it back to you with the most honest wear you could get.
Im all for the relics! Congrats dude i bet it gorgeous!
@@burnsyblues me too, I just like being a smart ass, and have a soft spot for telecasters.
Congrats....I just picked up one of those lmtd ed's CS Troposphere hard tail Strats Absolutely love it It's a 56 replica aged really nice Great stuff they are doing and man they are gonna sound so good in 20 or 30 year's from now Building great guitars out there now
@@paulcowart3174still have it? Beautiful guitar man
I love how much fun you guys had rediscovering this ubiquitous distortion pedal! 😊
Mick, Dan.... you would have the same revelation and grins if you put the early 80's SD-1 in the very same context... a semi-cranked/cranked amp and it is really hard to beat !! Thank you for giving the DS-1 the recognition and love it deserves !! :-)
Killer show. That last bit with you guys just hammering through with different guitars and exploring for your and our enjoyment/edification was pretty cool.
Back in the earlier 80's the D.S.-1 through the Sovtec Mig-50 into a 4-12 cab was a huge HUGE sound!! It was dubbed the Mamaloosha tone! You got all your dynamics by using your guitars volume and pickup selector. So easy!!! Great job covering this wonderfully under rated pedal!!! I promise to buy some of your shirts and other gear soon, now that I know you rely on it for these very informative videos! I've learned SO MUCH from you two guys I couldn't thank you enough!!!
I've actually been really getting into the AMP gain from muh Orange Rocker-32! It's a great little amp!
Sovtek! Made of Russian Army stuff. 💪🇷🇺🎸
DS-1 was my first ever guitar pedal, it taught me what a pedal can do and how to mix it with your amp. I absolutely love it and still have it. I don't know why people hate on it so much, I think it's just the price of its success.
I was struggling with this pedal initially but then I always felt there has to be something missing here. All my guitar heroes have used this thing for some of the best tones I've ever heard. I got myself a new amp which and I started using my amps a bit distorted and all of my pedals started to make sense. My big muff started singing and the DS1 took me to the 80s and back. Completely changed how I looked at my gain pedals.
so it was the amp?
@@johnretana2072he's trying to say., it's a balancing act between the guitar, pedal, and amp. Sweet spot is a key word here.
I bought a DS-1 based on its sound through a solid state amp in the store. Got home, put it into my Deluxe Reverb and got the same results you guys did-SUPER underwhelming. I suspected it had to do with SS vs. Tube, but I couldn’t find anything remotely close to confirming that till I came upon this episode comparing it between the two for an hour. EXACTLY what I needed. I can now confidently return my DS-1 knowing that I don’t have the best amp for it at the moment. (Unfortunately, I can’t turn up to 6-7 w/o royally pissing off the neighbors in my flat.) THANKS GUYS!
Try Maxon SD-9 Sonic Distortion with tone off… it’s everything a DS-1 wishes it was
My favourite part of your videos, exemplified beautifully in this one, is where you enter the quiet part after playing and become mutually meditative, like you’ve just taken communion. :-) great watch guys. Thank you.
Yes. I think I did a request for this a long time ago. Don’t know if you ever read it, but so happy you’re doing this.
The Jem Jr. returns!! I love that Mick "can't play it" yet sounds glorious every time with it. What a fantastic sounding episode. I do have to say WTF though. Here I am looking for an old DS1 to buy and mod, and now Dan goes and announces to the world how good they are for modding. I guess it will cost more to find now, haha. Part 2 of this episode should be the Keeley, Analogman, and JHS modded versions compared with the originals. Cheers guys, I hope the first experience day went well today.
Guys, I know this comment is two years late, but I love how you talk about the knobs on the DS-1 (and other pedals) as interactive. For example, that the volume knob is not just the volume, it can be a tone shaper. I think understanding how all three knobs work together on a simple pedal like that is really crucial. Thank you for that insight.
Great video. Really insightful.
I love the DS-1. It's been part of my rig for years. I have one I bought in the late nineties. It sounds great into most clean amps I've had. The break up and decay are a classic sound for a lot less money than many other pedals on the market that don't really get there.
I can get from AC/DC to BB King with it and everything in between. Wonderful piece of kit.
