T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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93.1 | A combination of lots of things | KRYPTN::JASNIEWSKI | | Wed Nov 12 1986 08:23 | 40 |
|
You're talking about Steve Hackett's *signature* sound, I believe.
You know, that sustaining lead he gets? Althought I dont know how
he does it *specific*, I can think of what you'd need to attempt
to recreate that sound.
First off, I dont even know what kind of guitar he uses, but
I'd be willing to bet its HEAVY (in weight, that is). I'd also suspect
that it's a Gibson. I've tried a "certain" Gibson against other
units and found that it would out sustain them all - even the Music
Man with it's 1/4" wide pole pieces. Sustain is in the guitar, I
mean, the whole hunk of wood becomes part of the sound producing
effort. Did you ever notice that when you tune a Gibson to proper
pitch - the whole thing comes alive??
Another trick that would lead to the Hackett sound is what Jerry
Garcia does - run your pickup output "wide open" thru the effects
and then back up to the guitar for volume and tone control. In this
way, you could do those "soft attacks" which sound like a violin.
Of course, you could always use a volume pedal *after* the effects.
The "right" combination of effects - either a compressor or
overdrive or "Bigg-Muff" type thing would be in order for low volume
sustaining. What's "right" is what works best for you - thy 'em
all. The circuit order is important too, no point putting the
compressor *after* the overdrive, which compresses the signal somewhat
anyway.
A good amp with a "sensitive" loudspeaker (the ones with the
astronomical magnets) will help to. Santana claims he can get infinite
sustain from his Boogie at low volumes, whatever that is to him
by now.
I always wanted to try a echo-plex with a reverse envelope
controlling the echo count for a sustainer. (pat. pending!)
Later
Joe Jas
|
93.2 | If deceit is all we have it's got to be over | INK::MWHITE | | Wed Nov 12 1986 09:06 | 16 |
| Re .0 & "every breath you take" guitar sound. Go back and re-read
that BOSS ad, it is VERY decieving. The ad sez, this combination
of effects is *similar* to the sound achieved on E.B.Y.T. Really,
Summers uses marshall amps for fuzz, an Electro-Harmonics chorus
unit, and compression and delay were provided by the studio.
BOSS has a number of those ads, pertaining to certain 'desired'
sounds of todays artists, they have one for Eddie Van Halen...it
uses a Boss HM2, a Boss Super overdrive, a Boss GE7, and a BOSS
DD2 delay....ya think eddie uses this set-up? Wrong! But some crazed
Van Halen freak will probably not read the ad too well and go out
and spend $500.+ on effects thinking he's coming home to sound like
EVH.
WJB_who_didn't_mean_to_sound_like_he's_flaming_but_thought_he'd_let_
you_know_anyway.
|
93.3 | Those box delays are mostly toys | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Wed Nov 12 1986 21:19 | 7 |
| Yeah, those ads are definitely shady.
I doubt that anyone like Summers would use one of those box-type
analog delays for recording (or anything). These people can probably
get the best HQ digital delays for free.
db-who's-real-big-into-delay-stuff
|
93.4 | Severely effected | PISCES::KELLYJ | | Fri Nov 14 1986 14:57 | 56 |
| I found thhat patching my compressor (MXR DynaComp) as the first
element in the pprocessing chain really helped the sound I got out
of other signal processing gear. In particular, the distortion
device I use relly seems to like a nice fat compressed signal.
Experiment with the order in which these devices are patched; let
me know if you find something extra-terrestrial!
A related trick: I was doing some tapes for a guy last weekend at
a local studio. The engineer used a gate (Kepex GainBrain) with
the bass player. Part of the bass signal was routed to a channel
in the board that was gated by the kick drum. When the kick drum
was played, it opened the gate for the bass. When mixed in with
the 'dry' bass channel, the effect was to give the rhythm tracks
a very tight groove, because the pulse of the bass was locked in
with the kick drum. It required the drummer to very tasty and straight
on the kick drum part (not too busy).
One final trick before I go: This one's DDL related and works best
with a type DDL that displays the delay time, although that feature
is not necessary. Here's how it works:
Patch the guitar into the DDL in the normal manner. Set the
DDL controls to give a SINGLE repeat exactly 1.5 beats later.
