@@giacomofigliolino only 2! Damn dude you’re good. Ive been playing electric for one year and i still have problems with vibrato while bending (thats why i mentioned them at first) , you have any tips?
@@2brainded240 practice with a tuner so you maintain your pitch doing vibratos white bending. Also, red specials are extremely short scaled guitars, so it has less tension on the string.
@@2brainded240 measuring skill with years isn't something aproppiate. Because, let say, if you practice a lot (you feel inspired to play some hours everyday) in your first six or nine months, like me, you can get it quite easily, but if you don't, you can aquire it after some years. It depends on hours of actual practicing, not months or years. I watched an old video of Eric Clapton bending and doing vibrato on top, explaining how he does it and how he gets his tone from it, that helped me a lot in my first months and the video is available for anyone. If you'd like too, I can search it for you. Anyway, I had to look at his hand, his wrist, even his thumb quite closely to figure out how does he do it so effortlessly, and I practiced and practiced
Sì, ma devi usare la red special, un vox ac 30 ed un treble booster per renderlo più simile possibile a quello live di Brian. Se poi vuoi renderlo ancora più fedele a questo va aggiunto un po' di riverbero e chorus...
Il rig di Brian base è essenziale ma molto costoso, per questo posso consigliarti amplitube 5 con l’aggiunta del pacchetto Brian May per ottenere un suono molto fedele pedali compresi.
Amplitube Brian May se vuoi un suono digitale da palco... Altrimenti vox ac 30 e treble booster di qualità. Ma soprattutto la chitarra fa la differenza.