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#274577 - 10/28/09 09:48 AM
Re: Air guitar anyone...
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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Thank God mine doesn't. Well it could if I really wanted it to, and truth is it can be fun to rip one out occasionally on an overdriven guitar sound, but never in public. Distorted guitar is one of the more easy sounds to create. Pretty much any source, such as that guys vocal, or an organ patch, or clav, or trumpet, or sax, or just about anything else can be turned into an over-the-top overdriven guitar by running it through enough distortion, a little compression, maybe some slight chorusing, and a ton of delay and/or reverb. Depending on the source it helps to have a slight slap-back delay in front of the distortion effect. ------------------ [b]Wm. David McMahan LearnMyKeyboard JazzItUp Band The Modulators
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#274578 - 10/28/09 11:04 AM
Re: Air guitar anyone...
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/16/02
Posts: 14376
Loc: East Greenwich RI USA
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Originally posted by WDMcM: Thank God mine doesn't. Well it could if I really wanted it to, and truth is it can be fun to rip one out occasionally on an overdriven guitar sound, but never in public.
Distorted guitar is one of the more easy sounds to create. Pretty much any source, such as that guys vocal, or an organ patch, or clav, or trumpet, or sax, or just about anything else can be turned into an over-the-top overdriven guitar by running it through enough distortion, a little compression, maybe some slight chorusing, and a ton of delay and/or reverb. Depending on the source it helps to have a slight slap-back delay in front of the distortion effect.
Actually Dave, that was more of a rhetorical question, hence the smileys ... While I have little use for a distorted guitar for most of my gigs, I notice it is used more and more in today's country tunes especially in the ballads ... t.
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t.
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#274580 - 10/28/09 12:40 PM
Re: Air guitar anyone...
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Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14269
Loc: NW Florida
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I've heard only a tiny handful of demos where the player got anywhere NEAR nailing a good distorted guitar solo. Good enough to fool an arranger player, perhaps Not good enough to fool a guitarist, though! There is simply too much interaction between the notes played and the amp on 11, pick angles, feedback and force and cleanliness (or lack of it!) of fingering for a keyboard to really nail it, IMO. To be honest, I find the 'clean' acoustic and electric guitars, especially SA and Mega, to be FAR more convincing (if played well) than any distorted patch, I'm afraid... JMO It's nice to pretend, but we are no more Jimi Hendrix than we are Stan Getz!
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An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
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#274581 - 10/28/09 12:51 PM
Re: Air guitar anyone...
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Senior Member
Registered: 07/27/05
Posts: 10606
Loc: Cape Breton Island, Canada
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Originally posted by Diki:
It's nice to pretend, but we are no more Jimi Hendrix than we are Stan Getz! Arranger keyboards are for the Walter Mitty that resides in many of us. Generally playing most any instrument that is not keyboard based will seldom fool a player of the real instrument. But, part of the playing experience of arranger(or synth) using samples of other instruments, is to paint with different colors, and not really try to fool anyone...generally it's done to give the "impression" of a guitar, or trumpet, or whatever. Having said that, I heard Kenny Kirkland (Sting's former keyboardist...RIP) play a PSR-8000 with a distortion guitar patch, that was pretty incredible...sure turned a lot of heads, especially guitarists, who were awestruck.
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Yamaha Tyros4, Yamaha MS-60S Powered Monitors(2), Yamaha CS-01, Yamaha TQ-5, Yamaha PSR-S775.
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