MarkofXlnts
Well-known member
I have seen a few incredible players using what I would consider "garbage" equipment, and they sounded spectacular. Develop your skill, then worry about the goodies later.
trem said:Excellent examples:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D9v5e1TTwts&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vxq0xvSJojw
Less than excellent examples:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lI6a0PtHYxc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KoENva0UCCM
Actually the tones on the last vids are somewhat bearable, but the playing was less than stellar. And by nature, the amp only flaunts the not-so-awesomeness even more. If you post on this board I'm sorry.
Ah, ok I see what you're saying. I thought you were making the point about getting good tone out of bad gear, which is not quite the same thing. Right on.trem said:Djw, "good" or "bad" tone is definitely subjective, but that's not what I was trying to point out. What I was trying to show is that both Satch and IA sounded extremely like themselves, whether they are using cheap guitar into cheap pedal into small practice amp (like in the vids I showed), or whether they are using their normal gear, thereby confirming that most of their tone come from their fingers. Listen to IA's albums to get an idea how he normally sound.
rabies said:clutch71 said:It's been said in various posts the 90% of tone is in the fingers. That in your tone chain 10% is pretty important IMO. I've spent the better part of last year chasing tone, mostly on this board learning about amps.
It still applies. Palm muting can sound terrible in the wrong hands (palms). Go to youtube and do a search for Master of Puppets, there should be tons of examples of good amps, dialed in good, but they sound terrible because of the way they're playing.clutch71 said:I've heard this said so many times on this board. "Tone is in the fingers."
oh yeah? well what if you play rhythm in a metal band?
Gtr_Pkr said:This is all great advice!! My opinion and experience is that get some decent starter gear, and keep practicing. I did a lot of playing and practicing before I bought my first Marshall. Even more before I got my first Mesa. As you grow and change, through practice, research, and jamming with others, your tone and gear will change too!
+1. We're called guitar players, not amplifier players. As one's skill and musicianship develops, so will one's ear for tone. I found jamming with others the best way to develop musicianship.jdurso said:Gtr_Pkr said:This is all great advice!! My opinion and experience is that get some decent starter gear, and keep practicing. I did a lot of playing and practicing before I bought my first Marshall. Even more before I got my first Mesa. As you grow and change, through practice, research, and jamming with others, your tone and gear will change too!
probably the best post in this thread
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