Effects or No Effects
There seems to be a lack of musical threads on here lately.
Dajax asked about an octave pedal in another thread. Instead of giving him advice some members chose to question using effects or not.
I thought this might be a good discusion subject.
I love effects on my guitar, and on vocals. My main band is a cover band and effects allow me to cover songs better than without. When I go and sit in with bands I take a small 20 watt amp, a Les Paul and a tuner. I can play just about anything I want to and this will cover it. But for the Aint Yo Mama band I like effects for textures in songs and also to allow me to stretch out with different tones and colors in the music.
My chain runs like this. Wireless into a tuner, to me a tuner is the most important thing to have in a guitar chain. I use the old tryed and true white Boss tuner. From there my signal goes to my wah wah pedal, a Bad Horsie II. Now I sometimes use it like a typical wah, but other times in say a solo I will mash it down and hold it to get a different nasaly tone out of my guitar. I push the sweep til I hit a sweet spot to make the solo guitar jump out of the mix. In lots of songs in say the chorus I will just stomp on it real quick to kinda get a wash to the tone.
I have an old tube screamer past my wah wah. I like this on my clean channel. Say a song like Simple Man Im playing a clean guitar part for the verse and instead of jumping on another gainer channel I just push in the TS on the clean. It has an altogether different sound than my gainy channels. Its a great lead tone that really cuts thru the mix better than another channel. I dont care for it much on the gain channels on my amps. To my ears it just mushes out too much.
I have a chorus pedal. I cant even remember the name. I have an old Electro harmonix Small Clone that i love for recording but live it seems to introduce too much line noise. So I got some no name pedal. I tend live to turn this thing all the way up and just hit it everynow and then to give that swoosh sound. I hardly ever just push it in and leave it.
Next is my Whammy II. This is an awesom pedal, a bit noisy but it is so useful. I mainly put this back in my pedal board for one song. RATM Killing In The Name. I see people say they can do something interesting in songs without pedals, but for this particular song it always sounded empty to me without this pedal. You can program 2 presets in this pedal. I have mine set for a one octave dive bomb setting. At the ends of many songs you slap the low E and give it a dive bomb. I use fixed bridge guitars so this is killer, without the tuning problems Ive had with whammy setups. The other preset is a 5th octave up. I use this for solos. Think Bad Company Cant Get Enough or Thin Lizzy Boys Are Back. I sometimes punch this in on slow lines in solos that dont have harmonys, just to thicken it up some. There are many other uses. The 2 octave up setting i use for Killing In The Name and also for my noise stuff. We play Whole Lotta Love and I can emulate the noise section prior to the guitar solo using this pedal and my delay pedal. I have an old original Whammy the red one, but it had a dial to change settings. The Whammy II has foot switches so you can manipulate it live, either between the 2 presets or bypass that and scroll thru all the settings. If youve never used one, I would suggest plugging into one sometime and see if it works for you. Oh yeah it also has a chorus setting where you can use the sweep in time ot the music. They are a bit noisy and you do lose some of your tone in this pedal, but it is a helluva tool to have under your feet.
The last pedal I have is a Line 6 Delay Modeler, the green one. Man this is a great pedal by itself. It can emulate all the old classic delays. You can load 3 presets. My main setting is an old echoplex setting. I set the repeats so tight that you cant distinguish between them. It acts as a sort of overdrive, plus thickens up solo lines giving it a fake doubling effect. It also has tap tempo. So durin a solo I can lenghten the delay repeats. For a slo lazy solo this gets those extra long repeats to fill up space. Then when Im done disengage it and your back to the original setting. My second preset is Reverse. I use this mainly for the song Give It Away by the RHCP. Once again you can use the tap tempo switch to get it in sync with the music. If your drummer isnt very consistent this tap tempo function is a must on a live delay pedal. I use this every now and then in other songs just to amuse myself. The last setting I have in there is what I call my U2 sound, you know the repeated decay type deal that the Edge was known for when they came out. We dont play any U2, but I find it fun to kick in the middle of a typical song and play with the tempo to change up the mood of the song. If you are looking at delay pedals this is a great one, very versatile. It even has a sampler function that can be used for up to 14 seconds. At one time I experimented with this to maintain a rythym while I played over the top, but damn after a few beers my mind dont think quick enough to do all of that.
From reading this you would think that my guitar sound is always drenched in effects. In reality I probably only have an effect on 15-20% of the time. The rest of the time its straight amp. On that front I use a Triple Recitfier. First channel set to a sparkly clean, 2nd Channel Vintage Rec and 3rd Channel Modern Rec sound. My current Triple has the solo function which allows for a volume boost with no alteration of the tone. Great for solos, or those one not low octave guitar lines that you want to stand out.
I just thought I would open it up for folks to discuss effects and thier usage, or not using effects. I can play all night with nothing more than a tuner and a wah and did for years. But playing in a cover band where we play for 4 hours a night. One or two guitar tones gets boring for me, and I would think it gets old to an audience too. I get lots of compliments from my guitar playing buddies who come ot see us, they ask me about the effects I use and how I did certain things, so for me they are essential to my live sound.
For the record I have been in 6 original bands thru the years and I used effects in those bands also, but I used them tastefully.
