Pedals vs Songwriting

General Gear Discussion - effects, synths, etc.

Moderator: Ghost Hip

User avatar
Bassus Sanguinis
Supporter
Supporter
Posts: 5075
Joined: Mon May 11, 2009 7:32 am
Location: Espoo, Finland
Contact:

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by Bassus Sanguinis »

Mmm. Depends on the material.

I've done albums and shows with a pretty minimalistic set up myself years ago with my old bands but I don't think I'm going back there anytime soon. Noise bands and the fantastic freaky shit like that are very different in that sense. Today I considered leaving the bass guitars home and just take the pedals with me. Even my current band drummer wants delay, fuzz and phaser pedals now for his precussion stuff :lol:

:idk: If You're fine with a good basic dirt sound that You thrash the whole live set through and it works, well, there You go.

But why would anyboldy want to play the whole set through with the same sound? Unless he's playing unplugged. Or he has the TOANZ IN FINGERS and shit like that. But I might be biased here and think I wash my hands too much for the toanz to stick these days. So don't take my word for it.
Image
:::: Metal up Yöur Jazz! with FUZZIFERblack psychedelic doom ::::
Ugly Nora wrote:It's a sad day when Bassus Sanguinis becomes the voice of reason. :lol:
User avatar
kaeth
committed
committed
Posts: 487
Joined: Mon Feb 21, 2011 10:33 pm
Location: Thunder Bay, Ontario

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by kaeth »

How am I supposed to mask my suck without pedals?
npfrs
committed
committed
Posts: 245
Joined: Sat May 25, 2013 12:26 am
Location: Canada

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by npfrs »

kaeth wrote:How am I supposed to mask my suck without pedals?


Dance routine?
npfrs
committed
committed
Posts: 245
Joined: Sat May 25, 2013 12:26 am
Location: Canada

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by npfrs »

rustywire wrote:Furthermore I would never give credence to a paradox of "pedals vs songwriting" because the 2 are anything but mutually exclusive.

But I will stop short of telling someone else what works best for them or what they *should* be doing.


I appreciate the thought and I should make it clear - I don't think they're mutually exclusive either but it's an internet forum so I just tossed a quick title on there and voila! :)

friendship wrote:As for me, of course I love effects and textures, but I need to write something on an acoustic/uneffected electric or a piano, or else I get distracted by all the cool sounds I can make. Using all the effects I want comes in the arrangement stage.

Everyone works in a different way, and you should find the one that works best for you. That's just how I do it.


I agree so hard with this. That's the crux of what I'm getting at. I'll write something without pedals then start to add them in but, playing with just gtr -> amp, I've started to realize I can make the songs sound just as interesting, let them have space rather than fill a bridge or wordless verse with sonic textures.

It's a thought I wanted to have out loud on a forum to start discussion - I'm pretty pumped for all the responses thus far! :p :thumb:
User avatar
Blackened Soul
IAMILFFAMOUS
IAMILFFAMOUS
Posts: 4758
Joined: Wed May 04, 2011 1:41 am
Location: puget sound where even the moss is covered in moss
Contact:

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by Blackened Soul »

I just do whatever.
User avatar
tuffteef
IAMILFFAMOUS
IAMILFFAMOUS
Posts: 7890
Joined: Tue May 26, 2009 7:05 pm
Location: Downunderverse

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by tuffteef »

Blackened Soul wrote:I just do whatever.
GardenoftheDead
IAMILF
IAMILF
Posts: 2950
Joined: Mon Oct 31, 2011 12:26 pm

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by GardenoftheDead »

My set-up is never complicated enough that I feel it gets in the way.
User avatar
bigchiefbc
IAMILFFAMOUS
IAMILFFAMOUS
Posts: 7313
Joined: Fri Dec 28, 2007 9:45 am
Location: Cumberland, RI

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by bigchiefbc »

npfrs wrote:
friendship wrote:As for me, of course I love effects and textures, but I need to write something on an acoustic/uneffected electric or a piano, or else I get distracted by all the cool sounds I can make. Using all the effects I want comes in the arrangement stage.

Everyone works in a different way, and you should find the one that works best for you. That's just how I do it.


