Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought
662I had it running through a memory man, forgot that part - but it really IS glorious. It feels like an instrument, not a 'workstation'. There's so many good sounds without digging much, and then you dig and you're rewarded. It is DEEP. At a base level it's like, you hit a key "oh that's nice", and then you start doing something and there's so much complexity available, but you can dial it back to really nice rich sounds. And at the end of it all you can try each of the three filters and get a different flavour.
There's so many good synths out and coming out continually, that I don't know if history will assign as much significance to it as I would. To me it's one of the few new things I've bought that I feel years from now people would look at it like "Of course it's a classic".
There's so many good synths out and coming out continually, that I don't know if history will assign as much significance to it as I would. To me it's one of the few new things I've bought that I feel years from now people would look at it like "Of course it's a classic".
Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought
663Traded a couple of unused pedals for a Reeves R1 1x12 cabinet. This thing is massively overbuilt without being too heavy. It even has metal inserts for the back and speaker mounting screws - which makes swapping the speakers the easiest I’ve ever experienced. It came to me with a 70th Ann. G12H-30 which sounds surprisingly great in this cab. It’s a bit underpowered and has a little too much top end for my current needs, but was impressed none the less. Have a G12-65 coming out out in there.
Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought
664Dirt cheap Dolamo D-8 overdrive from eBay turned out to be absolutely fucking awesome. $A31 delivered so probably $US 20? Beautifully cranked on my Tele, wide range of tones, no background noise, goes from a bit burred to snarly in very good ways. Apparently it’s a Timmy clone. Nice quality for no money, and I can dial in the sounds I want to hear very easily.
Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought
665Super cool.matttkkkk wrote: Fri Apr 12, 2024 7:56 pm Dirt cheap Dolamo D-8 overdrive from eBay turned out to be absolutely fucking awesome. $A31 delivered so probably $US 20? Beautifully cranked on my Tele, wide range of tones, no background noise, goes from a bit burred to snarly in very good ways. Apparently it’s a Timmy clone. Nice quality for no money, and I can dial in the sounds I want to hear very easily.
I have no need for pedals, but I've often thought that if I was back in a band that played sketchy shows that I'd build up a small pedalboard with Amazon mini and super budget pedals.
Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought
666Metal picks where a good idea but know I'm worried about fucking up my guitars body. Anyone use these? I know bluegrass palyers use metal finger things.
"There's a felling I get when I look to the west"
"When the meaningful words. When they cease to function. When there's nothing to say."
"When the meaningful words. When they cease to function. When there's nothing to say."
Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought
667I shredded the pickups on my EGC with copper picks, otherwise I've used them extensively with other types of guitars with and without pickguards, maybe a scratch or two here and there.Mickey242 wrote: Tue Apr 16, 2024 8:53 pm Metal picks where a good idea but know I'm worried about fucking up my guitars body. Anyone use these? I know bluegrass palyers use metal finger things.
Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought
668I totally fucked up a strat when I used copper picks in high school, but at that stage I was super cool and had my guitar slung pretty low. At this point I keep it up at approaching-middle-age-dad height centered just below my belt buckle and I don't really have any issues with chewing up the wood or pickup covers.GuyLaCroix wrote: Tue Apr 16, 2024 10:30 pmI shredded the pickups on my EGC with copper picks, otherwise I've used them extensively with other types of guitars with and without pickguards, maybe a scratch or two here and there.Mickey242 wrote: Tue Apr 16, 2024 8:53 pm Metal picks where a good idea but know I'm worried about fucking up my guitars body. Anyone use these? I know bluegrass palyers use metal finger things.
Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought
669FMR Really Nice Compressor and FMR Leveling Amp
ElectroVoice EVT 4500 rack mount spring reverb
I've made it so long without compressors. Well, I've got a Joe Meek C2 from the Ted Fletcher era and it's great, but I didn't really understand the controls and overused it in a way that left me skeptical and overly cautious about a decade ago. Anyway, I took the plunge a few months ago and I am so happy with these two products and they are astonishingly inexpensive. I know this isn't going to be news to anyone here but I still want to share my experience.
