Majestic said:Yeah, the "doubling" is almost more important than any detuning on that song.
It's very thick & "doubled". Plus, it's doubled again in stereo.
The biggest difference I EVER noticed in the tone on that particular tune, happened when I turned my RIGHT speakers OFF.
You'll be shocked.....there's almost no reverb, and it totally sounds like a guy playing in his living room with some 28ms doubling.
When you hear his "doubled" tone in stereo, through both sides, it's almost like it's "quadrupled", and it sounds crazy. That's the kicker.
Fade your speakers to the left, and listen to that tune again.
SQUAREHEAD said:He uses a Bass "A" string for his dropped D string on that song...
Sounds real F A T
kEITH
Majestic said:An Eventide is soooo effective at doubling with barely any shift. Some chorus pedals do it better than others. The best I've ever personally tried, which is now somewhat obscure, is/was the Rocktron Tsunami pedal.
strangegrey said:I think you're confusing that with Good Enough...He was drop A on that, and for that he used a bass string....
On 5150, it's just regular drop D with his regular E string....
SQUAREHEAD said:That one too!
Both were done with the bass string.
keith
ErikH said:I've given up trying to cop his tone from any of it anyway. If I'm playing any of it, it's with my tone. With this song (5150), I just drop that E to D and go. Yes, it is cool knowing what was used to record certain songs/records, but in the end, it's just not worth it trying to sound like that anymore.