Maestro Boomerang |
This is an introduction to a series of articles that I am putting together to help guide you through complex and exciting world of effects.
What effects do you need?
It all depends on what you have and where you want to get to. Is your fender combo not cutting it for metal. You need a distortion pedal. Want to add more flavor to your solos? Try a wah pedal. Want to add more texture to your rhythm playing? A chorus pedal might do the trick.
A great place to start is to listen for tones from your favorite guitarists that turn you on and research what effects they’re using. When I was starting out there was no Internet, so I had to rely on hearsay and what I read in magazines. Today there are many resources and forums that can really help your search.
Effects can really enrich your tone. Think of it as an artists palette. Effects are colors which can be blended to enhance a painting. Great works of art have been created using one color and hundreds of colors. Effects are only as necessary as the artists decides that they are.
Effects can also be great songwriting tools, allowing your notes to change form and behave differently which may inspire you in ways not possible without them.
Can’t seem to find a spark in that bridge section? Maybe all it needs is a little chorus. Want to thicken up that solo and fill the room with sound. Put a long delay with a slow phaser on staff.(I borrowed “on staff” from my good buddy http://comedians.jokes.com/vince-averill)
Having different effects to screw around with can make boring practice more fun. Delay and phasers are a great way to work on your timing by experimenting with different rhythms against the speed of the effect. Also, with the right concoction, effects can do a great job of covering up shortcomings in your playing giving you more confidence. All of these factor into the most important thing for any player: More Time With The Guitar In Your Hands.
On the very first day of our lesson, my student Anya was experimenting and having fun with simple power chords and the minor pentatonic scale minutes after she learned them with the help of long delay and swirling modulations. She’s hooked day one!
Line 6 Spider |
Amplitube |
You may run across certain type of player that trashes the use of effects. “All a real player needs is a guitar and an amp.” Yeah, so I guess Hendrix isn’t part of your elite club. “Sorry Jimi, maybe if you had manned up and stop using your wah and Octavia then you could be part of our dick-measuring contest.”
Sorry, but if you’re not down with Jimi, you’re probably not that good.
My contempt aside, in my upcoming posts I will be explaining guitar effects one “family” at a time.
Dynamics: Compressors, Noise Gates, Boost
Clip: Overdrive, Distortion, Fuzz
Modulation: Chorus, Tremolo, Vibrato, Phaser, Flanger, Ring Modulators,
Delay: Slapback, Effected Delays, Long Delay, Reverse Delay, Multi-head, tape, plate
Reverb: Room-based delay, Digital Reverb, Spring Reverb, Effected or Enhanced Reverb
Filter: Wah, Q-filters,Voltage controlled filters, High pass, Low pass, and synths
Pitch: Harmonizers and Whammy
It’s good to each individually as some effects are combinations of two or more families.
Octavia |
Octavia- Octave with Fuzz
Memory Man and Memory boy- Delay with modulation.
We’ll start to get into all the deets next time.Get ready to geek it up!
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