The RNC was B stock from Adorama for something like $125. I've been using it rather subtly to fit a dual vocal (male and female) into the mix better. I've used it during mixing on 3 songs so far and I love it. The singers (my wife and I) are not the best with controlling our volume and mic proximity. I did not want the compression as a vocal effect, just to get it under control a little bit so it sits better in the mix. I'm very happy with the results and it sounds natural.
One of the songs we are dubbing vocals onto was recorded over 10 years ago in a huge empty room and there is a lot of natural reverb. I wanted to add reverb to the vocals (also during mixing, after the RNC) and I got to really try out the Electro Voice EVT4500 reverb for the first time, beyond just testing. Damn this thing sounds good! I thought the dual tank design (short and long reverb tanks both inside the unit with a blend knob between the two to control the character/length of the reverb) was a gimmick but it was actually very useful. I was able to get a vocal reverb that was believable and worked well with the other elements. I really like this thing and look forward to running some HR-16 snare through it in the future and pushing it way out of "subtle" territory.
I added a combo organ part on that same recording and there are some differences in key volume between the octaves. It's all working fine, but you know how jagged some notes can pop out of an old Italian combo organ. I needed more than subtle on this, I needed to squish it a bit to smooth out the volume of the individual notes. The Leveling Amp was perfect for this. I also wanted to have the organ quite low in the mix, sort of barely there, and that would have been impossible without this tool. If it were higher up, I'm sure the compression would be more obvious, but as it is the overall effect is still pretty transparent. Just what I needed.
It's weird to be at a point in my life where I can consider these things to be "practical purchases", but each of these three pieces of equipment are solving problems and improving my recordings.
ElectroVoice EVT 4500 rack mount spring reverb
I've made it so long without compressors. Well, I've got a Joe Meek C2 from the Ted Fletcher era and it's great, but I didn't really understand the controls and overused it in a way that left me skeptical and overly cautious about a decade ago. Anyway, I took the plunge a few months ago and I am so happy with these two products and they are astonishingly inexpensive. I know this isn't going to be news to anyone here but I still want to share my experience.
The RNC was B stock from Adorama for something like $125. I've been using it rather subtly to fit a dual vocal (male and female) into the mix better. I've used it during mixing on 3 songs so far and I love it. The singers (my wife and I) are not the best with controlling our volume and mic proximity. I did not want the compression as a vocal effect, just to get it under control a little bit so it sits better in the mix. I'm very happy with the results and it sounds natural.
One of the songs we are dubbing vocals onto was recorded over 10 years ago in a huge empty room and there is a lot of natural reverb. I wanted to add reverb to the vocals (also during mixing, after the RNC) and I got to really try out the Electro Voice EVT4500 reverb for the first time, beyond just testing. Damn this thing sounds good! I thought the dual tank design (short and long reverb tanks both inside the unit with a blend knob between the two to control the character/length of the reverb) was a gimmick but it was actually very useful. I was able to get a vocal reverb that was believable and worked well with the other elements. I really like this thing and look forward to running some HR-16 snare through it in the future and pushing it way out of "subtle" territory.
I added a combo organ part on that same recording and there are some differences in key volume between the octaves. It's all working fine, but you know how jagged some notes can pop out of an old Italian combo organ. I needed more than subtle on this, I needed to squish it a bit to smooth out the volume of the individual notes. The Leveling Amp was perfect for this. I also wanted to have the organ quite low in the mix, sort of barely there, and that would have been impossible without this tool. If it were higher up, I'm sure the compression would be more obvious, but as it is the overall effect is still pretty transparent. Just what I needed.
It's weird to be at a point in my life where I can consider these things to be "practical purchases", but each of these three pieces of equipment are solving problems and improving my recordings.
Radio show https://www.wmse.org/program/the-tom-wa ... xperience/
My band https://redstuff.bandcamp.com/
Solo project https://tomwanderer.bandcamp.com/
My band https://redstuff.bandcamp.com/
Solo project https://tomwanderer.bandcamp.com/
Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought
670As a total side-note, I was annoyed af to do a price check on these and see that the ebay seller formerly known as 9guitar or something like that still has their shop going apparently but under a different name...and still owns one of literally every weird box ever made and then jacks the price up 3x. The 3 plants and flash photos are giveaway.Tom Wanderer wrote:
ElectroVoice EVT 4500 rack mount spring reverb