Im glad you guys posted this because I bought it and it was the go to pedal for me now. Sounds amazing
You both are awesome players! In case no one else has mentioned, you BOTH play extremeley well your both VERY different players so you compliment each other perfectly. This show is THE most entertaining pedalshow on EARTH 🌎
Thanks Jimmy 🙏
Yesterday would have been a good time to buy up all the old DS1s on Reverb.
It's never a good time to buy a DS1.
@@c.p.1589 LOL
All you have to do is look in a few old soda boxes, shake your accoustic guitar upside down, look in your friends attic.
You'll probably find 4 of them.
I got mine from some guy getting out of the navy for 25 bucks. God it's so good too.
no one buys a DS1, everyone just naturally owns one
Fun stupidity: I gutted my ds1 and recasted it with an extra foot switch for a synth mod. Then made a ds1 in the old ds1 case. lpb input buffer and sho for the output buffer. It rips!
My first pedal ever. Bought new in 1985. Played it through the solid state stereo my dad gave me, and an DIY MDF cab and 12” Jansen speaker. Life changing.
Great vid! I use my DS-1 with the gain off (which is still not clean) in front of my BD-2 and it works great as a boost!
It’s a fantastic piece of equipment and we’re all lucky to have one. It’s like a blank canvas, once you find the inspiration and a bit of technique it becomes invaluable.
It's crap
It’s. what you like or it isn’t. I bought a new one a few weeks ago from Sweetwater, and it sounds EXACTLY like the one I bought when they first came out. The DS-1 is one of the few things on Planet Earth you can depend on to be what you expect it to be.
You guys have the coolest room on the tube!!!
Truly magic tones in a pedal that so many people would overlook for something more boutique. Personally I’m excited for another orange colored dual overdrive that I’ve finally saved up enough cash for!!
Gentleman
Well played. The DS1 took youse someplace and touched a youthful memory.
Thank you for letting us come along for the ride.
Happy Trails
Yay, a pedal I own...not that I don't love the more uh, aspirational hardware, but a little inspiration and encouraging noises never hurts.
First an ODR-1 Episode and now a DS-1 episode 👀!?! Two of my favorite pedals that don't get near enough love. Pinch me I'm dreaming lol😂
You guys are killing it even more than usual lately, I'm loving it! ❤
Dan: "Oh, man, they were tight as fff......as a very, very tight thing."
Me: "I think I need to lie down for a bit."
Best Pedal Show episode I have seen. I usually skim through but watched this one start to finish. Excellent.
Put this in front of a TC Electronics MojoMojo pedal and the results are AMAZING! Im so glad you did this video, especially when mentioning the part about putting the DS-1 in front of a slightly saturated amp (amp aready on slight breakup). This made me think of my MojoMojo pedal which does a nice slightly starurated breakup but the pedal always seemed a bit dark and lacking an edge. well I thought, the MojoMojo is almost acting as an amp so why not try the DS-1 in front it. Well the results were spectacular! The DS-1 gave the edge and extra saturation and the MojoMojo filled out the mids and bottom end. They really complement each other. The total cost of the two pedals was a stagering $80! I run the pedals into a Peavey classic 20 mini head on the clean channel, sounds great! The DS-1 in front of my Joyo amp in a box (American and British) also sounds great!
This was truly a revelation!!! I always wondered why my sound was great when I used my UA OX at night to practice, but not so great during the day when I played through a speaker but at low volume. It’s because with the OX, I am turning the amp wide open and the EQ curve changes when the amp is really working! It’s not just which amp you just, but how you set the amp up! Thank you D&M!
Great episode! A real eye opener. DS1 was my first pedal …and I used it into clean amps, of course. But I’d be surprised if the designers really did design it for use with overdriving amps.
The real thing… Kurt proved it! Many thanks for dedicating an episode on this amazing device!
Dan: Give the bottom end some love.
Mic: I may have to twiddle with the knob.
I feel those quotes should be on the back of some of your shirts.
At last Mick made the Jazzmaster come to life in an alternative way, it’s been a long time coming but sounded great. Please do it more often.
Enjoyable show, as always.
