Rich_S
HomeGrownToneBrewologist
Re: Is it okay to use pedals as main distortion?
Sir, I give you a counter-example, Greg Koch's Death of a Bassman. The first known example of an odd-meter metal guitar riff employing both a tweed Bassman and banjo rolls. :jester:
G&Legacy: IMO, a Bassman is a great platform for almost any type of rock. It splits the difference between clean and dirty, and adds "real tube amp" mojo to stomp box distortion. I'd much rather play a rig like that a modern metal monster channel-switcher, or worse yet, a modeler.
My own rig is an 18 Watter clone for clean-to-crunch, and a Keeley DS-1 for dirt levels beyond that. For lower-volume playing at church, I'm looking at a silverface Champ for the clean-to-crunch part.
Keep the Bassman, try some new pedals. It's fun.
(I don't know why Metal would be played throught a Bassman.)
Sir, I give you a counter-example, Greg Koch's Death of a Bassman. The first known example of an odd-meter metal guitar riff employing both a tweed Bassman and banjo rolls. :jester:
G&Legacy: IMO, a Bassman is a great platform for almost any type of rock. It splits the difference between clean and dirty, and adds "real tube amp" mojo to stomp box distortion. I'd much rather play a rig like that a modern metal monster channel-switcher, or worse yet, a modeler.
My own rig is an 18 Watter clone for clean-to-crunch, and a Keeley DS-1 for dirt levels beyond that. For lower-volume playing at church, I'm looking at a silverface Champ for the clean-to-crunch part.
Keep the Bassman, try some new pedals. It's fun.
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