Graphically:
| | | | ... Meter
o o o o ... Notes from guitar
d d d ... Notes from delay line
Now find a simple melody that's composed of quarter notes ONLY;
simpler the better. Play staccato and mind the meter; don't
stary from the tempo.
I heard Albert Lee do this with Heads, Hands, and Feet about 15
years ago and the effect was amazing. If I hadn't seen him do it
live, I never would have been able to figure it out. It sounds
like you're playing incredibly fast (not to be construed as a vote
for fast playing at the expense of musicality!).
Finally, since it's getting to be Christmas, I present my wish list
for the ultimate processing rack:
Configurable for N effects (add 'em as you buy 'em)
Select a pleasing combination of effects and store as a patch
Analog (footpedal) control of the 'amount' of effect
Patches selectable on the fly
Patches storeable to some device (tape cassette)
Comments? I know this is starting to sound like I should by a MIDI
guitar, but I still haven't run across a guitar synth that tracks
correctly.
Regards,
Johnny Jupiter
|
93.5 | more | INK::MWHITE | | Fri Nov 14 1986 16:19 | 12 |
| Re .4: Yeah, that's a neat trick. I use it a lot, esp for tight
stabs. You can key any instrument to any audio source (you can key
it off a metronome if you wat). I like to use the Ashley 55 stereo
gate for that effect instead of the keypex, you get more control
over attack.
Another neat trick is to patch out of a channel (does not break
normal) into a second, put the second channel pre-fader effects
send and turn the fader down so you hear more effect. Sounds a bit
different than just panning the effect over to another side, which
you can still do with this trick. A combination of those ideas can
produce a great stereo effect.
|
93.6 | And for an example of that DDL trick.... | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Sat Nov 15 1986 15:24 | 6 |
| RE: .4
That delay trick is how Van Halen did "Cathedral" on "Diver Down"
LP.
db
|
93.7 | | PHUBAR::WELLS | Let's skip the news, boy... | Wed Dec 03 1986 16:47 | 7 |
| re .0,.1 Hackett w/Genesis
Almost all pictures I've seen of him with Genesis show him playing
a Les Paul. He also used a metal slide.
Richard
|
93.8 | DDL seems to be a favorite... | BARNUM::RHODES | | Tue Dec 09 1986 17:23 | 13 |
| And lots of volume pedal...
I have a DOD rackmount echo/delay that has stereo outputs. Some neat
stuff can be done by keeping one side on the dry side of things, and varying
the other channel in real time between somewhat-wet and very-wet.
My favorite of effects is to setup a guitar->fuzz->volume_pedal->echo
patch. With the volume pedal at full cutoff, hit a chord, then bring
the volume pedal slowly, and back down slowly. This creates a nice
delay-with-reverb type sound. This is stolen from both Tangerine Dream
and Hackett...
Todd.
|
93.9 | Variations on that DDL trick + pinky swells | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Wed Dec 10 1986 09:29 | 42 |
| re: .8
That's my favorite DDL trick also. Steve Morse was the first I
ever saw do anything like that.
You should try it without the fuzz box. Also it works well for
single notes too (not just chords). My favorite version is to have
a mono chorus unit before the DDL (this is sorta Holdsworthy sounding).
Other variations are the use Vol-Wah instead of just volume.
Also, you don't need a volume pedal at all. If you're fortunate
enough to have a guitar with a volume control near the strings
(strats definitely qualify) you can get the same effect using the
following technique:
Wrap your pinky around the volume control and practice turning
the volume control up by unwrapping your pinky. Once you get
a feel for doing that, turn the volume all the way down, pluck
the string(s) a bit ahead of the beat and then turn the volume
on by unwrapping your pinky.
If feels awkward at first but with a little practice you get very
use to it. There's a wide range of things you can do with this
pinky swell techniques even independent of the DDL effect mentioned
above. For example, if you use the lead pickup and pick fairly
close to the bridge and play two strings a fourth apart and then
bend the lower string up to obtain a third you can get a very
convincing Steel guitar sound.
I think this pinky technique is generally attributed to Roy Buchanan.
I think the first example I heard of it was on a Beck tune that
was dedicated to Roy ("Since We've Ended as Lovers" on "Blow By
Blow" which was written by Stevie Wonder (some of this information
may be inaccurate)).