One thing I wanted to mention, Joe Satriani famously used a DS1 for a number of years on his Silver Jubilee Marshall on a clean setting, which is how he got his lead and rhythm tones, along with two boss dds and a rack reverb unit. His lead tone on The Extremist is one of the greatest lead tones of all time.
Exactly the tone I hope to never have in this lifetime... But fun watching you both make a fantastic go of it.... however I truly love the show and you both cheers
😎👍👍
Every time I see a DS-1 at a Pawn shop, most of the time with the box, I offer them $20-25 bucks.... I have 6 now.
I give them to my students as their first pedal. But most importantly is to know how to use them.
DS-1 and most any amp, you just can't deny it.
Yet people fight them, and BOSS in general, until they mature I think.
Young, you buy because the look cool and are cheap, but you sell them cause in the long run you don't know how to use them.
I am so glad you fellers covered this subject.
Oh yeah, DS-1 Volume cranked, Tone Cracked and Distortion cracked driving virtually any other drive is awesome.
Right now my Direct Pedal Board has a DS-1 Drive in front of a MT-2... Keep the gain down and volume high, omg.... love it. I could go on all day... I
Another informative and entertaining episode - I also owned a DS1 many, many years ago and wound up selling it because I couldn't get a sound I liked out of it...but we live and we learn.
Another GREAT show! Inspired playing and a whole episode dedicated to a single pedal without a boring second. 👍🏼
Mick has always loved the DS-1 and has always extolled its virtues and I admire his integrity. great guy.
One can never get rid of their DS-1. They’re like the tribbles in Star Trek. You put the one you have away in a cabinet or wherever you store your disused pedals, and when you come back for a rummage you find there’s like 20 DS-1s where you left the one. Seriously though, the DS-1 is a great pedal when headroom isn’t a concern. There’s a reason it sold 1.5 million units
I’ve gotten rid of two DS-1’s. One modern and one black label MIJ. Never jived with it - maybe because the mid cut is so prominent. I do, however, own a DS-2
@@gunkanjima3408 to be fair, they’re not really my thing either, but it’s not because they’re a bad or bad sounding pedal. This video perfectly demonstrates why I don’t really use the DS-1. I use clean amps like the Deluxe with loads of headroom to get the most out of the pedals I do use, so I’m not in that “sweet spot” the DS-1 loves
My oldest son had my 1978 DS-1 (unbeknownst to me) and recently returned it. It was not a vintage purchase; I got it in 1978!
I know right....well Steve Vai and Joe Satch know what's what I always keep falling back on my older pedals Tried and true Nothing new has stayed on my board except for an Xotic Super Clean boost
@@asims1066 makes perfect sense. It’s not a bad pedal, that’s for sure!
Haha, that intro was hilarious. Keep up the great content guys! Loving anything and everything.
This is absolute madness, what a fascinating show!
Great review. I bought a DS-1 awhile back and now have lots of ideas to kick around while using the pedal. Thanks!
This video is a brilliant example of pedals helping your headspace as a player. Dan was absolutely wailing, Mick threw in some Hot For Teacher licks, it was glorious.
(Although as someone who was alive when Van Halen appeared on the scene, I love the DS1 sound as it's the basis for much of my beloved music).
Another great show. I own a few modded DS-1s but this goes to show how this pedal was meant to be used at the time it was released.
I think Dan was on speed with the humbuckers today - tapping - fast legato - shred arpeggios... all of it. 🤪
Must be the top-wrapped strings...
Yep, when Dan is on a humbucker guitar his 80’s rock instincts kick in. I personally prefer the jazzbo Dan who really should pursue that more often or at least release some instrumental song form videos like Tim P or other RUclips guitar slingers.
Looks like you guys had lots of fun doing this video. Made for most enjoyable viewing. Thanks
I love my ds-1. Got twin pro Junior amps and set the pedal on minimal level; tone midway and volume at 9:00. Volume on amps 6 to 7, (above that volume control starts altering tone.) Still waiting for pro Junior review! I love these amps!
I was using a bandmates rig at a rehearsal, which included a DS-1 plugged into an older Peavey solid state amp. It sounded so good I thought to myself “that’s the kind of distortion I want.” I bought myself DS-1, plugged it into my Fender Blues Deluxe and it fell totally flat. Sounded tinny and brash, which I thought was good for punk tones, but that wasn’t what I was looking for. This video helped clarify why that is. Thanks guys!
