Survey of what pedals people buy
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- Reg18
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Re: Survey of what pedals people buy
Seems like most people are buying OD pedals by the survey.
Do you think you still will in future even though the digital rigs are likely to be sufficient to cover most gigs?
Do you think you still will in future even though the digital rigs are likely to be sufficient to cover most gigs?
- GrantB
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Re: Survey of what pedals people buy
Please tell me how you achieved such a pure state? I thought I was done also but the shakes and cold sweats got to me...and now I have a second board. Justified by one being for gigs the other being for more artistic ventures.
"Man is the most insane species. He worships an invisible god and destroys a visible nature. Unaware that this nature he's destroying is this god he's worshipping." - Hubert Reeves
- jeremyb
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Re: Survey of what pedals people buy
I would still use an analog OD or Fuzz with a digital rig, never going to see a hotcake or a specific flavour of big muff I like in said digital rigs
Slowy wrote: That's the problem; everything rewarding is just such hard work. Regret takes much less effort.
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Re: Survey of what pedals people buy
I was still using od pedals in front of my Katana, though you have to work out what works and doesnt.
- Conway
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Re: Survey of what pedals people buy
Cheers Reg. And the Sundog is a really nice pedal, I like that one a lot. Huge range of great, usable sounds.Reg18 wrote: ↑Wed May 26, 2021 3:15 pm Side note, when I was looking for your pedals for sale I had a look at the preowned section on tonelounge and what a great range he has there!
Good prices and a great range of pedals!
https://tonelounge.co.nz/pre-owned-pedals/
- Conway
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Re: Survey of what pedals people buy
Good man Grant! Well, as long as you've got rid of that horrible Line 6 M5 thing!
I'm working on my 3rd board. Just because so much to choose from.
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Re: Survey of what pedals people buy
Overdrives (/distortions) are the ones i've most gone through trying to get a sound i can enjoy. Most others are pretty stable on the board. But I have been through a lot of different overdrives. Often run into issue like the ones that sound great for single notes have annoying intermodulation on multiple notes, and great rhythm sounds don't play well with the lead sound i have etc. Always interested in new pedals.
I reckon my ideal would be an overdrive that mixed some clean signal for definition in BUT compressed the clean. There are pedals out that mix in clean (pork loin, sparkle drive) but the more you dig in, the clean sound comes to the front too much.
I reckon my ideal would be an overdrive that mixed some clean signal for definition in BUT compressed the clean. There are pedals out that mix in clean (pork loin, sparkle drive) but the more you dig in, the clean sound comes to the front too much.
They keep telling me tone is in the fingers, but I have yet to see a "look at my fingers" thread.
Lawrence wrote: Every orchestra that comes thru here is a covers band as are most of the jazz bands...
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- Reg18
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Re: Survey of what pedals people buy
Yeah I found that with those pedals, owned both the Pork Loin and Sparkle and it never really worked for me.Delayman wrote: ↑Thu May 27, 2021 10:45 am Overdrives (/distortions) are the ones i've most gone through trying to get a sound i can enjoy. Most others are pretty stable on the board. But I have been through a lot of different overdrives. Often run into issue like the ones that sound great for single notes have annoying intermodulation on multiple notes, and great rhythm sounds don't play well with the lead sound i have etc. Always interested in new pedals.
I reckon my ideal would be an overdrive that mixed some clean signal for definition in BUT compressed the clean. There are pedals out that mix in clean (pork loin, sparkle drive) but the more you dig in, the clean sound comes to the front too much.
My current favourite OD is the Blues Breaker variants.
Nice immediate attack under the fingers.
One thing I’d love to build (but don’t have the skills)
Is an actual tube preamp (like a Princeton reverb) with an IR loader intergrated that can also run stereo effects on the output. Basically what the Strymon Iridium does but all analog with an actual tube preamp. Weather it would sound better I’m not sure but id love to build one one day.
- JHorner
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Re: Survey of what pedals people buy
That was probably rhetorical but:
1) I got over the fact that to me, phase, wah, trem, delay, rotary only sound good when someone else is using them.
2) I stopped trying to find "do it all" gain pedals and just kept 4 different ones that do one thing each really fuckin well.
3) I gave up on "amp sim" pedals. Not because they're not good. I'm just content with a Mesa 6L6 sound.
4) I gave up on drive stacking. Unity volume tweaking and feedback and tap dancing and loops and fuck all that noise.
5) I got rid of vintage pedals that artists I admire had used at some point. Fuck it, they themselves moved on decades ago.
6) I stopped trying to emulate others sound. Especially recorded sound. I'll play your song the way I play it and with whatever level of gain I feel like at the time.
- jimi
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Re: Survey of what pedals people buy
Digital rigs can do it all today, but I don't want one.
Pedals are cool, hit a price point where you can satisfy some gas without threat of divorce, have a bit of fun then flick them on when something else shiny comes along.
They're simple, 2-3 (or 6) dials, nudge here or there and your set.
I did like the M13 / M9 / M5 range for both the huge range of effects, but also the simplicity - it was like massive multifx that anyone who can handle a basic pedal board can work out - a button for each effect off and on, and a couple of knobs on each effect to tweak. Sure you could do 4 channel mode, before and after, and map expressions to dials etc, but you didnt have to.
I end up with option paralysis though - too many options = too much fiddling, and never quite happy.
Couple of dirt pedals, single channel amp, I'm all set. The thought of getting an ampsim / multifx thing and working it out / setting it up /programing it etc just makes me want to put the guitar down and watch TV or something else... anything else.
Closest I have is the Boss WAZA headset, and even that I just picked my favourite of the channels it came set up with and use that.
- vyfster
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Re: Survey of what pedals people buy
This!
Also, I find that I just don't experiment with all the different effects that I have at my disposal with a multifx because it's a PITA and feels like all the effects are locked / hidden away. It isn't really but there's something nice and simple with having a pedal that does a specific thing where you can tweak some *ahem* knobs to get different variations of the effect. Because of the accessibility of the varying effects I experiment more - that is when I get off the computer and actually pick up the guitar!
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Re: Survey of what pedals people buy
Do you mean the earthquaker devices one? I don't think that has a way of mixing in the clean with the overdriven? Do you just mean it's transparent?
The thing i like about mixing some clean(ish) back in with the overdriven is having grunt of a good overdriven sound, but a bit of clarity for chord voicings etc.
They keep telling me tone is in the fingers, but I have yet to see a "look at my fingers" thread.
Lawrence wrote: Every orchestra that comes thru here is a covers band as are most of the jazz bands...
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Re: Survey of what pedals people buy
Doh, yes that's the one. My understanding is one of the toggle positions (to the right) mixes dry with overdriven. Might be wrong tho.Delayman wrote: ↑Fri May 28, 2021 11:13 amDo you mean the earthquaker devices one? I don't think that has a way of mixing in the clean with the overdriven? Do you just mean it's transparent?
The thing i like about mixing some clean(ish) back in with the overdriven is having grunt of a good overdriven sound, but a bit of clarity for chord voicings etc.