Anyway, the DDL trick and the pinky stuff is really neat. They
give you ways to break out of the confines of sounding like an electric
guitar (I've got variations of the DDL trick that sound like Synth-type
Brass, woodwinds, or strings, it largely depends on the tone control
settings of the guitar and what effects you put before the DDL.)
db
|
93.10 | More hints on pinky swells | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Dave | Wed Dec 10 1986 09:38 | 27 |
| Addendum to pinky swells.
If you're fortunate to have a tone control within reach of the strings
you can use your pinky on that for wah-type things.
I have this one really trick that sounds like a cat meow where I
use BOTH the volume and tone AND the bar. (On my guitar the tone
is right below the volume so what I do is flatten my hand so that
it touches BOTH the tone and volume controls. By moving my hand
up (and down) I simultaneously turn up (and down) the volume and
the tone.
Oh, another trick for pinky swells. If have a guitar with two volume
controls, by setting the pickup selector to the middle position
(both pickups) you can adjust the gain on the volume control
your using with your pinky by adjusting the other volume control.
If the volume control 2 is at 10, you go almost to full volume
by turning volume control from 0 to 1 (this gives a fairly sharp
contour that is reminiscent of brass), by turning volume control
2 to 4 or 5, you have to turn volume control 1 to 6 or 7 before
the full gain kicks in.
Isn't this stuff neat? I love exploiting things regarding the design
of the guitar. Maybe this stuff should go in the guitar tricks
note.
db
|
93.11 | Pagey, too | LYMPH::LAMBERT | Note(d) Author | Wed Dec 10 1986 10:34 | 7 |
| re: .8, .9, .10
Page used these tricks for the (long, long...) solo on Dazed and
Confused on the _The Song Remains the Same_. Only he added a
violin bow and got even weirder sounds.
-- Sam
|
93.12 | animal noises | ERLANG::DICKENS | nervous hacker | Thu Dec 11 1986 14:17 | 9 |
| re. 10,...
I have a Mutex volume/wah. With both the volume and the wah turned
on, and the pedal all the way off, you hit a note and then bend
it up as you turn up the volume and open the wah. Good for all
sorts of animal/human noises.
-Jeff
|
93.13 | | PNO::HEISER | Santa, I wanna Les Paul Custom w/Vibrola | Wed Nov 23 1988 17:01 | 10 |
| Anyone know how some guitarists like Stevie Vai can make a guitar
"talk"? I've never used an electric so this note is really fascinating
to me.
Regarding effects boxes/pedals, are there units that have combinations
of the more popular effects built into one "box"? Could someone
list the recommended makes/models?
Thanks,
Mike
|
93.14 | rack vs. pedals | HAVASU::HEISER | yes I said TONE! | Wed May 01 1991 16:25 | 12 |
| I had a chance to A/B 2 fairly new effects processors the other day.
While the models aren't important, what bothered me is that it seemed a
lot of the effects seemed unusable to me. Do those of you that own
these multi effects processors see the same thing? Out of X number of
presets, how many of yours are actually usable? To carry it one step
further, how many do you actually use out of the usable portion? My
guess is that it's a very low percentage.
I'm seriously thinking of forgetting all the rack stuff and just buying
a couple stomp pedals for what I feel I need (chorus and delay).
Mike
|
93.15 | | RAVEN1::BLAIR | Need a hot tune and a cold one | Wed May 01 1991 16:49 | 15 |
|
I am a big fan of stompers. I have quite a few of them, but only
use 2 or 3 at a time. It's fun to change them around every few
weeks or so. Easy to use, no programming, and most importantly
(for you and me) is that EJ uses 'em ('cept for the MXR flange
rack job.
As of late, I have: Dunlop Wah Wah
MXR Flanger *
MXR Phase 100
Peavey (digital) Chorus *
Tube Screamer
Digitech PDS 1002 delay *
* currently in use
|
93.16 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Wed May 01 1991 17:25 | 13 |
| Mike, you're right. Most of the rack goodies have a bunch of presets
that are junk. Absolutely nothing that I use for PA *OR* GUITAR stuff is
a factory preset. IMHO, their job is to show off what the unit will
do - period. (ADA's Mp1 is an exception - pick your favorites, edit to
taste and presto!)