I've burst the cold sore on the middle of my bottom lip not smiled this much in ages . Great show brought back a lot of good memories .
The OD-2 was my DS-1 back in the day. It was the pedal everybody hated… but the same people liked my sound enough to excitedly ask what I was using. Which was an X2N equipped Ibanez PL2550, a Marshall Lead 100 Mosfet set dead loud clean, a Boss OD-2 with the gain all the way up, tone set at 9:00, level at 3:00, a Celestion Lead series (120w speakers) loaded homemade 4x12 with the bottom holes empty.
That rig sounded huge and punched like Tyson.
From my personal experience, the DS1 is very picky about where you plug It in. It does not sound good in cheap transistor amps. I used my Ds-1 to test amps. If the Ds1 sounds okay, any other pedal would sound great. But the Ds1 can sound great in some amps. I got some great tones playing in a Hot Rod Deluxe, and it goes from a mid-gain distortion to a fuzz-like pedal. So it becomes a versatile pedal that can be both distortion or a fuzz for those who don't want to spend on a fuzz. You can play "Sorrow" with one of these. Thanks for another great video.
Your ability to articulate what is happening with the different tones, sounds.... is so impressive!
Never was a fan of the DS1, still not crazy about it. Thoroughly enjoyed the video though! The tone you guys got with the Deluxe on 6, no pedals, Les Paul was IMO the best of all.
Sometimes I have absolutely no idea what you guys are talking about. But somehow I like it and I’m still here...
Two years ago I recorded a song with my band that required a 60s Kinks style riffy fuzz tone. I had no fuzz pedal at that time (aside from a broken Shin-ei Fuzz Wah) so the best I could do was use my old (late-80s) DS-1 with the tone rolled off on a Les Paul-style guitar for the rhythm and a second track where I went straight fuzz tone for lead sounds (quite Yardbirds-y as it turned out). The result was more than satisfactory. Spectacular actually. However, since the global you-know-what, I've become obsessed with fuzz and, no thanks to you two or the JHS show etc, I've spent god knows how much money on god knows how many fuzz pedals (not complaining, mind).
I recently bought a CD copy of XTC's psychedelic offshoot band The Dukes of Stratosphear (where they reinvented themselves as a psychedelic band complete with mellotrons etc, trying to exactly recreate 1960s sounds). I'd always wondered what vintage fuzz the guitarist used on their recordings, but reading the liner notes it was.. guess what? Yep, a friggin' Boss DS-1. And yes, of course Dan, it's your old mate Dave Gregory. Hilarious!
I read some where that the Dukes had 2 rules for recording:
1. No equipment that was older than 1968.
2 two takes maximum.
Not saying you're wrong, I eat up any new details regarding the Dukes!
@@redkingeye Yes, you're right, those were the original rules, but they had to relax them once they realised that they simply didn't own enough vintage gear. Even the Mellotron M400 that they used was not introduced until 1970. More shocking to me was the fact that they used a Roland synth for the organ sounds. (By the way, guitarist Dave Gregory -- aka Lord Cornelius Plum - used a Boss Compression Sustainer as well as the DS-1).
In the liner notes they admit that they may have broken the two-take rule once or twice as well, but the band were given a five thousand pound budget to do the mini-LP and managed to give the record company a Grand back in change. The entire recording was done in less than three full days, and the band did the whole thing wearing full psychedelic garb.
Bloody fantastic record. Still sounds amazing. Every single track is killer. It actually outsold the current "legitimate" XTC album at the time by quite a stretch.
@@NewFalconerRecords produced by the great John Leckie too. I read the Stone Roses wanted John to produce their debut album based on his work with the Dukes. I love XTC but the Dukes records are just so incredible. Thanks for taking time to share your knowledge my friend.
@@redkingeye Have you seen Warren Huart's interviews with John Leckie on the Produce Like a Pro channel? Fantastic. It was the reason I sought out the CD copy of the Dukes' debut record. My vinyl copy from back in the day is completely worn out.
