
I hear Flavor Flav's workin' cheap these days.

Moderator: D-Rainger
…...........................…psychic vampire. wrote:The important take away from this thread: Taoism and Ring Modulators go together?
I love tourboxes but I'm fairly certain most generate little buzz for the maker.sylnau wrote:Have demos by big names... Just Nick, Kingman, ...
More presence on social media.
Tourbox.
Music out on all streaming services and bandcamp and what not.
…...........................…psychic vampire. wrote:The important take away from this thread: Taoism and Ring Modulators go together?
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I can't get the maths to work out.Chankgeez wrote:For a forum the size of ILF, I might agree with you. For a much larger forum (e.g. TGP), however, I think you're wrong.
David's pedals aren't your typical TGP fare though. No transparent overdrives or fancy reverbs.![]()
Still, doing a tourbox is good exposure no matter how debatable the intended results are.
Music out on all streaming services and bandcamp and what not.
Music out on all streaming services and bandcamp and what not.
Thanks!hotknife wrote:The tourbox can snag you a potential echo chamber of enthusiasts on a forum. Also reviews and more user impressions for when a buyer does a search in the future and wants further affirmation. Just interacting with a whole different community could do you a lot of good too. That's how Source Audio went from being ignored to having their new line of digital products take off in a generally snobby analog crowd.
Kayzer is cool, but a lot of guitarists with "safe" tastes seem to ignore his demos and some even call it noise. Branching into the mainstream guys (Andy, M.Hermans @PGS, Burgs) will give traditionalists a warm & fuzzy introduction into something that would probably scare them off otherwise. Just my 2cs, though. A lot of good points brought up all around.
Andy from ProGuitarShop (he rotates demo duties with another guy called Mike Hermans). Burgs is the alias of an Australian demo dude named Brett Kingman. ProGuitarShop gets more hits than him, though.D-Rainger wrote:Thanks!hotknife wrote:The tourbox can snag you a potential echo chamber of enthusiasts on a forum. Also reviews and more user impressions for when a buyer does a search in the future and wants further affirmation. Just interacting with a whole different community could do you a lot of good too. That's how Source Audio went from being ignored to having their new line of digital products take off in a generally snobby analog crowd.
Kayzer is cool, but a lot of guitarists with "safe" tastes seem to ignore his demos and some even call it noise. Branching into the mainstream guys (Andy, M.Hermans @PGS, Burgs) will give traditionalists a warm & fuzzy introduction into something that would probably scare them off otherwise. Just my 2cs, though. A lot of good points brought up all around.
Who's Andy, and Burgs?
I don't have time right now to respond to your baseless accusations, goroth.goroth wrote: The idea of course is that it can't compare, rather that it is a complementary action. But it just seems a drop in the ocean, especially considering the time aspect.
I think Andy, Burgs and Mike Hermans all do demos for PGS now.Chankgeez wrote:one word: hype
two words: social media
three words: scattergun-like dispersion pattern
…...........................…psychic vampire. wrote:The important take away from this thread: Taoism and Ring Modulators go together?
I know you didn't say one or the other - that's what I meant in that I understand a direct comparison isn't necessarily relevant. But if impact is a function of number of actions multiplied by the reach of the actions divided by the time frame over which it occurs, then I can't see te relevance of a tourbox, especially when it could directly fund other actions with a higher impact.Chankgeez wrote:I don't have time right now to respond to your baseless accusations, goroth.goroth wrote: The idea of course is that it can't compare, rather that it is a complementary action. But it just seems a drop in the ocean, especially considering the time aspect.I never said just do one or the other.
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Music out on all streaming services and bandcamp and what not.
oldangelmidnight wrote:Freakenfest:
D. Rainger drives from house to house with a helmet-mounted camera and a cattle prod and electrocutes people while they play songs using the pedals.
I think a lot of the greatness of the Rainger pedals is in the performance capabilities of the Igor. It's hard to capture that in a typical video demo.