Stomps are great (IMHO) for jammin' around the house and occasionally
out, but having your stuff in a rack makes it mighty roadworthy and
easier to trouble shoot when you have a crummy chord or something.
Also ask Scary whats it's like to have a fellow band member unplug
one of your boxes in the middle of a solo. Major bummage. :)
jc (JMHO)
|
93.17 | finance hits the music world | HAVASU::HEISER | yes I said TONE! | Wed May 01 1991 17:52 | 17 |
| I thought about this some more during lunch. Say you have a processor
with 128 presets (seems to be most common). If you only use say 20
presets (I think I'm being generous here too), you're only utilizing
15.6% of that unit.
Somehow I can't see spending $300-$500 on something that I'll only
effectively use 15%. Pedals would certainly have a better
return on investment (ROI) here. I'd have to figure it out, but I'd
bet it would be high.
What's funny too is applying this utilization to buying DEC equipment.
I've written quite a few workstation C.A.R.'s over the years. When our
current workstation utilization rates were less than 60% and we wanted
to buy more, the capital committee would laugh us out of the room.
They wouldn't even talk to us if our ROI wasn't a minimum of 35%.
Mike (just trying to put this in perspective)
|
93.18 | ROI ? Bah. This is signal processing, not CapitolAppropriations... | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Wed May 01 1991 18:10 | 31 |
| A different perspective:
Say you run off and buy a chorus, a flanger, a digital-delay, a
digital reverb, distortion, compressor, and wha-wha.
Here's your approx. cash outflow:
Flanger: $100
CHorus: $100
DDL: $150
DDR: $150
Dist: $ 50
Compr: $ 40
Wha: $ 40
---------------
Total: $630
With that, you have a zillion knobs to turn (never remembering which
knob goes where), a zillion 6" cords to wreck, batteries and/or wall
bugs...(better get a carrying case for 'em - $100 - total=730) and
IMHO, way too much clutter in front of you to step on wrong, kick,
unplug etc... Again, cool for the living room, uncool for the stage.
Ever seen someone play with all this stuff in front of them ? Instead
of posing and having a blast, they spend all their time tweaking knobs
and tap dancing on their pedals.
Of course you can avoid all of this buy getting your Marshall and
plugging stright into it and blowing everyone away...
jc (Who used to have all those stomps, and the headache to go with 'em)
|
93.19 | | KEBLER::WSC100::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Wed May 01 1991 18:26 | 24 |
| Not to mention that the simple sound quality is not quite as good from peddles.
If you can get a good deal on a rackmount item and come up with a good control
scheme for it, I think the sound is better. It's probably a little cheaper
to go rack mount if you need a LOT of effects.
If you don't need a LOT of effects, it's probably cheaper to use peddles. I
notice that the sound quality from peddles is better than it was, say, ten
years ago, so for the most part, sound quality may not be an issue.
And if you're ("you" being anybody) looking to upgrade your effects you can
do this: Forget about state of the art. If you just stay something like one
or two years behind state of the art, and buy all used stuff, you can do it
for cheap!
I don't even look at new equipment anymore. Who needs to spend that kind of
money? Just look at the depreciation! The thing to do is to make it work for
you instead of against you.
BTW: I used a couple peddles even when I had my rackmount unit.
JMO, of course,
Will
|
93.20 | Advantages of multieffects units | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Marshall Stack Puke | Wed May 01 1991 18:30 | 45 |
| > I thought about this some more during lunch. Say you have a processor
> with 128 presets (seems to be most common). If you only use say 20
> presets (I think I'm being generous here too), you're only utilizing
> 15.6% of that unit.
I disagree on this method of utilization measurement. That's only
measuring how much of the storage you're using, not how much of the
EFFECTS you're using. If you have a unit that will do say, 10 effects,
and you use 8 of them, that's 80% utilization in my book, whether you
take 1 storage slot or 100 to store the combinations you like.
There are many more considerations that might cause you to pick a
multieffects unit. If you want something in a sound that's perfectly
repeatable *every* time that you can access instantly, then you want a
multieffects unit (or a bunch of midi controllable effects). The
analog controls on stomps allow you to get *close* if you remember
where you had it set, but it's not exact.
