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Post by petox on Apr 19, 2004 11:30:09 GMT 9
im learning Over The Hills And Far Away. Jimmy Page explains in the book and its also on the tab that at the end where there are the nice soft chords that its only the echo returns, theres no dry signal. so how do you get that? hit the chord with the volume on the guitar turned down then turn it up or somethin??
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Post by robbieb on Apr 19, 2004 14:24:43 GMT 9
Sounds like a wah effect you are talking about. You can do thatwith the volume knob, but if you have an expression pedal, like a wah, you should be able to do it a lot easier. Does your RP50 have a wah effect on it? The RP100 does. You should be able to do it by adjusting the attack of the signal. You want the attack to be slow, ie, build up from nothing slowly, instead of fast. The interlude part of My Friend of Misery by Metallica uses the same effect. You play the note, then use the pedal to kind of fade it in.
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Post by mickp on Apr 19, 2004 14:44:03 GMT 9
Or you could use the volume effect on the expression pedal of a RP200...much heaps better and easier
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Post by petox on Apr 20, 2004 10:56:32 GMT 9
ah so its just like violining or fading in or whatever you want to call it. i knew that
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Post by freezex61 on Apr 23, 2004 16:52:57 GMT 9
Some echo / FX units (such as the alesis midiverb 2)allow you to independantly mix the input signal and the return signal so by hitting the strings with the mix turned flat out to the return and source the other way, it doesn't produce the source sound only the return This probably makes as much sense as...ahr...um...arr........... something that doesn't make much sense but it's good to hear that you are getting into some "Real" music. "How to become a Rock Guru" - Lesson 18 Listen to shitloads of Zeppelin" ;D Freezex61
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