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Doug, you wrote “In the world of
electronic chips and processors, I own a Boss GT-3. I love it. BUT. It has no
resonance around the pitch of G. Regardless of the patch, it kinda goes limp
when I play a G. I can feel my guitar resonating, but I hear the unit just
tossing a wet blanket over the note. Explain that one. “ Its possible that the electric guitar you own has a dead spot resonate
to the pitch G, unless all your guitars are doing this, I’ve used a
groove tubes fat finger to lower the resonate frequency on my guitar and move
9but not totally eliminate) dead spots. But…….I think the problem you are encountering may be
inherent to modeling processors in general, I’ve owned stuff from Line 6
(a pod pro), Roland (VF-1), and a Vox tone lab se. Of the three, the vox sounds
the best and feels the best to my ears and fingers, however, all of them
exhibit a digital rasp or harshness, that is most apparent on clean tones, and
open strings (the g string being the worst, but not the only offender), and
hard playing only makes it worse and sound more harsh and hollow, with no bloom
to the note. After my love affair with the vox started to wear off , I became
more aware that this same phenomena had also occurred with my Line 6 Pod pro I had
gotten rid of, and even worse on my VF-1, (that I no longer use for its
modeling but still use for its massive effects). Now I may not have noticed it
so much if I didn’t have real tube amps and analog effects to compare the
modeling to, but now that I do it’s starting to irritate me, and make me
long for an all tube direct recording amp that has speaker emulation, but is
and all analogue signal path. Speaking of which, I got a chance to check out
the new Bill From: Douglas Baldwin
[mailto:coyotelk@optonline.net] I simply must thank you all for this thread. It's the sharing of these
ideas, feelings and observations that makes the Looping community my fave-rave
e-place. Since I review gear as part of my work, and since I own a good number
of instruments (and play them all), I can say that mojo is absolutely what it's
all about, with the understanding that a certain resonance exists between the
player and the played. Per mentioned this. I think it can sometimes be
understood in very practical terms: a guitarist might favor the key of G major.
S/he picks up a guitar, strums some chords that revolve around G, and it just
doesn't feel right. Next guitarist comes along, favoring the key of E, and the
same guitar goes bonkers - strong E major resonance, weak G major resonance. In the world of electronic chips and processors, I own a Boss GT-3. I
love it. BUT. It has no resonance around the pitch of G. Regardless of the
patch, it kinda goes limp when I play a G. I can feel my guitar resonating, but
I hear the unit just tossing a wet blanket over the note. Explain that one. I also believe that certain objects are filled with mojo, and can
generate good/bad vibes accordingly. I believe that it's almost silly NOT to
understand that a musical instrument will be altered by how it vibrates
(someone must remember the "vibrating chamber" that Rick Turner
checked out for use with guitars...?). And if an instrument is transformed by
its use, and we are transformed by music, well, "there's magic in the
music and the music's in me..." This thread is my Looper's Christmas wish come true. Thank you all! Douglas Baldwin, coyote-at-large "Life! Life! |