Blog Post Categories
- Dire Straits/ Mark Knopfler live pictures and videos (16)
- Guitar in general (62)
- Vintage guitars (30)
- Mark Knopfler gear (89)
- Misc (59)
- MK guitar style and licks (70)
- Recording (15)
- Understanding music (23)
Pages
- Contents – List of all articles
- Forum
- What is a blog and how can I use it most efficiently
- The idea behind this blog
- Support this site
- Poll: Wishes for future articles
- Gear on all songs for all albums – WIKI
- Privacy policy
- Live Chat
- Contact
Recent Forum Posts
-
Welche Gitarre und Amp fuer Anfaenger und Knopfler-Sound?
posted in forum Deutsches Forum - German forum by stratgod82 on 10. February 2012 at 18:20
-
Bridge state/height
posted in forum Gear by thomasfloss on 30. January 2012 at 20:00
-
Recommended gear for the MK style
posted in forum Gear by Ingo on 29. January 2012 at 16:41
-
Gitarre & Amp mit Knopfler-Sound für Anfänger
posted in forum Deutsches Forum - German forum by markus on 26. December 2011 at 18:20
-
St. Mark's DSP Effects Pickups Debuted At The Musikmesse Frankfurt Show
posted in forum General Guitar discussion by littlemustache on 19. November 2011 at 15:50
Recent Comments
- The Häussel 1959 pickups for the Mark Knopfler Les Paul sound (4)
- Alex (Gunslinger): Couldn’t agree more with the comments above, keep this work up Ingo it...
- Ingo: Thank you both for your comments. J.F., especially thanks for your contribution (you are...
- Jean-Francois: not only the best MK related, just one of best music related site, and...
- Lola: Simply the best MK related website ever. Thank you Ingo. Keep the good work coming.
- Limited Alchemy Edition of the white Schecter pickguard (5)
- Sultans of Swing – backing track for long live version available (1)
- Ingo: I updated the product page in the shop so that you can now listen to sound samples.
- Dire Straits Down to the Waterline explained: licks – chords – solo – no tabs (12)
- The VFS-1 – New pick-up for our Schecter-style pickguards (10)
- Andrew MacAskill: Hi again Ingo, I couldn’t sleep tonight and I re-read/watched all your...
- Andrew MacAskill: Hi Ingo, As a small token of my thanks for all of your hard work providing such...
- The Schecter Story: Schecter Guitar Research – Dream Machines – The Van Nuys Era (11)
- Alexis: I never know guitars could be this awesome. All I know in my life is just electric guitar...
- National Style-O 1932 and 1936 – Double Power (2)
- CJ: Sorry, it should be”height” of course
/CJ
- CJ: Sorry, it should be”height” of course
Archives
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
Links
Meta
Tag cloud
TOP 15 Popular Articles
- Guitar refinishing – nitro vs poly and how to remove a polyester finish
- Mark Knopfler’s Music Man HD 130 212 guitar amp
- Forum
- Mark Knopfler’s Sultans of Swing amp – The brown Fender Vibrolux
- Music Man Guitar Amps
- Mark Knopfler’s Amp and Effect Settings on the On Every Street tour
- Red – redder – the reddest: fiesta, dakota, candy apple, hot rod, and more Fender colours
- The King of Clean – Mark Knopfler’s Tone King Imperial amp – Hand-built vintage technology and sound
- Trying to recreate that Sultans of Swing sound - The gear I used on the Puresolo competition.
- New site shop launched
- How to get that Sultans of Swing Sound - Mark Knopfler played 08 strings?
- Mark Knopfler’s amp settings on Fender Hot Rod Deluxe (Boom like that promo, Germany 2004)
- The Dan Armstrong Orange Squeezer compressor – Did Mark Knopfler really use it?
- Mark Knopfler’s 1938 Gibson Advanced Jumbo acoustic guitar
- Ernie Ball volume pedal modification to make the taper like it was with the old Allen Bradley poti
Top Comment Authors
- Ingo (301)
- Jean-François (117)
- Jeff - Anthony (36)
- Dermot O'Reilly (28)
- Erik (21)
- TheWizzard29 (21)
- Knopfleberg (20)
- zach (20)
- Philipp (19)
- Fletch (17)
- Morten (17)
- John (14)
- Jim (13)
- Ryan T. (11)
- thomas (11)
- liftedcj7on44s (10)
- Alex Mircica (9)
- danny (9)
- Jakehadlee (9)
- jude (9)
- Eduard (8)
- Antonio (7)
- Chris (7)
- Eric (7)
- Jeff (7)
The Vox Vintage Coil Cord – and why I love spiral guitar cables
Posted in: Mark Knopfler gear,Misc by Ingo on November 09, 2010
When I started playing the guitar in 1979, spiral guitar cables were common. Many players favoured these spiral – or coil(ed) – cables because it is very handy not to have meters of cables lying on the floor between your feet and your effects. The spiral cable shortens automatically to a few feet, while it allows distances up to several meters when stretched out, and they don’t wrap themselves after turning around a few times such as normal cable does. Last not least, I always found they look cool.