> Somehow I can't see spending $300-$500 on something that I'll only
> effectively use 15%. Pedals would certainly have a better
> return on investment (ROI) here. I'd have to figure it out, but I'd
> bet it would be high.
I think you'd better price some pedals before you go saying that they
have a better return on investment. If your multieffects unit offers
10 effects and (just to make it fair) you use only 8 of them and it
cost you $400, that comes out to $50 per effect that you use. I don't
think you could buy 8 stomp boxes for under $300, especially when most
of the multieffects unit's you'd probably get have reverb and digital
delay, the two MOST expensive stomps. Just grabbing my old Musicians
Friend catalog, I find that a Boss DD-3 Digital delay will cost you
$169.88 alone. Then you gotta have a power supply (or *lots* of
batteries), all the cables to put them together, and the little
accessories like that, and you'll suddenly find a STRONG financial case
for the multieffects unit.
But...
All that aside, IMHO music has NOTHING to do with return on investment
whatsoever. I try to get the best deals I can on the equipment I want,
but my bottom line is that I don't really care how much I spend on
something as long as it SOUNDS right. This is not about capitol gains
and losses.
Greg
|
93.21 | Examples | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Marshall Stack Puke | Wed May 01 1991 18:51 | 51 |
| Woah, major notes collision.
re: .18 I agree with your analogy, but some of your prices are
whacked. You can't touch a new Wah pedal for under $70...
Here's some real numbers (courtesy of Musicians Friend and American
Musical Supply). I've found their prices on stuff like this to be
pretty close to what my local music stores charge.
> Flanger: $100
DOD FX75B stereo flanger - $59.95 (AMS)
> CHorus: $100
DOD FX65 stereo chorus - 59.95 (AMS)
Boss CH-1 stereo chorus - $75 (AMS)
> DDL: $150
Boss DD-3 digital delay - $149.00 (AMS)
DOD DFX-9 digital delay - $109.88 (MF)
> DDR: $150
I couldn't find a reverb stomp in either of these catalogs. I do
remember Boss having one awhile back and I think it cost about $175.
> Dist: $ 50
Cost on these varies from the DOD Supra distortion at 35.95 (AMS) to
the Boss OD-2 Turbo Overdrive at 99.88 (MF). In any case most
multieffects units which have distortion offer several varieties, not
just one, so figure to get the same functionality, you'd need multiple
stomps.
> Compr: $ 40
WAY low...
Boss CS-3 Compression Sustainer - $89.88 (MF)
Ibanez CP10 - $66.00 (AMS)
> Wha: $ 40
DOD FX17 77.95 (AMS)
But then again, the only multifx unit that I know of that has a real
controllable wah sound is the Roland Gp-8...
Greg
|
93.22 | Depends on what you're doing ... | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | I got a hankerin' ! | Thu May 02 1991 08:02 | 31 |
| What ? Somebody say GP-8 ? OK, I feel my chain getting jerked ... 8^)
It's all in what you're doing, playing-wise, IMO. Case in point: In
my band, we play everything from cry_in_your_beer country (Merle
Haggard) to metal (Judas Priest). I've got 8 patches programmed for
each guitar - they allow me to go from sappy country chorus to singe
your eyebrows metal at the tap of a toe. Or other guitar player uses
stomps. For country songs he uses the lo-gain input of his amp (no
overdrive) and stomps for chorus and delay. But these effects sound
like fecal matter when he PHYSICALLY switches from lo-gain to hi-gain
on his amp. So he has to go back to his amp, switch input jacks and
adjust his tone briefly EVERYTIME we switch types of music. For a
live application, this inhales. He's using my rackmount Tube Driver
now, so he uses the clean channel all the time, just switches the Tube
Driver off when we're clean. Works MUCH better.
But, if your audience consists of 2.3 pets, a small child, a SO, and
close group of complaining neighbors, then stomps (used) may very well
be your ticket. Also, if you only plan to play 1 certain type of music
live, stompers may be the way to go. If I was just playing blues (hey,
we can dream, can't we ?), I'd go with a Tube Screamer, a wah, a chorus
pedal, and run that into a tube combo amp. For metal/hard rock, I'd
probably go with a Marshall, a 4x12, maybe a stomp EQ, maybe a chorus
pedal. But since my band does a little of everything, I have to round
off the corners on the *ideal* rigs and use something that "gets the
job done".
