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I was lucky enough to see Mr. Adrian Belew play 5 or 6 nights in a row when he was still with Sweetheart, a cover band that played R&R dance clubs on the Florida-to-upper-midwest circuit (same gigs where Zappa first saw him, actually). They did 4 sets a night (with only few repeats and originals in the last set each night) and covered songs that weren't the typical choices of cover bands. They were by far the best cover-band I've ever seen. Anyway, using stomp-boxes and astonishing feedback control he would switch from sounding just like Jimi Hendrix to sounding just like Jeff Beck, to Townshend to Clapton to Harrison to Lennon to Page to Zappa to.... I talked to him at the bar a few times between sets that week. IIRC he said that among his stomp boxes and pedals were several different fuzzes (fuzz-face, Big Muff, some kinda Rat IIRC) and also octave up/down box(es) but that he often did the octave-up thing using just feedback and EQ. Of course, I might be mistaken because this was a long time ago and the gear talk wasn't as memorable as some other details of those nights. As Catilyne said, he was using that beat-up dayglo yellow strat with duct-tape around the top horn of the body where he would grab it to bend the neck. That's the same guitar he later used with Zappa, Bowie, Talking Heads / Tom-Tom Club, etc. I think he already had the lime green one then, too. I know he had both the yellow and green dayglo guitars a few months later when I saw his (first?) gig with Zappa. I don't think he ever put a sustainer on those old guitars, but in later years he's had a Fernandes (and other guitars?) with them built-in, but I don't know how much he uses them. I recall seeing him touch the speaker cabinet with the guitar's neck or headstock during one of the KC double-trio gigs so that guitar probably didn't have a built-in sustainer. In case you don't know, Twang Bar King and Lone Rhino have *finally* been released on CD as Japanese imports and are available directly from the artist at http://www.adrianbelew.net . Sadly, Young Lions seems to now be out of print but is worth checking out for "Pretty Pink Rose", "Men in Helicopters", and especially "I Am What I Am", if you like his fuzz/sustain/tone/technique. Sorry to take so much bandwidth. Back to looping, Nick