Pantera – The Great Southern Trendkill
The music gear and equipment used by the artists, producers, engineers, and more involved in the making of the 1996 album The Great Southern Trendkill.
Music from The Great Southern Trendkill
Artists on The Great Southern Trendkill
Gear Used On The Great Southern Trendkill
Explore the instruments, equipment, software, and production tools used in the making of Pantera – The Great Southern Trendkill (1996). Click more on each item to see exactly how it was used.
Dimebag Darrell
Roles:
Effects Pedals used by Dimebag Darrell on The Great Southern Trendkill
Electro-Harmonix Electric Mistress Flanger/Filter Matrix
Avg price: $478.26
Used on The Great Southern Treadkill, as stated in this June 1996 Guitar World interview.
You've got a huge pile of effects boxes in the studio. Aside from the ones you've already mentioned, what other units did you use?
I hooked up my MXR Flanger/Doubler every once in a while and I used an E-Bow for a real smooth, continual sustain on "10's." I also used one of those little Korg Pandora boxes for a weird, fluttering sound on a short passage in "10's" and a Lexicon Vortex for the shimmering, breathy tone on my theme-like lead in "The Underground in America."
I also used a Roland AP-2 Phase II pedal, a KorgAX30G, a Digitech Whammy pedal, of course!, a Boss CE1 Chorus and a bunch of old Electro-Harmonix shit -- a Small Stone Phaser, an Electric Mistress Flanger/Filter Matrix, a Little Big Muff and a Soul Preacher Compressor/Sustainer. I also used a Korg G1 on the demos and some of that made it on the record. If l can't beat a part of the demo we'II just extract that small section and use it. The G1 is a bad-sounding little unit, man.
There's some wah on the record, too.
Shit, I almost forgot about that! I used my Vox Wah on the earlier part of the recording and then Jimmy Dunlop sent me one of his rack-mount units [Crybaby DCR-1SR]. Man, that thing is incredible, you can literally get whatever you want out of it. I also really like the idea that you can run a bunch of Wah pedals all over the place on stage with it so you're not always tied to that one spot. The only uncool thing about it is that Rex [Brown, bassist] will be dicking me off every night 'cause he'll be jumping on my pedals all the time!
Electro-Harmonix EH-1316/EH-4500/EH-4501 Soul Preacher
Avg price: $100.00
Used on The Great Southern Treadkill, as stated in this June 1996 Guitar World interview.
You've got a huge pile of effects boxes in the studio. Aside from the ones you've already mentioned, what other units did you use?
I hooked up my MXR Flanger/Doubler every once in a while and I used an E-Bow for a real smooth, continual sustain on "10's." I also used one of those little Korg Pandora boxes for a weird, fluttering sound on a short passage in "10's" and a Lexicon Vortex for the shimmering, breathy tone on my theme-like lead in "The Underground in America."
I also used a Roland AP-2 Phase II pedal, a KorgAX30G, a Digitech Whammy pedal, of course!, a Boss CE1 Chorus and a bunch of old Electro-Harmonix shit -- a Small Stone Phaser, an Electric Mistress Flanger/Filter Matrix, a Little Big Muff and a Soul Preacher Compressor/Sustainer. I also used a Korg G1 on the demos and some of that made it on the record. If l can't beat a part of the demo we'II just extract that small section and use it. The G1 is a bad-sounding little unit, man.
There's some wah on the record, too.
Shit, I almost forgot about that! I used my Vox Wah on the earlier part of the recording and then Jimmy Dunlop sent me one of his rack-mount units [Crybaby DCR-1SR]. Man, that thing is incredible, you can literally get whatever you want out of it. I also really like the idea that you can run a bunch of Wah pedals all over the place on stage with it so you're not always tied to that one spot. The only uncool thing about it is that Rex [Brown, bassist] will be dicking me off every night 'cause he'll be jumping on my pedals all the time!
Avg price: $90.00
Used on The Great Southern Treadkill, as stated in this June 1996 Guitar World interview.
You've got a huge pile of effects boxes in the studio. Aside from the ones you've already mentioned, what other units did you use?
I hooked up my MXR Flanger/Doubler every once in a while and I used an E-Bow for a real smooth, continual sustain on "10's." I also used one of those little Korg Pandora boxes for a weird, fluttering sound on a short passage in "10's" and a Lexicon Vortex for the shimmering, breathy tone on my theme-like lead in "The Underground in America."
I also used a Roland AP-2 Phase II pedal, a KorgAX30G, a Digitech Whammy pedal, of course!, a Boss CE1 Chorus and a bunch of old Electro-Harmonix shit -- a Small Stone Phaser, an Electric Mistress Flanger/Filter Matrix, a Little Big Muff and a Soul Preacher Compressor/Sustainer. I also used a Korg G1 on the demos and some of that made it on the record. If l can't beat a part of the demo we'II just extract that small section and use it. The G1 is a bad-sounding little unit, man.
