Dec 29 2011

Great deal on the Seymour Duncan SFX-06 Paranormal Bass EQ Direct Box

Nice deal on the Seymour Duncan SFX-06 Paranormal Bass EQ Direct BoxThe Seymour Duncan SFX-06 Paranormal Bass EQ Direct Box is currently out of production, but there is a great deal going on at Amazon for this pedal. This pedal lists for $199, and is usually available for $139, but is currently on sale for only $49.99 at Amazon! At the time of this posting there were only four in stock, so if you’re thinking about picking this up, you’ll need to jump on it.

Here is the official description of the Seymour Duncan SFX-06 Paranormal Bass EQ Direct Box:

While passive DIs proved to be quite useful for recording bass or sending bass to a console for live performance, people began to notice a decrease in overall response and punch. That’s when active DI’s came to the rescue. But how many are tailored to the response of a bass guitar? The Seymour Duncan SFX-06 Paranormal Bass EQ DI is, featuring a three-band active EQ that’s optimized for bass along with a contour switch for slapping styles.

Seymour Duncan SFX-06 Paranormal Bass EQ DI, First Take:
Active DI with three-band EQ optimized for bass
Dedicated contour switch for slapping styles
Solid construction, balanced XLR out and ground lift

DI with active three-band EQ

The three-band EQ allows you to dial in your tone in any room, sculpting your lows, mids, and highs quickly and easily. So, along with performing the normal functions of a DI, you get the benefit of adding an active EQ to your bass without having to make any modifications to your instrument. The EQ provides ±12dB boost and cut for each band, which have center frequencies at 30Hz for deep lows, 650Hz to contour the mids, and 5.2kHz for presence, clarity and attack.

Proprietary Slap Contour switch for happy slapping

The SFX-6 also features Seymour Duncan’s proprietary Slap Contour switch, which applies an additional preset EQ curve. As the name implies, this is a dedicated switch for slapping styles, but it also adds an extra dimension to fingerstyle or pick playing. Slap Contour gives you a 6dB boost at 80Hz to bring out the bottom and cuts 6dB at 650Hz to reduce the mud that can occur in the low mids. The result is a solid low end and more room for attack. By using it with the 3-band EQ, you can bring out more attack information if needed, as well as extra bottom below 80Hz.
Solid construction and hum elimination

Built like a tank with a 16-guage steel chassis and powered by either a single 9V battery or a regulated DC power supply, the SFX-06 features a balanced XLR output with ground lift to eliminate electromagnetic interference and AC-hum. Between that and its active electronics you can drive longer cable runs to a feed a front-of-house mixing board or a recording console without noise or signal loss.

Again the Seymour Duncan SFX-06 Paranormal Bass EQ Direct Box is on sale for only $49.99!

Popularity: 4%

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Dec 7 2011

Free Shirt Wednesday – 12/7 – BassEFX

Free Shirt Wednesday - 12/7 - BassEFXDecember 7th, the day that will live in infamy. I have a few relatives that joined the military the following days in 1941 and were some of the lucky ones to survive WWII. It was a crazy time in the world and should be remembered.

Today’s Free Shirt Wednesday is sponsored by BassEFX.com out of Seattle, Washington.  Chad Beeler over at BassEFX.com is the real deal for bass knowledge, and he created a website to focus on effects for bass players out there. His knowledge in the field is quite extensive, he’s definitely been around the tone block and can really be helpful when thinking of effects and your bass tone. For more information about Chad and BassEFX, please read my October interview with him – “Talking with Chad at BassEFX.com

Here is a nice snippet from BassEFX.com that describes it perfectly:

BassEfx.com provides the widest selection of bass pedals and bass effects available. That’’s it – no guitar effects, no instruments, no amps. Our singular focus (and our special relationship with manufacturers) enables us to offer bass players the biggest selection, the most competitive prices and the best service.
Personal guidance — from a pro

Bass players of all styles work to find their individual, original voice.  That “voice,” of course, is tone. Too many bass musicians don’t realize that the right bass effect can help you create your tone –and share it with an audience.

When it comes to effects, some bass players benefit from one-on-one guidance. At BassEfx.com, you get it. Chad Beeler, a seasoned bass professional, can help you find, modify, or augment any sound.  Whether you want just the right amount of balls, anger, funkiness or beauty, Chad gets what you’re talking about. He’s played bass for more than 30 years, used every effect imaginable, and equipped some of the world’s best known bass players.