Scary (who says ROI and guitar toys shoyuld never be mentioned in the
same paragraph ... 8^)
|
93.23 | | PAULUS::BAUER | Richard - ISE L10N Center Frankfurt | Thu May 02 1991 12:06 | 14 |
| Hi there !
I too think that rack-mount devices are cheaper (at least if you want several
effects), better quality (in most cases) and easier to handle (reproduction of
sounds and setting up cables and DC units etc.).
I had an FX900 over the weekend recently and was really impressed by the
quality of the effects. It also has the ability to use a normal foot controller
or any MIDI controller as a wah-wah pedal. Furthermore the wah-wah can als be
programmed to be touch sensitive or LFO controlled etc. So in reply to .21
there's more than just the GP-8 for wah-wah. I think most of the modern units
suport that. And if it's like the FX900, there's much more you can do with it.
Richard
|
93.24 | | HAVASU::HEISER | all I need is a COUPLE DAYS OFF! | Thu May 02 1991 13:08 | 29 |
| Well as soon as I entered my last reply, I knew it needed more
clarification to avoid a rathole. I was just too tired to hang around
and do it ;-)
When I made the DEC analogy, I was trying to give a point a view
that shows what it is like when someone else is footing the bill.
If we had to justify our gear on those terms, we would still be playing
air guitars. As Greg said, whatever sounds good is right. You can't put
your music in financial chains.
Now for the price breakdowns: the people contributing to this
discussion so far use amps with names like Kitty Hawk, Marshall,
Mesa/Boogie, ADA, etc. With amps like these, you can forget about
distortion pedals, reverb (on board and tolerable in most amps), and
maybe even compressors. All we would need in a pedal is a decent
substitute for a DSP type unit. This means Chorus, Delay, Flanger, and
EQ. I don't include Wah because most effects units don't have it either.
Musician's Friend is serving up the DSP256 for $299. You MIGHT be able
to get Chorus, Delay, Flanger, and EQ pedals for that price, but you
won't approach the flexibility. A $100 MIDI pedal might be necessary
to fully take advantage of it though.
The pedal scenario gives you the chance to build over time rather than
buying everything at once.
BTW - forget Boss pedals (my opinion). DOD is the only pedal company
that gives you a 3 year warranty and are generally less expensive.
Mike
|
93.25 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Thu May 02 1991 13:29 | 7 |
| Mike,
DOD is the only company who NEEDS that good of a warantee. :)
Boss pedals rule !
BTW - Almost all MultiFX do Wha-Wha with continuous controllers
Midi'd in. No sweat. :)
|
93.26 | | KEBLER::WSC100::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Thu May 02 1991 16:56 | 27 |
| An interesting note:
For the price of many more inexpensive amps that some one may feel need
dressing up with distortion, reverb, and eq; you might can buy a nicer amp
with it built in.
Maybe not a Boogie, but perhaps a 50 wt channal switching Marshall. I've got
to say one the finest sounding amps I've evern heard for the money is a
Carvin X-60 (right number?). 60 watts of EL34 power, with channel switching,
distortion (very nice), and reverb.
Get one of those and blow off a distortion peddle ($50?), reverb ($100+?).
If you find the right amp that suits your taste, you often don't need an EQ
($100+?) either.
Take a $400 amp and add the $250 and presto, you can get into a used
Marshall, maybe even a Boogie.
Really, with the sound of a fine tube amp, you can get away with fewer effects.
It might not really be cheaper, but it's probably not as much more as it would
seem at first glance.
And IMHO, the money is better spent on the basics (amp and guitar) than effects.
Effects can't compensate for mediocre basic sound, but exellent basic sound
often doesn't need effects.
Will
|
93.27 | | GSRC::COOPER | Opinionated MIDI Rack Puke | Thu May 02 1991 17:33 | 7 |
| Good point will. Thats where most of my old stomps went - into an amp
with decent distortion and verb (a GK250ML at the time).
I just sold a Marshall with a fine distortion sound, and a decent verb.
Less than $300!
jc
|
93.28 | Boss effects | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Marshall Stack Puke | Thu May 02 1991 17:36 | 10 |
| I have to agree on the Boss pedals. These are among the highest
quality (excluding the TC stomp stuff which really doesn't compare) and
most reliable stomp boxs available. I think they're easily worth the
extra $10-$20 or so over the DOD effect that does the same thing.