@@NewFalconerRecords yeah its amazing mate, there's also a video knocking around of them going back to the studio where they recorded which is really great.
Mick with the Casino and Dan with Red slayed me. Gave me smiley guitar face, for sure. Chapeau and kudos, good sirs.
Mick on the JM was stellar! It’s amazing what he can do when he doesn’t box himself in mentally as just a blues player!
Is this video in response to like a forum trend? This pedal is insanely popular and well talked about it my circles
Mick played as many Teles in this show as Dan did. We're definitely in end times.
lol!
I have one from 1984, and a more recent one. They sound very different.
🤣
Really great episode guys. It’s easy to tell when you guys are really having a great time!
Play em if ya got um
42:11 THANK YOU MICK. This is how I have always described pedals, amps, guitars, pickups, speakers, cabinets,...etc to people. Like my parents and friends, really anyone who ever asked if "we need that much gear". Thank you
The next t-shirt or sticker available from the TPS store should have Dan’s silhouette from the D&M drive with the line, “Love in the Bottom End.”
Great demonstration of how dynamic it can be with a Tele. You pick softly and it chimes. Go a bit harder and it crunches. Hit it even harder and it’s squishy and fuzzy. Just a blast to play.
6:46 Yes! A Saab 900 mention! Never thought I would hear that on TPS
I know all you snobs will lough out at me, but recently I just found ways to get satisfying sounds out of my cheap multi FX units (basically the lower half of the Zoom G series), but I was missing a satisfying chugging sound. You just revealed the missing piece at me; chaining a TS, some sweet drive, a D1 and a NY Muff together just gave me the missing sound I was lusting for.
Thank you so much for that!
try the zmp-1 preammp model with the allien amp set up the filter delay kind of like an evh phaser - thats my favorite zoom g line patch . enjoy
This was my first effect pedal ever -- bought new in the early / mid 80's. Sounded kind of ratty through my Kustom combo amp. I've since had the Keeley mod done to it, and the sound improved dramatically.
Wierdly i had just bought one at the beginning of this month after realizing it was Gary Moore's fave drive pedal, its my best Christmas present to myself and i'm enjoying it already!...loved this video! 👏🏻💙🇬🇧🎸🌟😎
“now let’s have a listen to the rat” **cue gif of marty mcfly getting blown backwards**
OMG guys you look so much older than last time I saw you! And so do I :-> , love your shows. keep them comming!
We're all going to die Allan, soon. It's fleeting.
I saw it hit 109 decibels at least twice in that which is pretty much equivalent to a chainsaw from 1m away… that must have been fun! 😂
A DS-1 boosted RAT is a thing of beauty the way you’ve got the deluxe set. Phewie!!! Yes please!!! Great episode; got me thinking of busting out an old DS-1…that was like the third pedal I had, lol. Hope everyone is well, all my LOVE!!!
i used a homemade pedal board of three boss pedals and an ernie ball volume pedal, it worked on the road for years.Into a 62 Vibrolux it was a very notable tone.
Man I haven’t owned one of these in Y E A R S. You guys just convinced me to nab one again. Got an old 18W Valco made thing that I think has enough midrange and breakup to make the ds1 a lot of fun.
Besides all the other nuggets of wisdom in this episode, I've also learned that the DS-1 might be one of the best fuzz pedals that I've ever heard.
Just discovered you guys tonight. I love your vids. Keep being real and enjoy the craft.
I've always looked at my DS-1's as more of a fuzz style pedal than a distortion. To me they were more in common with a fuzz. I have two of them. Both sound very similar. One was my father's and he bought it new in 81. My second is one I got on a trade about 14 years ago.
Make sure you stack the two pedals, keeping both below 50% on the gain and tweak from there. I use one with nearly zero gain and the other about 25% and they are great together.
@@jvin248 oh yeah, I've stacked them before. Can get some great lead tones. Love combining my old Peavey Delta Stomp's "Octaver" setting with it as well. Monstrous sounding.
With a dying battery (or the sag feature on the Pedal Power), it really sounds like a nasty fuzz. And I mean nasty in a good way.
It is always a pleasure to see you! Excellent review of this beloved and at the same time so hated pedal. Greetings from Lima, Peru. 🤜🏻🤛🏻