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How much for a good double neck - bass & guitar nowadays? Think about it. You could look like a God. David Kirkdorffer ----- Original Message ----- From: "S V G" <vsyevolod@yahoo.com> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Thursday, January 13, 2005 9:40 PM Subject: Re: Boss Octave Pedal > > Brian, > > I use the Boss PS-5, which has 5 different settings of pitch shift effects, one of them being > a pitch shift up or down by as much as two octaves (2nds, 3rds, 4ths, 5ths, octaves and double > octaves). It doesn't glitch, doesn't have latency problems, handles chords just fine, and sounds > relatively awesome. By shifting up an octave or two, you get a pretty decent 12 string kinda > sound, expecially with judicious use of the wet/dry mix knob. The octave down really does work > well. It actually gets pretty beefy. The only downside is that it costs $130 new (if you know > where to look, $150 to $200 if you don't). The upside is that it's >small, has the familiar Boss > DC power in, sounds great on an acoustic guitar, has both mono and stereo out, 5 different > functions including intelligent shifting and detuning, and 4 controller knobs (1 of them > concentric) controlling way more than any pedal in its right mind should really try to do. For > all that it does it deserves to be the size of an Electrix rack mount. Huh, now there's an > idea... > > Stephen > > > > > <<I have to assume some people on this list use the Boss Octave pedal in their looping setups, to > achieve "bass guitar" sounds. To those of you that do....do you like it? what do you think of > the > tracking? I'd like to get the EH Pog, but can't justify nearly $400...>> (snip) > > > > __________________________________ > Do you Yahoo!? > Yahoo! Mail - Easier than ever with enhanced search. Learn more. > http://info.mail.yahoo.com/mail_250 >