There's some wah on the record, too.
Shit, I almost forgot about that! I used my Vox Wah on the earlier part of the recording and then Jimmy Dunlop sent me one of his rack-mount units [Crybaby DCR-1SR]. Man, that thing is incredible, you can literally get whatever you want out of it. I also really like the idea that you can run a bunch of Wah pedals all over the place on stage with it so you're not always tied to that one spot. The only uncool thing about it is that Rex [Brown, bassist] will be dicking me off every night 'cause he'll be jumping on my pedals all the time!
Avg price: $65.00
Used on The Great Southern Treadkill, as stated in this June 1996 Guitar World interview.
You've got a killer, brittle rhythm tone on this album. Have you changed your basic setup at all since the last record?
Kinda. I ended up using the old, carpeted Randall RG-100 head I recorded Cowboys From Hell with.
What happened to the Randall Century 200's you've been playing through for the longest time?
When we were jamming around and doing the demos I didn't bother to hook up my normal rig; I just wanted something that would do the job. So, we dragged in a bunch of my old shit and set it up. In addition to my RG-100 stack, I used an old Furman PQ-3 parametric EQ, which has a different gain structure from the PQ-4's I've got in my main rack, my blue MXR 6-band graphic EQ and a cheap little Boss Noise Gate. Then, when we did the demos, I was liking the way everything was sounding so I thought, "Don't fuck with it, there it is!"
Electro-Harmonix Small Stone Phase Shifter V2
Avg price: $159.00
Used on The Great Southern Treadkill, as stated in this June 1996 Guitar World interview.
You've got a huge pile of effects boxes in the studio. Aside from the ones you've already mentioned, what other units did you use?
I hooked up my MXR Flanger/Doubler every once in a while and I used an E-Bow for a real smooth, continual sustain on "10's." I also used one of those little Korg Pandora boxes for a weird, fluttering sound on a short passage in "10's" and a Lexicon Vortex for the shimmering, breathy tone on my theme-like lead in "The Underground in America."
I also used a Roland AP-2 Phase II pedal, a KorgAX30G, a Digitech Whammy pedal, of course!, a Boss CE1 Chorus and a bunch of old Electro-Harmonix shit -- a Small Stone Phaser, an Electric Mistress Flanger/Filter Matrix, a Little Big Muff and a Soul Preacher Compressor/Sustainer. I also used a Korg G1 on the demos and some of that made it on the record. If l can't beat a part of the demo we'II just extract that small section and use it. The G1 is a bad-sounding little unit, man.
There's some wah on the record, too.
Shit, I almost forgot about that! I used my Vox Wah on the earlier part of the recording and then Jimmy Dunlop sent me one of his rack-mount units [Crybaby DCR-1SR]. Man, that thing is incredible, you can literally get whatever you want out of it. I also really like the idea that you can run a bunch of Wah pedals all over the place on stage with it so you're not always tied to that one spot. The only uncool thing about it is that Rex [Brown, bassist] will be dicking me off every night 'cause he'll be jumping on my pedals all the time!
The V2 can be deduced from the eras of the Electric Mistress, the Little Big Muff Pi and the Soul Preacher.
Electro-Harmonix EH-1009/EH-1322 Little Big Muff Pi
Avg price: $161.17
Used on The Great Southern Treadkill, as stated in this June 1996 Guitar World interview.
You've got a huge pile of effects boxes in the studio. Aside from the ones you've already mentioned, what other units did you use?
I hooked up my MXR Flanger/Doubler every once in a while and I used an E-Bow for a real smooth, continual sustain on "10's." I also used one of those little Korg Pandora boxes for a weird, fluttering sound on a short passage in "10's" and a Lexicon Vortex for the shimmering, breathy tone on my theme-like lead in "The Underground in America."
I also used a Roland AP-2 Phase II pedal, a KorgAX30G, a Digitech Whammy pedal, of course!, a Boss CE1 Chorus and a bunch of old Electro-Harmonix shit -- a Small Stone Phaser, an Electric Mistress Flanger/Filter Matrix, a Little Big Muff and a Soul Preacher Compressor/Sustainer. I also used a Korg G1 on the demos and some of that made it on the record. If l can't beat a part of the demo we'II just extract that small section and use it. The G1 is a bad-sounding little unit, man.
There's some wah on the record, too.
Shit, I almost forgot about that! I used my Vox Wah on the earlier part of the recording and then Jimmy Dunlop sent me one of his rack-mount units [Crybaby DCR-1SR]. Man, that thing is incredible, you can literally get whatever you want out of it. I also really like the idea that you can run a bunch of Wah pedals all over the place on stage with it so you're not always tied to that one spot. The only uncool thing about it is that Rex [Brown, bassist] will be dicking me off every night 'cause he'll be jumping on my pedals all the time!
