This is an Update to the experiments I've done with my pedal board over the last year. I've recorded over 20 songs, and I did not want to take the board apart, but definitely wanted to make some changes... so I just made a new board. (Overkill... I know)
This vid does not have pedal demos, other than a small section of a lead when I had it in the studio.
Check out part 1 for demos, or the demos provided by the manufacturers.
I added the four cable method, and added 2 pedals to help take advantage of the stereo output more. I swapped out a few pedals to try something new. I made the cables more accessible, while moving the power supply below the pedals, and I managed to make the board with some style, because that kind of stuff makes me happy.
As before:
...you don't need pedals to play perfectly traditional rockabilly music... but I'm not trying to do that. I'm just as influenced by huge cinematic bands like Pink Floyd and the Cure, as well as indie rock, punk, shoegaze, surf guitar, Jazz, Big band, and even singer songwriter stuff from multiple decades... so I'm just combining things I love and making my own thing out of it. Music does not have rules. The legends broke rules and used contemporary gear for their time... so in my opinion, it's fine to use whatever you want, and do whatever you want, as long as you are happy doing it.
Enjoying a style of music and incorporating it into your style does not mean you have reenact the past.
Pedals:
Atomic Brain
Keeley Limiting Amplifier
PolyTune2
Mosky MM Silver (Timmy Clone)
Fulltone Red OCD (Overdrive)
Keeley Memphis Sun (Mod)
Mooer Red Truck (Od and Stereo effects)
Mooer Reecho Pro (Stereo Tap Delay)
Neunaber Immerse Reverberator (Stereo Reverb)
Electro Harmonix Cathedral Reverb (Stereo Spring Reverb)
Amps:
Mesa Boogie California Tweed (x2 - For Stereo)
Before I got the twin California Tweeds, I was using Fender (Blues Deluxe) and Vox (Ac30)
19 июн 2020