All guitar effects demonstration in one video (Most popular guitar effects demo)
Easy guitar lesson from http://hard-guitar.com/ (by Mykola Yermolenko)
Every guitar effects demo (all guitar effects tutorial)
Most popular guitar effects demonstration
(in one video):
Chorus
Phaser
Flanger
Tremolo
Vibrato
Wah-wah
Delay/Echo
Reverb
Overdrive/Distortion
Noise gate
Acoustic Simulator
Chorus:
Chorus pedals mimic the effect
choirs and string orchestras
produce naturally by mixing sounds
with slight differences in timbre and pitch.
Phaser:
A phaser or "phase shifter"
creates a slight rippling effect - amplifying some aspects
of the tone while diminishing others - by splitting
an audio signal in two and altering the phase of one portion.
Flanger:
A flanger creates a "jet plane" or "spaceship" sound,
simulating a studio effect produced
by recording a track on two synchronized tapes
and periodically slowing one tape by pressing
the edge of its reel (the "flange").
Tremolo:
A tremolo effect produces a slight,
rapid variation in the volume of a note or chord.
Vibrato:
Vibrato effects produce slight, rapid variations in pitch,
mimicking the fractional semitone variations produced
naturally by opera singers and violinists
when prolonging a single note.
Wah-wah:
Wah is a type of guitar effects pedal that alters the tone of the
signal to create a distinctive effect, mimicking the human voice.
The pedal sweeps the peak response of a filter up and down
in frequency to create the sound (spectral glide),
also known as "the wah effect."
Delay/Echo:
Delay/Echo units produce an echo effect
by adding a duplicate instrument-to-amplifier
electrical signal to the original signal at a slight time-delay.
Reverb:
Reverb units simulate sounds produced
in an echo chamber by creating a large number
of echoes that gradually fade or "decay".
Overdrive/Distortion
Over/Dist effects are sometimes called "gain" effects.
Distortion effects create "warm", "gritty" and "fuzzy" sounds
by "clipping" an instrument's audio signal,
which distorts the shape of its wave form and adds overtones.
Noise gate:
Noise gates eliminate "hum", "hiss" and "static"
by greatly diminishing the volume of sounds
that fall below a set threshold.
Acoustic Simulator:
Acoustic Simulators enable electric guitars
to mimic the sound of acoustic guitar.
This is a lesson for beginner
Guitar effects pedals
Best guitar effect
Видео All guitar effects demonstration in one video (Most popular guitar effects demo) канала Mykola MrHardGuitar - Guitar Reviews And Lessons
Every guitar effects demo (all guitar effects tutorial)
Most popular guitar effects demonstration
(in one video):
Chorus
Phaser
Flanger
Tremolo
Vibrato
Wah-wah
Delay/Echo
Reverb
Overdrive/Distortion
Noise gate
Acoustic Simulator
Chorus:
Chorus pedals mimic the effect
choirs and string orchestras
produce naturally by mixing sounds
with slight differences in timbre and pitch.
Phaser:
A phaser or "phase shifter"
creates a slight rippling effect - amplifying some aspects
of the tone while diminishing others - by splitting
an audio signal in two and altering the phase of one portion.
Flanger:
A flanger creates a "jet plane" or "spaceship" sound,
simulating a studio effect produced
by recording a track on two synchronized tapes
and periodically slowing one tape by pressing
the edge of its reel (the "flange").
Tremolo:
A tremolo effect produces a slight,
rapid variation in the volume of a note or chord.
Vibrato:
Vibrato effects produce slight, rapid variations in pitch,
mimicking the fractional semitone variations produced
naturally by opera singers and violinists
when prolonging a single note.
Wah-wah:
Wah is a type of guitar effects pedal that alters the tone of the
signal to create a distinctive effect, mimicking the human voice.
The pedal sweeps the peak response of a filter up and down
in frequency to create the sound (spectral glide),
also known as "the wah effect."
Delay/Echo:
Delay/Echo units produce an echo effect
by adding a duplicate instrument-to-amplifier
electrical signal to the original signal at a slight time-delay.
Reverb:
Reverb units simulate sounds produced
in an echo chamber by creating a large number
of echoes that gradually fade or "decay".
Overdrive/Distortion
Over/Dist effects are sometimes called "gain" effects.
Distortion effects create "warm", "gritty" and "fuzzy" sounds
by "clipping" an instrument's audio signal,
which distorts the shape of its wave form and adds overtones.
Noise gate:
Noise gates eliminate "hum", "hiss" and "static"
by greatly diminishing the volume of sounds
that fall below a set threshold.
Acoustic Simulator:
Acoustic Simulators enable electric guitars
to mimic the sound of acoustic guitar.
This is a lesson for beginner
Guitar effects pedals
Best guitar effect
Видео All guitar effects demonstration in one video (Most popular guitar effects demo) канала Mykola MrHardGuitar - Guitar Reviews And Lessons
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16 апреля 2012 г. 15:28:13
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