Anywho, I'm with you sylnau! I was turned off from filter pedals for a long time, because no one seemed to have enough of an imagination to not use it only as a lazy man's wah pedal. It wasn't until I bought an Ooh Wah II a couple years ago that I started thinking perhaps there is room for experimentation. Also, don't discount the DOD 440. Jonny Greenwood seems to make good use of his.
Last edited by modernage on Fri Apr 08, 2011 3:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
eatyourguitar wrote:I am impressed by that video. I did say most people not all. I still haven't seen it on a pedalboard of someone who plays guitar in a band.
Whaaaat?
That was the point I was making, fixed or modulating filter pedals are honestly the secret piece to a lot of guitarists tone. Check those boards closer, a lot of guys have even just an FM4 left on full time.
eatyourguitar wrote:I am impressed by that video. I did say most people not all. I still haven't seen it on a pedalboard of someone who plays guitar in a band.
Whaaaat?
That was the point I was making, fixed or modulating filter pedals are honestly the secret piece to a lot of guitarists tone. Check those boards closer, a lot of guys have even just an FM4 left on full time.
I didn't say I never saw a filter on a pedal board, I said I never saw the $400 moog pedal that doesn't even make sound on a guitarists pedalboard.
eatyourguitar wrote:I am impressed by that video. I did say most people not all. I still haven't seen it on a pedalboard of someone who plays guitar in a band.
John Davis from Nerve has it on his board (although he plays bass, not guitar).
I love q-trons. but it seems like thats all anyone makes theese days is qtron ripoffs. thats what got me pissed when I saw this thread. someone asking for another filter pedal "something different" and ofcourse there is gonna be people suggesting stuff that is all the same. I'm so jaded and cynical it borders on insanity.