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So what I've just demonstrated was just a tune I just made up that is really the essence
of it is I'm trying to achieve a classic amp sound. Like you might get in the '60's; if
I was back to Stax recording's, the Motown recordings, Steve Cropper, the Funk Brothers,
really anybody from that era that was just playing early R&B; what you might find
is an amp that's a little harried, because its cranked and a tremolo, on board tremolo,
setting within the amp. People played; they weren't really pedals; they plug right in
to the amp and dialed everything up. And this was similar to the sound the might have gotten.
I have an amp that was nowhere near what they had back then. It's a two-channel Rivera amp,
a great amp. I'm just going clean, and what I've done is I've taken the tremolo that I
believe sounds closest to what an on board amp tremolo would sound like, this Supa Trem
by Fulltone. It's a very warm, analog sounding tremolo. And then my favorite pedal the Fulltone
first generation OCD Pedal, again drive all the way down. I'm basically using it as to
emulate a cranked amp, as a transparent sounding overdrive.
So what I'm getting is a very musical representation through pedals and through different settings
of what it would sound like if I was just plugging my Telecaster into just an old, vintage
tweet amp. What I've done as far as the settings, very simple, you drive all the way down on
the overdrive pedal. Volume to match the clean, it'd be a little bit of a boost. And then
as far as the tremolo, I have it about 12 o'clock. Mix and rate on like a medium to
slow, slow to medium speed on the tremolo. It's not a hard tremolo. It's a soft tremolo.
It's almost barely noticeable and that's what gives you that very warm, rounded effect that
I think is really just pretty. I think that a lot of just slow R&B, ballads work great
with this. You really pop out of the mix. And I find that if you're backing up a singer
or if you're playing where you really have texture; you're not really playing down beats.
You're not really-- you're rolling the rhythm section is really to add color and fill up
space with texture. I think this is a great effect to use for that and it's a very natural
sounding one, too.