@@JoshuaDeLaVictoria indeed. I think every player outside of mathrock/postrock/emo /prog etc only uses bridge pickup , and neck for jazz and blues . All I use is middle lol
Commenting for engagement because I love your content yay! I hope whatever happened to your cheek gets better soon! I'd love to see you making a video about your process of shooting and editing video, color correcting etc. You have the absolute best looking videos of all youtube/nstagram guitarists out there and it would be so cool to see tutorials like that from the perspective of a musician.
I really appreciate your effort, these videos are golden! Would love to see one where you show how your audio tracks are set up. I experience difference in the Neural DSP standalone versions and when I load them in Logic, so would like to learn more about them to figure out what I'm doing wrong.
This all sound great Josh! Metric modulation in this one is pretty cool. This style vid your going for is by far my favourite that your doing atm. Just a thought.. it would really cool to see you do the same thing, but with how you go about recording a “real” amp in the room ( monitoring etc) any ways, always a pleasure to hear you play man ❤
I have been using the mesa plugin as my "main" sound for a while now. At first I was one of those who just wanted "metallica and petrucci" sounds but after tweaking a lot with the plugin I find myself using it for pretty much everything.
Great as always man, these videos are always so inspiring for me. If I could suggest one thing though, it would be nice to see more of your rejected ideas when producing. It's great seeing you put music together but it would be nice if these videos were slightly longer and featured more clips of you trialling things and then showing how you further develop a rejected idea into something you're happy with. Looking forward to the next one!
I really enjoyed and learned a lot from watching how you work at building a track. Shouldn't be that much different in Cubase (my DAW) so I'll have to give it a go. Thank you.
Can you explain the track stack for guitar a bit? You had 2 mono guitar tracks, then stacked into a summing stack and threw a stereo instance on the stack?
@@DaveZnoiseyeah, I’m running 2 mono DI’s panned right & left into a stereo instance of an amp sim. This is so I can get the double tracked sound with only 1 plug-in. Also let’s me adjust the tone of both sides at the same time
I can tell and it's one of the things I appreciate in your music that makes it more enjoyable than some of the other groups in the genre. I take that approach on my own drum parts with the 8 string guitarist I play with. Our music is a little more jazz oriented so there is some room to 'go out' but I still always want it to feel good to the listener
Love this, please do more! Also, when it is « that easy » for you to compose something, how to you sort out between the stuff you want to keep developing and eventually release, and the stuff that will not be a thing?
I struggle with this for sure. The stuff I actually release as music I spend much more time on. This is kinda just a single riff. The hard part about writing a full song is creating a bunch of different parts that go together with a nice flow
When you start from some chord, how do you move to the next bit? Can you just intuit what the movement should be, or do you use some kind of theory knowledge to constrain your choice?