I agree so hard with this. That's the crux of what I'm getting at. I'll write something without pedals then start to add them in but, playing with just gtr -> amp, I've started to realize I can make the songs sound just as interesting, let them have space rather than fill a bridge or wordless verse with sonic textures.

It's a thought I wanted to have out loud on a forum to start discussion - I'm pretty pumped for all the responses thus far! :p :thumb:


I'm the exact opposite of you guys. I generally find playing unplugged/clean to be really really uninspiring and, well, boring.

99% of the songs I've written were inspired by a cool sound I got with some pedals or a fucked up synth patch I made by turning a shitload of knobs.

My favorite quote on this subject is by The Edge, as lame as that is : "The biggest difference between me and other players is that I don’t use effects to color my parts. I create guitar parts using effects. They’re a crucial element of what I do so I don’t consider them a crutch... They’re a part of the art."
Buy my gear! viewtopic.php?f=44&t=58763
Achtane wrote:I can hit it with a Blowing Up and it'll just sound awesome instead of like capacitors farting into each others' dicks.
Achtane wrote:
last.fm wrote:Zs makes music that is variously categorized as no-wave, post-jazz, brutal-chamber, brutal-prog, and post minimalist.
srsly?

Fuck you.
User avatar
rustywire
IAMILFFAMOUS
IAMILFFAMOUS
Posts: 4715
Joined: Thu Dec 13, 2012 9:54 am
Location: on.

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by rustywire »

bigchiefbc wrote:
npfrs wrote:
friendship wrote:As for me, of course I love effects and textures, but I need to write something on an acoustic/uneffected electric or a piano, or else I get distracted by all the cool sounds I can make. Using all the effects I want comes in the arrangement stage.

Everyone works in a different way, and you should find the one that works best for you. That's just how I do it.


I agree so hard with this. That's the crux of what I'm getting at. I'll write something without pedals then start to add them in but, playing with just gtr -> amp, I've started to realize I can make the songs sound just as interesting, let them have space rather than fill a bridge or wordless verse with sonic textures.

It's a thought I wanted to have out loud on a forum to start discussion - I'm pretty pumped for all the responses thus far! :p :thumb:


I'm the exact opposite of you guys. I generally find playing unplugged/clean to be really really uninspiring and, well, boring.

99% of the songs I've written were inspired by a cool sound I got with some pedals or a fucked up synth patch I made by turning a shitload of knobs.

My favorite quote on this subject is by The Edge, as lame as that is : "The biggest difference between me and other players is that I don’t use effects to color my parts. I create guitar parts using effects. They’re a crucial element of what I do so I don’t consider them a crutch... They’re a part of the art."


Inclined to agree, personally. Effects can be like alternate brushes or even pigments to an artist.
Surely it's possible to paint a spectacular scene using 1 brush and 1 color, but how many variations on that theme can one muster before the experience grows stale?

Not everyone draws inspiration from the same location...

Great quote/philosophy @Edge
[B/S/T shoutouts] Shortlist: Hollow Earth|Ct5|856|Condor|Thermae|OP-1|half track reel2reel|Prophet6 ... :whoa:
rfurtkamp wrote:The only transparent thing I own is a set of drinking glasses.
Image
npfrs
committed
committed
Posts: 245
Joined: Sat May 25, 2013 12:26 am
Location: Canada

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by npfrs »

rustywire wrote:
bigchiefbc wrote:
npfrs wrote:
friendship wrote:As for me, of course I love effects and textures, but I need to write something on an acoustic/uneffected electric or a piano, or else I get distracted by all the cool sounds I can make. Using all the effects I want comes in the arrangement stage.

Everyone works in a different way, and you should find the one that works best for you. That's just how I do it.


I agree so hard with this. That's the crux of what I'm getting at. I'll write something without pedals then start to add them in but, playing with just gtr -> amp, I've started to realize I can make the songs sound just as interesting, let them have space rather than fill a bridge or wordless verse with sonic textures.

It's a thought I wanted to have out loud on a forum to start discussion - I'm pretty pumped for all the responses thus far! :p :thumb:


I'm the exact opposite of you guys. I generally find playing unplugged/clean to be really really uninspiring and, well, boring.

99% of the songs I've written were inspired by a cool sound I got with some pedals or a fucked up synth patch I made by turning a shitload of knobs.