Have a Great Day
Dajax asked about an octave pedal in another thread. Instead of giving him advice some members chose to question using effects or not.
I thought this might be a good discusion subject.
I love effects on my guitar, and on vocals. My main band is a cover band and effects allow me to cover songs better than without. When I go and sit in with bands I take a small 20 watt amp, a Les Paul and a tuner. I can play just about anything I want to and this will cover it. But for the Aint Yo Mama band I like effects for textures in songs and also to allow me to stretch out with different tones and colors in the music.
My chain runs like this. Wireless into a tuner, to me a tuner is the most important thing to have in a guitar chain. I use the old tryed and true white Boss tuner. From there my signal goes to my wah wah pedal, a Bad Horsie II. Now I sometimes use it like a typical wah, but other times in say a solo I will mash it down and hold it to get a different nasaly tone out of my guitar. I push the sweep til I hit a sweet spot to make the solo guitar jump out of the mix. In lots of songs in say the chorus I will just stomp on it real quick to kinda get a wash to the tone.
I have an old tube screamer past my wah wah. I like this on my clean channel. Say a song like Simple Man Im playing a clean guitar part for the verse and instead of jumping on another gainer channel I just push in the TS on the clean. It has an altogether different sound than my gainy channels. Its a great lead tone that really cuts thru the mix better than another channel. I dont care for it much on the gain channels on my amps. To my ears it just mushes out too much.
I have a chorus pedal. I cant even remember the name. I have an old Electro harmonix Small Clone that i love for recording but live it seems to introduce too much line noise. So I got some no name pedal. I tend live to turn this thing all the way up and just hit it everynow and then to give that swoosh sound. I hardly ever just push it in and leave it.
Next is my Whammy II. This is an awesom pedal, a bit noisy but it is so useful. I mainly put this back in my pedal board for one song. RATM Killing In The Name. I see people say they can do something interesting in songs without pedals, but for this particular song it always sounded empty to me without this pedal. You can program 2 presets in this pedal. I have mine set for a one octave dive bomb setting. At the ends of many songs you slap the low E and give it a dive bomb. I use fixed bridge guitars so this is killer, without the tuning problems Ive had with whammy setups. The other preset is a 5th octave up. I use this for solos. Think Bad Company Cant Get Enough or Thin Lizzy Boys Are Back. I sometimes punch this in on slow lines in solos that dont have harmonys, just to thicken it up some. There are many other uses. The 2 octave up setting i use for Killing In The Name and also for my noise stuff. We play Whole Lotta Love and I can emulate the noise section prior to the guitar solo using this pedal and my delay pedal. I have an old original Whammy the red one, but it had a dial to change settings. The Whammy II has foot switches so you can manipulate it live, either between the 2 presets or bypass that and scroll thru all the settings. If youve never used one, I would suggest plugging into one sometime and see if it works for you. Oh yeah it also has a chorus setting where you can use the sweep in time ot the music. They are a bit noisy and you do lose some of your tone in this pedal, but it is a helluva tool to have under your feet.
The last pedal I have is a Line 6 Delay Modeler, the green one. Man this is a great pedal by itself. It can emulate all the old classic delays. You can load 3 presets. My main setting is an old echoplex setting. I set the repeats so tight that you cant distinguish between them. It acts as a sort of overdrive, plus thickens up solo lines giving it a fake doubling effect. It also has tap tempo. So durin a solo I can lenghten the delay repeats. For a slo lazy solo this gets those extra long repeats to fill up space. Then when Im done disengage it and your back to the original setting. My second preset is Reverse. I use this mainly for the song Give It Away by the RHCP. Once again you can use the tap tempo switch to get it in sync with the music. If your drummer isnt very consistent this tap tempo function is a must on a live delay pedal. I use this every now and then in other songs just to amuse myself. The last setting I have in there is what I call my U2 sound, you know the repeated decay type deal that the Edge was known for when they came out. We dont play any U2, but I find it fun to kick in the middle of a typical song and play with the tempo to change up the mood of the song. If you are looking at delay pedals this is a great one, very versatile. It even has a sampler function that can be used for up to 14 seconds. At one time I experimented with this to maintain a rythym while I played over the top, but damn after a few beers my mind dont think quick enough to do all of that.
From reading this you would think that my guitar sound is always drenched in effects. In reality I probably only have an effect on 15-20% of the time. The rest of the time its straight amp. On that front I use a Triple Recitfier. First channel set to a sparkly clean, 2nd Channel Vintage Rec and 3rd Channel Modern Rec sound. My current Triple has the solo function which allows for a volume boost with no alteration of the tone. Great for solos, or those one not low octave guitar lines that you want to stand out.
I just thought I would open it up for folks to discuss effects and thier usage, or not using effects. I can play all night with nothing more than a tuner and a wah and did for years. But playing in a cover band where we play for 4 hours a night. One or two guitar tones gets boring for me, and I would think it gets old to an audience too. I get lots of compliments from my guitar playing buddies who come ot see us, they ask me about the effects I use and how I did certain things, so for me they are essential to my live sound.
For the record I have been in 6 original bands thru the years and I used effects in those bands also, but I used them tastefully.
Have a Great Day