Korg Toneworks G1 Guitar Distortion Processor
Used on The Great Southern Treadkill, as stated in this June 1996 Guitar World interview.
You've got a huge pile of effects boxes in the studio. Aside from the ones you've already mentioned, what other units did you use?
I hooked up my MXR Flanger/Doubler every once in a while and I used an E-Bow for a real smooth, continual sustain on "10's." I also used one of those little Korg Pandora boxes for a weird, fluttering sound on a short passage in "10's" and a Lexicon Vortex for the shimmering, breathy tone on my theme-like lead in "The Underground in America."
I also used a Roland AP-2 Phase II pedal, a KorgAX30G, a Digitech Whammy pedal, of course!, a Boss CE1 Chorus and a bunch of old Electro-Harmonix shit -- a Small Stone Phaser, an Electric Mistress Flanger/Filter Matrix, a Little Big Muff and a Soul Preacher Compressor/Sustainer. I also used a Korg G1 on the demos and some of that made it on the record. If l can't beat a part of the demo we'II just extract that small section and use it. The G1 is a bad-sounding little unit, man.
There's some wah on the record, too.
Shit, I almost forgot about that! I used my Vox Wah on the earlier part of the recording and then Jimmy Dunlop sent me one of his rack-mount units [Crybaby DCR-1SR]. Man, that thing is incredible, you can literally get whatever you want out of it. I also really like the idea that you can run a bunch of Wah pedals all over the place on stage with it so you're not always tied to that one spot. The only uncool thing about it is that Rex [Brown, bassist] will be dicking me off every night 'cause he'll be jumping on my pedals all the time!
Avg price: $215.00
Used on The Great Southern Treadkill, as stated in this June 1996 Guitar World interview.
You've got a huge pile of effects boxes in the studio. Aside from the ones you've already mentioned, what other units did you use?
I hooked up my MXR Flanger/Doubler every once in a while and I used an E-Bow for a real smooth, continual sustain on "10's." I also used one of those little Korg Pandora boxes for a weird, fluttering sound on a short passage in "10's" and a Lexicon Vortex for the shimmering, breathy tone on my theme-like lead in "The Underground in America."
I also used a Roland AP-2 Phase II pedal, a KorgAX30G, a Digitech Whammy pedal, of course!, a Boss CE1 Chorus and a bunch of old Electro-Harmonix shit -- a Small Stone Phaser, an Electric Mistress Flanger/Filter Matrix, a Little Big Muff and a Soul Preacher Compressor/Sustainer. I also used a Korg G1 on the demos and some of that made it on the record. If l can't beat a part of the demo we'II just extract that small section and use it. The G1 is a bad-sounding little unit, man.
There's some wah on the record, too.
Shit, I almost forgot about that! I used my Vox Wah on the earlier part of the recording and then Jimmy Dunlop sent me one of his rack-mount units [Crybaby DCR-1SR]. Man, that thing is incredible, you can literally get whatever you want out of it. I also really like the idea that you can run a bunch of Wah pedals all over the place on stage with it so you're not always tied to that one spot. The only uncool thing about it is that Rex [Brown, bassist] will be dicking me off every night 'cause he'll be jumping on my pedals all the time!
Avg price: $550.00
Used on The Great Southern Treadkill, as stated in this June 1996 Guitar World interview.
You've got a huge pile of effects boxes in the studio. Aside from the ones you've already mentioned, what other units did you use?
I hooked up my MXR Flanger/Doubler every once in a while and I used an E-Bow for a real smooth, continual sustain on "10's." I also used one of those little Korg Pandora boxes for a weird, fluttering sound on a short passage in "10's" and a Lexicon Vortex for the shimmering, breathy tone on my theme-like lead in "The Underground in America."
I also used a Roland AP-2 Phase II pedal, a KorgAX30G, a Digitech Whammy pedal, of course!, a Boss CE1 Chorus and a bunch of old Electro-Harmonix shit -- a Small Stone Phaser, an Electric Mistress Flanger/Filter Matrix, a Little Big Muff and a Soul Preacher Compressor/Sustainer. I also used a Korg G1 on the demos and some of that made it on the record. If l can't beat a part of the demo we'II just extract that small section and use it. The G1 is a bad-sounding little unit, man.
There's some wah on the record, too.
Shit, I almost forgot about that! I used my Vox Wah on the earlier part of the recording and then Jimmy Dunlop sent me one of his rack-mount units [Crybaby DCR-1SR]. Man, that thing is incredible, you can literally get whatever you want out of it. I also really like the idea that you can run a bunch of Wah pedals all over the place on stage with it so you're not always tied to that one spot. The only uncool thing about it is that Rex [Brown, bassist] will be dicking me off every night 'cause he'll be jumping on my pedals all the time!
