Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Danelectro

 
Album Review: Danelectro

  • Artist: Yo La Tengo
  • Rating: StarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: November 14, 2000
  • Type: Extended Play (EP)
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Following the near unanimous success of 2000's And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out, Yo La Tengo released material from two collaborative projects. First, the double 7" set Now 2000/Excalibur 2001 paired the New Jersey trio with members of New York's ecstatic jazz scene. Then came Danelectro, this EP of three instrumentals and their remixed counterparts. Yo La Tengo had worked in this realm before -- the second disc of 1996's Genius + Love = Yo La Tengo collected together 14 tracks without vocals from the band's singles. Yet while the band's music for its songs is structured much like its instrumentals, the latter somehow failed to compel when standing alone.

The Danelectro EP opens with "Danelectro 3," which is approached with the sensitivity of the And Then Nothing material and is of a similar quality. Kit Clayton plays the song as a percussive and volatile backward tape loop for the remix. It can sometimes be difficult, however, to tell when a beautiful piece of instrumental music crosses over into dull territory. "Danelectro 2" begins promisingly, with sounds and textures the band had not used before, but by the midway point it simply ceases to captivate. Nobukazu Takemura breathes new life into his take. With its stuttering, shifting rhythm patterns, the result bears a striking resemblance to the work of Chicago post-rock band Tortoise.

Yo La Tengo's instrumentals work best as interludes and intriguing sidetracks on their full-length albums. On Danelectro, the instrumentals are brought out of this context, and are not as successful. While a remix can be an interesting exercise, the results should speak for themselves. Danelectro's reworkings come close, but this is certainly not the place to approach Yo La Tengo. Fans will find it an interesting, though unnecessary, addition to their collections. ~ Nathan Bush, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Danelectro 3 Yo La Tengo Yo La Tengo (4:13)
Danelectro 2 Yo La Tengo Yo La Tengo (4:35)
Danelectro 1 [Remix] Yo La Tengo Yo La Tengo (2:52)
Danelectro 3 [Remix] Yo La Tengo Yo La Tengo (4:20)
Danelectro 1 Yo La Tengo Yo La Tengo (1:15)
Danelectro 2 [Remix] Yo La Tengo Yo La Tengo (11:17)

Credits

Annabel Wright (Cover Art), Q-Unique (Remixing), David Henry (Engineer), Peter Walsh (Mixing), Peter "Pops" Walsh (Mixing), Kit Clayton (Remixing)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Danelectro
Top
Danelectro
Type Private
Genre Producer
Founded 1947
Founder(s) Nathan Daniel
Headquarters original: Redbank New Jersey, United States of America / modern: Camarillo California, United States of America
Industry Musical instruments
Owner(s) Evets Corporation
Website danelectro.com
59-DC guitar

Danelectro is a manufacturer of musical instruments and accessories, specializing in rock instruments such as guitars, bass guitars, amplifiers and effects units. Danelectro was founded by Nathan Daniel in 1947; throughout the late 1940s, the company produced amplifiers for Sears, Roebuck and Company and Montgomery Ward. In 1954, Danelectro started producing the Danelectro lines of solidbody electric guitars and amplifiers, and also working as a "jobber", that is producing guitars and amps by contract, that were branded not with the Danelectro name, but with the names of various store brands, such as Silvertone and Airline. Later hollow-bodied guitars (constructed out of Masonite and plywood to save costs and increase production speed,) distinguished by Silvertones' maroon vinyl covering, Danelectros' light tweed covering, the concentric stacked tone/volume knobs used on the two-pickup models of both series, and the "lipstick-tube" pickups--invented by placing the entire mechanism into spare lipstick tubes—these lines aimed to produce no-frills guitars of reasonably good tone at low cost. In 1956, Danelectro introduced the six-string electric bass, which would be adopted by other companies such as Fender with the Fender VI. The six string bass never proved especially popular but found an enduring niche in Nashville as the instrument of choice for "Tic-tac" bass lines. In 1966, Danelectro was sold to MCA. A year later, in 1967, the Coral line was introduced, known for its hollow-bodies and electric sitars. In 1969, the Danelectro plant was closed, due to MCA's attempt to market Danelectros to small guitar shops, rather than large department stores.