Over at BassEFX.com there is a great selection of effects from multiple manufacturers including some great boutique builders. They cover all the ‘types’ of effects from filters to distortion to delays to function pedals like EQs and DIs as well. BassEFX.com is also involved socially with Facebook and Twitter, be sure to like/follow to receive updates on sales and news.

Now, if you want to be featured on Free Shirt Wednesday.. it’s really quite simple. Send me a shirt, if it’s music related (ie: guitar builder, band, pedal builder, guitar shop, recording studio, etc) I’ll dedicate a blog post about your biz, band, etc. I’ll take a photo with my aging, slightly pudgy mug and post it. Great simple, cheap form of advertising. Still interested? Then check this page for more info

Popularity: 3%

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Oct 28 2011

Talking with Chad at BassEFX.com

Talking with Chad at BassEFX.comI had a chance to send some questions over to Chad Beeler of BassEFX.com. For those of you don’t know, BassEFX.com is a new site that is providing a great selection of effect pedals for the bass players out there. Chad definitely knows his stuff when it comes to bass, bass tone and effects, and he’s bringing in his knowledge to BassEFX.com.

When it comes to effects, some bass players benefit from one-on-one guidance. At BassEfx.com, you get it. Chad Beeler, a seasoned bass professional, can help you find, modify, or augment any sound.  Whether you want just the right amount of balls, anger, funkiness or beauty, Chad gets what you’re talking about. He’s played bass for more than 30 years, used every effect imaginable, and equipped some of the world’s best known bass players. 

A few days ago I had a great conversation with him on the phone, and wanted to send some questions his way. Here is the interview:

- What prompted you to start BassEFX.com?
I got frustrated trying to research pedals for not only myself, but for customers who had some specific requests.  Google-ing “bass effects” listed the usual suspects:  Guitar Center, Amazon, Musician’s Friend, etc…then a laundry list of random pedals. None, as it turned out, were what I was looking for.  So the light bulb moment came when I asked my self “Man, why isn’t there a central web site with effects targeting bass players?”  With 20 years in bass specific retail, I said to myself, “Why the hell don’t I do it?”  So I did it.

- Tell us about your past experience in the music industry.
I co-founded and ran Bass Northwest in Seattle for 15 years, (1994-2009) and prior to that, worked in the bass department at Seattle Music, a rather cool shop downtown.  I still work at Bass NW on very limited part-time basis to help out and stay in the loop musically.

- Do you see more bass players using effects?
Absolutely!  Some are looking for a specific effect or getting a game plan together, others are just starting to explore, but more and more are pushing the envelope with extensive, well thought out pedal boards that are constantly evolving. It’s a facet of the bass community that’s definitely getting bigger.

- What are some things you would recommend to avoid when it comes to effected bass?
First, I recommend avoiding bad advice.  Players, whether bass or guitar, have a sonic goal in mind.  It’s a path we’re all on, we don’t necessarily know the direction, but subjective and unqualified opinions make for unnecessary detours.  It’s easy to ask and get answers to “what’s the best pedal for this or that?”, but unless you know what instrument, amp, or cabinet the player is using or what kind of style or tone they want to emulate, you can’t offer or get a helpful answer.  I work very hard at asking all the right questions and giving thoughtful, professional advice.

Second, (and last) avoid buying pedals to correct your tone.  If you don’t like the tone of your bass, amp, cabinet, or any combination of those, fix that problem first. If you can’t afford to do that, make what you have work.  Use your EQ, your hands, your mind, your heart, your cojones, whatever, just make it work.  If your fundamental sound, (the tone you’re using 95% of the time), ain’t cuttin’ it, fix it.  Effects can help create and augment your tone, but if your tone is weak from the get go, buying effects to help will only be frustrating and expensive.  In other words, you can put diamonds around a dog’s ass…but it’s still a dog’s ass.

Otherwise, get to it and have fun!

- What pedals do you think are incredibly useful for a bass player?
Given the dynamic and sonic range of the instrument, compressors and outboard preamps are typically the fundamental building blocks to focused, fat tone.  Which pedals in particular?  That’s a personal, subjective call.  You get a good deal of EQing on your bass and/or amplifier and some compressing or limiting capabilities on some amps, but what you create in between, signal-wise, can define your signature sound.  Everything else, whether it be modulating, filtering, octave dividing, overdriving, distorting, delaying, etc… opens wide a giant sonic palate on which to geek out accordingly.

