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#16
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#17
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I built a pedalboard for myself. I'm really into the Lo-fi sound. Think 50's radio, mid heavy, with a slight warm saturated breakup and a bit of warble.
For effects, the the traditional, "correct" order would be Guitar>>Compressor>>Drives>>Modulation>>Delay>>Rev erb I would start there to build your virtual pedalboard. I look at it in two parts. Modulations and drives are what shapes your sound. The wet effects are just afterthoughts so they're not necessary. So in your case, I would start twiddling with your overdrives and play around with stacking them. Then add modulation like choruses, and vibratos after. Since I was looking for that Lofi tape warbly degraded sound, I put my vibrato (modulation) close to the beginning of the chain: Guitar>>compressor>>vibrato>>fuzz>>drive>>delay>>r everb Alot of this came from my inspiration from Madison Cunningham. The result is that the pitch shifting oscillations from the vibrato would get overdriven which emulated a degrading tape sound. It also produced a warmer sound. The compressor also adds to the saturation effect. Those three are my always on pedal. If I want to go crazy, I can turn on the fuzz but I keep it low to create sort of a bit crushed type of sound. Just enough to give it some hair, but low enough that I can still hear the notes when I'm chording. The overdrive is after it because I want that to be my base tone. So basically my main tone is compressor to vibrato into a slight overdrive. The overdrive is set really low, just enough to create a saturation effect instead of actually driving it. The compressor also helps me reach saturation faster which is helpful for low volume playing. I keep my amp on the clean setting and turn the master and gain to taste. The rest of the effects are all extra. I guess, in the purest sense, I could even just use a Strat and the tremolo bar or a humbucker with a bigsby into a loud tube amp. Last edited by hatamoto; 06-04-2023 at 09:57 PM. |
#18
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I always start with an amp I like, then do small tweaks until I like it better. Almost always, less is more. I have lots of pedals, and I’m used to stacking them in different ways on pedal boards. A modeler is really the same thing, but the pedals are all in one box. The box IS the pedal board, but with many more options.
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#19
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Thanks to everyone for the advice and suggestions. I built some patches last week that seemed to work well at today's band practice.
Friday we play outside at a local farmer's market, followed by an indoor gig at a senior center followed by two outside performances at my city's annual festival. I plan on more patch work tomorrow and this weekend. At least I have a better idea of what I should be doing now.
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Martin 000-17 SM Martin HD-28M Lots of loud banjos |
#20
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Not sure if this is any help, I use a Helix and for many year used a pair of QSC K12’s. At one point I found on the internet an explanation to use the QSC with the volume control set about 2:00 and use the Helix to control the volume. I did get better tones doing that. I had issues using certain delays, and my needs changed and for electric guitar nowadays I play through either a Powercab+ or my EV-50. With the QSC’s certain delays did not appeal to me.
See if that 2:00 volume setting does anything for you, unless you already know ![]()
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