Guitar playing can generally be condensed into two categories. Your
technique and style, and your tone. In this article we're going to be
talking about tone, and the importance of refining it.
I see too
many guitar players who have a zillion guitar effect pedals, and I try
not to open my mouth, but then they start playing, and its absolutely
unbearable. Guys, seriously, don't compensate with toys. Take the time
to improve your playing, because all the goodies in the world won't make
you a better guitar player.
Also, using too many pedals and
effects can be bombarding to the listener, and it also kills the
strength of your overall sound. If you spend most of your time playing
through a clean setting on your guitar, don't think for a moment that
you are not affected by this.
I've witnessed a lot of clean guitar players who are bad for this as well.
If
you can find the discipline to limit yourself a little bit, then you
will see just how awesome a tone you can get. For instance, deciding to
build a pedal board is a great way to tackle the problem of guitar pedal
self indulgence. Sure, you could buy a pedal board brand new, but they
are expensive, and many won't fit your needs.
Building your own
pedal board is fun, rewarding, and helps you to get a good idea of how
you're going use your tone. Remember, when you're building a pedal
board, you're also building your tone, because you'll need to determine
what goes where, and what goes before what.
Invest part of your time into becoming a smart consumer. Don't
just settle for any old pedal off the shelf, and don't ever assume that
because a pedal is really expensive, that its the best and is the best
for you.
Try out all sorts of pedals, and you'll find that the
oddest effect pedals compliment each other. In example, using a clean
setting with a very light amount of delay (really short delay) can give
you a nice and rich "creamy" sound for chords.
If you experiment,
you'll find all sorts of tricks like this, which helps you to determine
the layout of your pedal board. Don't forget to put this down on paper
first, and certainly don't forget to measure the dimensions of the
pedals, and account for the space needed between each one for your
cables.
Now I'm not saying that building a pedal board is the only
way to do this, but it does help to nudge you in the right direction,
because if you do something like this and find that perfect sound,
you'll probably freak if anyone so much as breaths in the direction of
an effect pedal knob.
So make sure that you ask questions of
yourself. I'm sure that you have your own opinions about what sounds
good to you. Perhaps you like a touch of the flanger, or maybe a little
wah, or some chorus action in their. Regardless of what it is that you
want, refine and come up with a plan.
Final Advice
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