Guitars used by Dimebag Darrell on The Great Southern Trendkill
Dimebag Darrell extensively used the Washburn Roswell Camo ML during The Great Southern Trendkill era, as highlighted in Ola Englund's YouTube video, "Visiting Dimebag's Guitar Vault."
Studio Equipment used by Dimebag Darrell on The Great Southern Trendkill
Avg price: $992.38
Used on The Great Southern Treadkill, as stated in this June 1996 Guitar World interview.
You've got a huge pile of effects boxes in the studio. Aside from the ones you've already mentioned, what other units did you use?
I hooked up my MXR Flanger/Doubler every once in a while and I used an E-Bow for a real smooth, continual sustain on "10's." I also used one of those little Korg Pandora boxes for a weird, fluttering sound on a short passage in "10's" and a Lexicon Vortex for the shimmering, breathy tone on my theme-like lead in "The Underground in America."
I also used a Roland AP-2 Phase II pedal, a KorgAX30G, a Digitech Whammy pedal, of course!, a Boss CE1 Chorus and a bunch of old Electro-Harmonix shit -- a Small Stone Phaser, an Electric Mistress Flanger/Filter Matrix, a Little Big Muff and a Soul Preacher Compressor/Sustainer. I also used a Korg G1 on the demos and some of that made it on the record. If l can't beat a part of the demo we'II just extract that small section and use it. The G1 is a bad-sounding little unit, man.
There's some wah on the record, too.
Shit, I almost forgot about that! I used my Vox Wah on the earlier part of the recording and then Jimmy Dunlop sent me one of his rack-mount units [Crybaby DCR-1SR]. Man, that thing is incredible, you can literally get whatever you want out of it. I also really like the idea that you can run a bunch of Wah pedals all over the place on stage with it so you're not always tied to that one spot. The only uncool thing about it is that Rex [Brown, bassist] will be dicking me off every night 'cause he'll be jumping on my pedals all the time!
Furman PQ-4 Parametric Equalizer
Visible in this photo of Darrell's rack gear. It is also mentioned in this 1992 interview at 21:27 and this June 1996 Guitar World interview.
Interview with Pete Brown, 1992
[Brown] What kind of Randalls are they?
[Darrell] They're Randall RG100HTs. They're rack mount. I think HT means "rack mount", I don't know.
[Brown] You got a pedal board?
[Darrell] I don't I have them in a rack and the only thing else I use is a Furman PQ-4 parametric equalizer. I just use that, I don't really use it for much more than just cuttin' out some frequencies that I don't want and boostin' a couple that I do want. And the main thing is another vital, detrimental thing to my tone, is a little blue MXR Six Band EQ, nine volt battery and that's it. I use a-
[Brown] A whammy pedal?
[Darrell] I don't even include that, because I come out and I fuckin' just use that thing to get super ridiculous squeals. I just got it, I don't even know how to use it good yet.
Guitar World, June 1996, posted online on January 22, 2013 as "From the Archive: Dimebag Darrell Discusses Pantera's 1996 Album, 'The Great Southern Trendkill'"
You've got a killer, brittle rhythm tone on this album. Have you changed your basic setup at all since the last record?
Kinda. I ended up using the old, carpeted Randall RG-100 head I recorded Cowboys From Hell with.
What happened to the Randall Century 200's you've been playing through for the longest time?
When we were jamming around and doing the demos I didn't bother to hook up my normal rig; I just wanted something that would do the job. So, we dragged in a bunch of my old shit and set it up. In addition to my RG-100 stack, I used an old Furman PQ-3 parametric EQ, which has a different gain structure from the PQ-4's I've got in my main rack, my blue MXR 6-band graphic EQ and a cheap little Boss Noise Gate. Then, when we did the demos, I was liking the way everything was sounding so I thought, "Don't fuck with it, there it is!"
Avg price: $550.73
In this interview of Dimebag Darrell from around the time that The Great Southern Trendkill came out, he is quoted as saying; “I also used one of those little Korg Pandora boxes for a weird, fluttering sound on a short passage in "10's" and a Lexicon Vortex for the shimmering, breathy tone on my theme-like lead in "The Underground in America."
Vinnie Paul
Roles:
Cymbals used by Vinnie Paul on The Great Southern Trendkill
Avg price: $264.57
Vinnie Paul used Sabian 20 AA Metal X China In the photo I attached you can see that Vinnie Paul used Sabian 20 AA Metal X China and others symbols, This drum cymbal was present for a time Cowboys from hell until the end of his career
I'm brutal. Nobody plays as hard as me. I use the back ends of my sticks, I wear gloves... I'm into power. The harder I hit 'em, the louder they get, the better I feel. A cymbal needs strength and power to handle my playing. And that's what I get with my SABIANS... great sound, durability and power. "Vinnie Paul"