The black Vox Vintage Coil cable with silver plug with 24k gold-plated contacts
I am not really sure why they got out of fashion a few years later, so much that for decades it was almost impossible to get a long high-quality spiral cable. I was surprised to see them back a few years ago, when Vox presented their Vintage Coil Cord. Fender also has one again. In fact the Vox cable looks pretty much exactly as the cable that Mark Knopfler played live when he started Dire Straits, so I tried to get hold of them. Unfortunately it turned out that they were not available in Germany, and shipping them from the US meant high additional costs. I finally got some from the German distributor that were left over after a music fair. I use them live and for recording since then.
What I like about this cable is the look, the feel, and the sound. It is really true that different cables sound different. This is not vodoo thinking but based on a few technical facts about pick-up design. With these cables the sound becomes smoother with some nice bite in the upper mids. I am not sure if this has to do with Vox’s multi-core design forthis cable – different cores for different frequencies – or if it is just the result of the electrical specs. Anyway, it sounds good.
The sound of the cable is especially important when using two of these, before and after a passive effect, like Mark Knopfler apparently did in the late 7oies. With an active effect device, only the cable before the device matters, but with e.g. the Morley volume pedal, both will affect the sound, to be concrete, the capacity of both cables adds and transforms the pick-up’s resonance peak, adding some high mids.


This and the next picture prove that one spiral cable was before and one after the Morley volume pedal.

The cable is very reliable. I guess spiral cables were phased out because they can be damaged when you step on them very hard, thus bending the coiled cable to some radius smaller then allowed, which makes the cable break or the shielding loose. The Vox cable, however, is very strong so that it will not be harmed when stepping on it (something I nevertheless try to avoid). Even after using it for a few years now, none of mine makes noises when moving the cable, or shows any other problems.

I recently got some of these great cables which I can offer at a great price in this site’s online shop. Check them out!
"Buy me a beer" - donate for the site via PayPal. Or buy a backing track in my online shop :)Related articles
Money for Nothing on Guitar Hero Warriors of Rock
Posted in: MK guitar style and licks by Ingo on November 02, 2010
The new Guitar Hero Warriors of Rock features Dire Straits – Money for Nothing from the Brothers In Arms CD (1985).
We had a lot of fun and many valuable insights with Sultans of Swing from this game some months ago. This one is also a great listen for all of us MK-style guitar players since hearing the guitar(s) alone lets you hear so many details that are lost behind the other instruments in the mix. I especially love that rhythm riff Mark plays only in the verses, but also all those licks in the refrain are great. So buy yourself a game console like Playstation 3, Wii or Xbox, and this great new game.
Here – as an appetizer – some short extracts from the the two riff guitars.
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
Simply click on the blue progress bar to make the player play a different part of the song.
Note that in the intro and the first verse there is only one guitar that is doubled with some delay. From the first refrain on, we have two separate guitar tracks. As these are panned left and right, you just need to set your monitors so that only one channel is played to hear these alone.