It's like comparing a Porsche to a MGB. They both perform well for
certain things, but the Porsche'll blow the doors of the MG in the long
run.
Greg
|
93.29 | Will soon have more Marshall stuff at my house then the local factory authorized dealer | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Marshall Stack Puke | Thu May 02 1991 20:08 | 6 |
| Yeah, get a good amp! I just bought a Marshall with a fine distortion
sound, and a decent verb for less then $300!
;^)
Greg
|
93.30 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | I got a hankerin' ! | Fri May 03 1991 07:47 | 10 |
| RE: Boss effects ...
I've gotta plug 'em too, since the GP-8 is basically all of these
stomps put to rack, and dressed in MIDI.
Everybody *needs* something different - my rig wouldn't work for a lot
of folks, but it suits me. So my suggestion is to take out a $4K loan,
spending no more than $600 at a time. Experiment with a lot of stuff.
Then you'll end up like me, a house full of stuff but only a small
portion actually gets used .... 8^)
|
93.31 | | ICS::CONROY | | Fri May 03 1991 15:19 | 17 |
| Another plug for BOSS pedals. They sound good and they last.
I recently sold two of them and bought a Boss BE-5, basically
5 Boss pedals in 1 box. It's not programmable but is very easy
to use. I got it mainly for live playing. I almost bought a
programmable box but I really didn't think I'd need that many
subtle variations of effects for playing live. I think 5 or 6
different sounds are enough. And I don't even use the distortion
on the BE-5, just a bit of overdrive. I just didn't want to spend
time having to program sounds either.
If I was recording a lot of music, I might think differently, but
for live playing simpler is better. If I had the money right now
I'd buy on of them JCM900 50 watt dual reverb combo jobbies.
RE: take out a 4K loan. My wife would love that! "Yea, I know the
checking account was overdrawn last week, but ..." ;)
|
93.32 | | CAVLRY::BUCK | ICE :== Intense Coaster Enthusiasts! | Fri May 03 1991 15:59 | 11 |
| Bob, oh lord of smoking classical chops...
What's in a BE-5?!?
I'm actually thinking of getting one of those plastic BOSS fx carrying
things, and putting a delay, a chorus, an octave divider, and my
master volume footswitch in it. Lemme know what the BE-5 is all about
before I go off in this direction.
Thanks
B
|
93.33 | | IXION::ROST | Lobster in cleavage probe | Fri May 03 1991 16:11 | 8 |
| A BE-5 is like a poor man's ME-5. It's been around a few years now.
Compressor plus distortion plus chorus plus delay plus noise suppressor
built into one case. No programming.
Now a new version is coming that *is* programmable (dunno if it's
in the stores yet).
Brian
|
93.34 | Korg A5 series | HAVASU::HEISER | all I need is a COUPLE DAYS OFF! | Fri May 03 1991 17:08 | 14 |
| I've been looking at the Korg A5 series for guitar. It's basically the
same as the BE-5, but without overdrive. I think its programmable too
and under $300 (list is $350). On the 5 pedals you get chorus/flanger,
delay/reverb, compression, exciter, and 3-band EQ. I just pulled out a
catalog... It is all digital, 30 programs (5 are user-definable), LED
numeric display, 1 pedal for program/edit functions, 5 pedals for
effect in/out, and has CD like sound quality (16 bit sampling @
44.1kHz). There are 3 versions, 1 for bass, 2 for guitars/keys (1 with
distortion/overdrive, 1 without. I'd prefer the latter).
I'd love to have a DSP256XL, but can't see it happening yet. I want
chorus and delay and may just end up getting a couple pedals for now.
Mike
|
93.35 | | ICS::CONROY | | Fri May 03 1991 17:19 | 11 |
| Buckage, you embarrass me; I'm only smokin' in my dreams.
Brian is right, poor man's ME-5.
I probably got mine for a good price because no one wants them
anymore. Works great though. I think it works much better than
separate pedals because of the built in noise suppressor. You can
also easily step on 2 pedals at once for different combinations.
Bob
|
93.36 | | MILNER::WSC100::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Fri May 03 1991 17:41 | 6 |
| If you're looking for peddles, hit the pawn shops. Don't pay what's marked,
ask them "What will you take for that".