In the late 1990s, the Evets Corporation started selling primarily copies of old Silvertone and Danelectro guitars and newly designed effects pedals, and small amplifiers. After initially selling well, guitar sales slowed down to the point where Danelectro stopped selling guitars after 2001, opting to concentrate on effects pedals. In 2006, the new owners of Evets decided on a new marketing model for the guitars, selling a limited number of guitars each year.[1]

Contents

Amplifiers

Guitars

1954-1969

2007 Danelectro Pro reissue

1998-2001

2006-current

Effects pedals

Today, Danelectro primarily produces effect pedals. There are eight main runs of pedals: original effects, FAB effects, mini effects, vintage effects, Wasabi effects, Paisley effects, Cool Cat effects and other miscellaneous effects. All run on 9V batteries or may be equipped with a power adapter. The original effects featured metal enclosures and FET switching. Cool Cat models are the most recent pedals, designed with metal enclosures and true-bypass switching. Danelectro have begun rolling out Cool Cat V2 pedals, featuring extra 'under the hood' features. Mini effects pedals are smaller, compact pedals with effects resembling those of the original effects and the FAB effects. Vintage effects include the large, rectangular Spring King and Reel Echo effect pedals. The discontinued Paisley series featured paisley-patterned drive effects in original style enclosures. The Wasabi series features large, futuristic-looking metal enclosures. FAB effects are the cheapest of the bunch, and feature plastic enclosures somewhat larger than the Mini effects series.

Recently, a carrying case was developed to hold up to five mini effects in it. When the player is ready to play, the top may be removed and the bottom acts as a pedals board. Despite the many advantages of the mini effects, FAB effects are the ones primarily seen today. The Mini effects are often praised for their high quality tones, but the plastic construction makes them fragile.

Original effects

  • Daddy O. Overdrive (notably used by Mike Campbell)
  • Cool Cat Chorus
  • FAB Tone Distortion
  • Dan-Echo Simulated Tape Echo
  • Dan-O-Matic Tuner

FAB effects

  • FAB Overdrive
  • FAB Distortion
  • FAB Metal
  • FAB Chorus
  • FAB Flanger
  • FAB Echo

Mini effects

  • Pastrami Overdrive
  • T-Bone Distortion
  • BLT Slap Echo
  • Corned Beef Reverb
  • Tuna Melt Tremolo
  • Hash Browns Flanger
  • Pepperoni Phaser
  • Milkshake Chorus
  • Surf and Turf Compressor
  • Grilled Cheese Distortion
  • Pedal Tuner
  • Chili Dog Octave
  • Fish and Chips 7 Band EQ
  • Chicken Salad Vibrato
  • French Toast Octave Distortion
  • PB&J Delay
  • Rocky Road Spinning Speaker
  • Black Coffee Metal Distortion
  • French Fries Auto-Wah
  • Black Licorice Beyond Metal

Vintage effects

  • Reel Echo
  • Spring King

Paisley effects (discontinued)

  • Blue Paisley PureDrive
  • Black Paisley Liquid Metal

Wasabi effects

  • Wasabi Overdrive
  • Wasabi Distortion
  • Wasabi Rock-A-Bye
  • Wasabi Forward-Reverse Delay
  • Wasabi Chorus-Trem

Miscellaneous effects

  • Shift Daddy
  • Trip-L Wah
  • Dan-O-Wah
  • Free Speech Talk Box
  • Psycho Flanger
  • Sitar Swami
  • Back Talk Reverse Delay

Cool Cat effects

  • Tremolo
  • Vibe
  • Metal
  • Fuzz
  • Fuzz V2
  • Drive
  • Drive V2
  • Transparent Overdrive
  • Transparent Overdrive V2
  • Distortion
  • Metal II
  • Chorus

Artists notable for their use of Danelectro equipment

External links

www.fortmadisonguitars.com the world's largest Danelectro dealer!

References


 
 
Learn More
Burn (1970 Album by Ennio Morricone)
Teen Beat, Vol. 2 (1994 Album by Various Artists)
Flat Duo Jets (1990 Album by Flat Duo Jets)

How much would a 1945 Danelectro guitar be worth? Read answer...
What model danelectro did Jimmy Page use? Read answer...

Help us answer these
Show you the danelectro dc-59 guitar?
How do you use danelectro cool cat?
How many Danelectro Baritone classics were made between 1998-2001?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Danelectro" Read more

 

Mentioned in