T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1415.2 | it can be done for small $! | WELMTS::GREENB | Very clever with maracas | Tue Aug 08 1989 04:33 | 6 |
| You can also brighten up that kind of sound by using a flanger subtly,
i.e. set the depth and speed controls fairly low. It works pretty
well on my cheapo Shaftesbury Ned Callan - I can get a sound somewhere
between a Rickenbacker and a Tele (with a bit of imagination!)
Bob
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1415.3 | helping hand from GP-8 | VNABRW::EXEL | | Tue Aug 08 1989 09:19 | 12 |
|
What I did when I got my Strat (an American standard too) to get
a Knopfler like sound was playing arround with the GP-8. What I
found was more than I expected: a combination of compressor and
a light chorus. It sounds a bit more "cutting" than a real Knopfler
or Robert Cray, but it IS a crystal clear one - and this small
difference in the sound matches the small difference in the playing
technique (it's time to wake up.......).
Guenter
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1415.4 | It's "the" sound | BUSY::JMINVILLE | Cuz I said so! | Tue Aug 08 1989 16:53 | 4 |
| Try playing it through an "old" Fender Twin Reverb (i.e. prior to
~ '74).
joe.
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1415.5 | I LOVE my Strat! | SALEM::ABATELLI | I don't need no stinkin' Boogie! | Wed Aug 09 1989 09:51 | 33 |
| I guess it all depends on what "tone" you're looking for.
Stevie Ray's tone "mostly" is due to the *neck* p/u, but
he's been known to play all 5 positions within one song too. One of the
great things about a Stratocaster type guitar is that you can get
ALOT of sounds/tones for the money. Personally, I think it has alot
more character in it's sound than alot of guitars out there for
double the price. Clapton tends to play his bridge and middle p/u's
for his "sound". Also his neck and middle for a bassier tone. I'm
mainly talking without effects here. The effects he uses are discussed
somewhere else in this conference. If I remember correctly, those
combinations tend to make the guitar sound "out of phase" but they
truly are not. I've wired my Strat "out of phase" and it sounded
like a chicken scratching to China for a worm, "YUCK" - my opinion.
Every Strat is different, whether it's a Fender, or an Ibanez, or
Charvel, or whatever. No two are exactly the same. You can get a
new Fender Strat and LOVE IT, or get a new one that truly is a
piece of junk. I guess it is all what you like. If you play a guitar
before you buy it and one month later you hate it... that's YOUR
fault! Don't settle for the first pretty guitar that comes along.
In *my* opinion, a guitar HAS to have that "tone" you are looking
for "without" the amp hooked up to it. If you like the tone that
way, you'll like the tone hooked into an amp. Unless ofcourse your
amp is hurting bigtime, then that isn't a fair test, but on the
whole the tone will, or will not be there without the amp.
I have an older Fender Strat and a ~'70 Les Paul Custom and if both
of them are in reach... I'll play the Strat. Both have the same
type of (low) action and both necks are quick, but it's that tone
that I like. It just has more personality!
Fred
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1415.6 | My strat just has that SOUND... | RAVEN1::DANDREA | CRAZY on a ship of fools | Thu Aug 10 1989 13:46 | 9 |
| I get "that" sound from my American Std. strat. It's a maple neck,
1989 model. The five position switch helps immensely (sp). I don't
think I'm doing anything special, but I did play about 10 different
models before I bought mine. I got I lucky and got my favorite
color (gunmetal blue), but there was some difference in tone and
especially feel/action in all the axes I demoed.
Steve
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1415.7 | strats and the weather ... | GOOROO::CLARK | roots, wings, and oat bran | Thu Aug 10 1989 14:38 | 12 |
| re .-1
I second the comment that the tone/feel of the Strats varies.
I tried a lot before I bought mine. But What I've noticed with
the Strat (also '89 American Standard) is that, more than any
other guitar I've owned, it seems very sensitive to changes in
climate. A set-up that feels good in dry weather feels
mushy in muggy weather, and a set-up that feels good in
muggy weather feels stiff in dry weather. Is this typical
of Strats?
-Dave
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1415.8 | 4 | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Conliberative | Sat Aug 12 1989 10:18 | 10 |
| I think the sound your looking for is the 4th position sound.
Some strats have only a 3 position switch. What does your have.
It seems sorta hard to get on a non-strat. I can get something
that is very close, but it requires a VERY particular setting
of my guitar, and I have a particular GP-8 setting for it that
employs EQ, compression, and a subtle out-of-phase flange.
db
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1415.9 | chuck the pick for M.K. sound | 42384::EVANS | Aged Hippy | Mon Aug 14 1989 09:45 | 12 |
|
I'm not a strat owner but on the ones I've played the Knopfler sound is
real easy to get. You realise that most of Knopflers work is done with
fingers & not a Pick? If you select Middle & Bridge PUs, use a flatish
setting on the amp, add touch reverb & throw away your pick you get
"Sultans/Tunnel of Love" every time. The other thing to watch out for
is that Knopfler uses special tunings a lot which affects tonality due
to fingering techniques.
Cheers
Pete_who_has_a_LP_Custom_&_is_more_a_"money_for_nothin"_man_himself.
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1415.10 | | JAWS::PELKEY | In Memory of Bullwinkle | Mon Aug 14 1989 16:49 | 23 |
| Sounds like you're referring to that
Strong Clean ..
sound ?!
hmp!
I think an earlier reply drove the nail on the first hit..
If you're using a Strat...
A pre-74 (or older) twin reverb..
(better yet is a pre-CBS that's been dropped off a second floor porch!)
Other than that, compression helps, but another reply gave a good
suggestion, and that was to stay away from too much distortion which
tends to mask the voice of the pickups...
and of course, as you clean the sound up, the compressor (used
sparingly) helps to smooth things back out again. It at least keeps
sound men from wanting to kill you everytime you 'go clean' on them
|