Errr...I don't know if punchy is the word you're looking for. It actually in a way, looses the punch and the rawness and filters out some harsher high frequencies to smoothen out the overall tone for a more liquid sound.drew_half_empty said:well, a compressor tightens up the sound, makes it stand out more and give it a kinda punchy sound
and a sustainer well, makes things ring out more
so needless to say, that setting would compress, but not sustain. You only really need a compression sustainer to make things sound punchier without compromising sustain
Sweet! So are you saying that you have your entire tone is compressed throughout all of your songs?DeadSkinSlayer3 said:I always found the compressor on my V-amp2 to make everything more defined.
For example in Megadeth's Holy Wars...The Punishment Due, they have that run that has power chords on the E string seperated by the open E and B in that order. Do you know what I mean? When I incrased the compression level, those open strings were way more audible, where they used to be totally eaten by the low strings ringing out.
Is there a reason why you only like it on clean? I know I didn't like the compression on rhythm because it made the tone so sterile...but then again, I didn't have the time to work with the dials enough to really give that a fair grading. Thanks Falstaff.Falstaff said:I use one but only when I'm playing clean. They are fun pedals.
Guitarist said:Is there a reason why you only like it on clean? I know I didn't like the compression on rhythm because it made the tone so sterile...but then again, I didn't have the time to work with the dials enough to really give that a fair grading. Thanks Falstaff.
Falstaff said:I use one but only when I'm playing clean. They are fun pedals.