My favorite quote on this subject is by The Edge, as lame as that is : "The biggest difference between me and other players is that I don’t use effects to color my parts. I create guitar parts using effects. They’re a crucial element of what I do so I don’t consider them a crutch... They’re a part of the art."


Inclined to agree, personally. Effects can be like alternate brushes or even pigments to an artist.
Surely it's possible to paint a spectacular scene using 1 brush and 1 color, but how many variations on that theme can one muster before the experience grows stale?

Not everyone draws inspiration from the same location...

Great quote/philosophy @Edge


I'm going to watch It Might Get Loud again... for the 82nd time.

The one thing about Edge though is that he's well aware of how simple some of the things he's playing are and how effects can change the sound of that; that's also why I love effects! What I'm finding interesting is taking a song I normally loop and add several layers to to create different verse/chorus build-ups, etc, and playing it gtr -> amp and realizing it's still a good song. Instead of laying down Whammy bass and POG organ, etc, etc, just letting certain parts breath/act as space between lyrics - it's enjoyable and I don't think the songs are losing anything... mind you, maybe I'm biased as it would mean not having to lug a backpedal around :P
User avatar
D.o.S.
IAMILFFAMOUS
IAMILFFAMOUS
Posts: 29881
Joined: Sun Jul 03, 2011 8:47 am
Location: Ewe-Kay

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by D.o.S. »

Pedals + Songwriting.

My personal favorite blip on this comes from Roger Waters via the Director's cut of Live in Pompeii.

"It's like saying 'Give a man a Les Paul guitar and he becomes Eric Clapton,' you know. It's not true. And give a man an amplifier and a synthesizer, and he doesn't become whoever, you know. He doesn't become us."
good deals are here.
flesh couch is here.
UglyCasanova wrote: It's not the expensive programs you use, it's the way you click and drag.
Achtane wrote:
comesect2.0 wrote:Michael Jackson king tut little Richard in your butt.
IT'S THE ENNNND OF THE WORRRLD AS WE KNOW IT
User avatar
Doctor X
experienced
experienced
Posts: 977
Joined: Sun Oct 07, 2012 8:19 am
Location: London

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by Doctor X »

variety

when i play clean i think, that sounds great clean
then i switch to phaser and i think, that sound great with the phaser
then with dirty fuzz
then with chorus
then back to clean

it sounds fresh each time because its new
Sold to: dan_abnormal (3 times), Abanoise, Kayzer, Ragged Trousers, Schlatte
Bought from: McSpunckle, RitalinCupcake, Tendollarcat, Brobee, Ryan, cedarskies, behndy
User avatar
ryan summit
Supporter
Supporter
Posts: 6197
Joined: Wed Jun 06, 2012 10:11 am
Location: charlton hestons cold dead hands,exit 21,NY

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by ryan summit »

bigchiefbc wrote:
I'm the exact opposite of you guys. I generally find playing unplugged/clean to be really really uninspiring and, well, boring.



not opposite of me chief
im totally with you on this
and it doesnt apply to listening to other people
i dont question often what someones using
sounds good sounds good
unfortunately i dont sound good to my ear
without something whackin it out a bit
if im trying to learn a specific riff or song
i got the accoustic to work it out now
i used to do it on an unplugged guitar
but my ears suck so i couldnt hear it
but when it comes to any kind of creativity for me
i need somethin to set the mood
im not sayin amp distortion wouldnt do it
im sayin by next year id need to buy another amp
fuck it by next month
User avatar
behndy
Supporter
Supporter
Posts: 19883
Joined: Tue Sep 15, 2009 3:06 am
Location: Cali. East Bay Yo.
Contact:

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by behndy »

moop.
Eric! wrote:YOU'RE like having two pedals in one
with your...momentary fuck switch and all..
theactionindex wrote:QUADRACOCK BEHNDERFUCK
music, videos, in progress - http://www.youtube.com/c/behndy

okay, Plan B - PANICImage
User avatar
skullservant
IAMILFFAMOUS
IAMILFFAMOUS
Posts: 16575
Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2011 12:55 am

Re: Pedals vs Songwriting

Post by skullservant »

I honestly find and think of my pedals as an extension of my playing, they do things I can't normally do or make without them for the most part. I've been playing clean a lot lately, but then I always throw pedals on after I figure something out clean to see how it sounds
Post Reply