Save a bundle,
Will
|
93.37 | The gh theory on life and guitar equipment | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Marshall Stack Puke | Fri May 03 1991 20:03 | 4 |
| > RE: take out a 4K loan. My wife would love that! "Yea, I know the
> checking account was overdrawn last week, but ..." ;)
I always say, "Ya gotta have yer priorities!"
|
93.38 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | I got a hankerin' ! | Fri May 03 1991 20:05 | 5 |
| I agree - pork and beans for supper 3 times a week doesn't really
sound *that* bad to me ... 8^)
Scary
|
93.39 | Boiling water, I can't wait | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Marshall Stack Puke | Fri May 03 1991 20:15 | 6 |
| ...or Macaroni & Cheese, heck I'm an official member of the "Kraft
Cheese & Macaroni Club"!
;^)
Greg
|
93.40 | Heh Heh... | SMURF::BENNETT | Retro Rockets | Sat May 04 1991 17:59 | 5 |
|
PS had ramen noodles for $.10/ pack last week. Chow for a month on
$10.
repeat after me: Mono Sodium Glutamate
|
93.41 | effects chain | HAVASU::HEISER | doin' the woodpecker stomp | Wed May 08 1991 14:15 | 6 |
| What would be the best order to put these effects in?
Chorus - Delay - Octaver - Compressor - Noise Suppressor - Exciter
Thanks,
Mike
|
93.42 | try this | HAMER::KRON | ELECTRIFIED | Wed May 08 1991 14:38 | 4 |
| any order as long as the compressor is first and the noise suppressor
is last....but I would bet comp-ex-oct-ch-de-n/s would sound about the
best due to what the exciter and octaver do and require signal-wise
-Bill
|
93.43 | | MILNER::WSC100::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Wed May 08 1991 14:53 | 5 |
| I'm curious: What does an exiter do?
(No smart-ass replies necessary :) )
Will
|
93.44 | real basically | CAVLRY::BUCK | ICE :== Intense Coaster Enthusiasts! | Wed May 08 1991 15:23 | 3 |
| -1
BASICALLY, it's a treble boost.
|
93.45 | JMHO | CAVLRY::BUCK | ICE :== Intense Coaster Enthusiasts! | Wed May 08 1991 15:25 | 8 |
| >What would be the best order to put these effects in?
>
>Chorus - Delay - Octaver - Compressor - Noise Suppressor - Exciter
I do it:
Exciter - Compressor - Chorus - Delay - Octaver - Noise Suppressor
|
93.46 | | GSRC::COOPER | Opinionated MIDI Rack Puke | Wed May 08 1991 15:57 | 13 |
| I think Buck told me this, Will:
(About a BBE Sonic Maximizer)
The exciter splits the signal into three bands, processing the highs
with a delay/eq thingie, and jst delaying/filtering the low and mid
bands.
Listen to Satch, and you'll hear massive amounts of "Excitement".
:)
|
93.47 | | MILNER::WSC100::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Wed May 08 1991 16:15 | 11 |
| re: exciter
Cool, thanks, guys.
effects order:
I would do it like Buck except I always had the delay as the last one. Kind
of like playing guitar in a canyon: The echo would always be the last thing
to happen to the sound.
Will
|
93.48 | | HAVASU::HEISER | kwah yttik ym yub | Wed May 08 1991 16:59 | 6 |
| Re: exciter
Boss has a new pedal exciter model. Coop is right, it is an integral
part of Satch's sound.
Mike
|
93.49 | Build your own effects station | RESYNC::D_SMITH | | Fri Mar 20 1992 07:58 | 7 |
| Has anyone attempted to build your own effects? Didn't see any notes
pertaining to such. What I'm looking for is schematics for an
analog/digital delay unit.
Any pointers?
Dave'
|
93.50 | alternatively | EZ2GET::STEWART | the leper with the most fingers | Fri Mar 20 1992 10:38 | 8 |
|
Dave, you can probably buy what you want for about what you'd spend
constructing one of these from a schematic.
For example, Digitech DSP-128s (no longer state of the art, but more
than just a digital delay) sell for a little more than $100. Check
the want ads and do model number lookups in this conference.
|