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Sonic Experiments with Guitar Pedals: Mixing it up!
Article by Sahl "the sonic meat-cleaver" Metivier
As electric guitar players we are always searching out ways to get new and exciting sounds. In our quest for killer tone we go to great lengths and spend hundreds or even thousands of dollars on guitars, effects pedals, pickups, rack effects and guitar amps. If you play electric guitar you probably own a guitar pedal or two (at last count I had 19!!). Have you ever thought about the order in which they are hooked up? It can make a huge difference or a subtle one, depending on what pedals you are using. Here is a little trick that you can try yourself for getting different sounds using a Wah pedal and a Distortion pedal.
I'm going to use a Crybaby Wah pedal and a Boss MT2 Metal Zone distortion pedal. I'm going to start by hooking up the pedals in this order: Guitar > Wah > Distortion > Amp (See Fig. 1). This is the typical way most people would hook up these pedals. This arrangement gives a classic smooth, sweeping Wah sound because the Crybaby pedal is acting as a sweepable filter on your clean guitar signal before going to the MT2 Distortion pedal.
Example 1-
(Fig. 1)
I am now going to switch the order of the pedals to: Guitar > Distortion > Wah > Amp (See Fig. 2). The guitar signal is now being distorted first and then sent to the Wah, where the sweepable filter of the Wah pedal shapes the distorted signal. This gives us a more extreme, 'moaning' Wah sound. Example 2-
(Fig. 2)
You may have to adjust the settings on your distortion pedal to get a usable sound. Even then you may not like the sound you are hearing. The point is to experiment with your sounds yourself and see what you like. When it comes to tone, everybody likes something different and every little thing makes a difference. The guitars, amps, pedals, picks and cables you use along with the way that you play each note all contribute to your tone.
Gear used for audio examples: Fender Classic Vibe Squier Stratocaster, Boss MT-2 Heavy Metal Pedal, Dunlop Cry Baby Wah-Wah, and Fender 1965 Deluxe Reverb Reissue
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