- How do you feel about using guitar focused effects on bass? Or do you recommend using pedals tailored specifically for bass?
Everything’s fair game. Experiment with all of it.  Some pedal groups: distortion, fuzz, overdrive, for example, may work much better for guitar than bass on paper and in the real world, but that doesn’t mean a bassist can’t incorporate any of those in creating or augmenting their tone.  It’s totally subjective and there are no rules.  However, bass players are very concerned with “losing low end” when stepping on a pedal. And, since the majority of players have one main rig, there is definitely an awareness of this when choosing a pedal. Bass specific pedals more precisely address the dynamic and sonic range of the instrument and can help minimize low end loss when the pedal is stomped.  Therefore, I’m a proponent of having a separate rig for effects and “A,B,Y-ing” the signal to the appropriate rig, that’s the best way to preserve the fundamental low end and use effects you may not try otherwise.   But, that’s not a realistic and/or feasible choice for a solid majority of players, economically or otherwise. So, that’s why bass-specific pedals are usually looked at first, though, some pedals designed for guitar fit nicely in the bass realm.

Bottom line, (as lame as it may come across,) use what works for you.

- Are there things to consider when dealing with amps and effects. Drawbacks of effects with Solidstate vs. Tube amps?
There aren’t really any drawbacks regarding amps.  But solid state and tube amps behave differently, so adjustments on whatever pedals you use will vary a bit.  Most bass amps, new lightweight class D amps included, are of hybrid design, with usually at least one 12AX7 tube at the preamp stage to warm things up along with a solid state power section, so again it just comes down to trying out pedals with a particular system, seeing what works best and tweaking accordingly.  The biggest drawback is that most bass cabs are full-range with some sort of tweeter or horn.  And if you run overdrive or distortion through a horn, you get a harsh bumblebee-ish sound, so the horn has to be dialed way back.  Unfortunately, that means when you go back to a clean sound and you want to slap and pop, for example, you lose that crystally high end.  So it’s a bit of a conundrum, but still solvable.

- What are the hot builders when it comes down to bass effects?
There are many great builders.  The bigger players, MXR, Aguilar, Tech 21, etc.. are making great stuff.  A newer company that I’m impressed with is Source Audio.  They’re smart, forward thinking, and they’re creating some very cool stuff for bass players including the Bass Envelope Filter Pro, Programmable EQ, and the Hot Hand products.  The boutiques I’m digging lately are 3Leaf Audio, Darkglass, and Wren & Cuff.

- Are there any new pedals coming down the pipe that you’re excited about?
Yes.  I’m very excited to be the first U.S. dealer for Darkglass Electronics, hand built in Finland. Their Microtubes B3K overdrive pedal has generated a massive buzz and I can’t wait to get my mitts on one.  I’m also excited about an exclusive pedal for BassEFX.com that I am collaborating on with Spencer Doren of 3Leaf Audio fame.  Spencer is a genius and it’s going to be an amazing bass-oriented EQ, DI, and headphone amp.  A “Swiss Army Knife” that’s designed to be a pedal that every bass player would want or need, with all aspects of it delivering at the highest level.  I have been in the business a long time and I can say that this will be one of the best pedals ever produced.  Price will be under $300.00 and, hopefully, it will find its way onto everyone’s pedal board.

- As a bass player, what pedals should probably be avoided.. if any?
None.  Check as much stuff out as you can.  Even the crappiest or weirdest pedal may have some attribute that you dig.  Maybe it won’t find its way onto your pedal board, but having a range of effects can stoke you creatively for recording or song writing.  Just keep your ears and your mind open.

- Who are some of your favorite bass players that are known for using effects to shape their tone?
There are waaaay too many to list.  The two that popped into my mind first are:

Dug Pinnick from King’s X.  Dude’s tone is epic, giant, and just plain filthy.  “Black the Sky” on the “Dogman” album is probably the coolest rock tone ever.  It blends a fat fundamental and tube driven distortion that is perfectly executed.  Most of it is created through a giant couple of racks of compressors and EQs in addition to Ampeg and Traynor amps.  Not a lot pedal wise, by I’ve made it a personal mission to emulate his tone in a downsized rig with the appropriate pedals.

Next is Tony Levin.  He wields compression like a broad brush stroke with his Music Man basses and adds bits of other effects, (octavers, chorus, distortion) in subtle but effective ways.  Combine all that perfectly crafted bass lines, dynamics, and use of space and you get a phenomenal bassist and musician.

It was great to talk with Chad. I think it’s awesome to have a site that focuses on bass effects. I know when I post bass related products here at EffectsBay.com, the feedback from bass players has been huge. Please check out BassEFX.com on the web and their page on Facebook.

Chad is also offering a EffectsBay.com exclusive coupon code for BassEFX.com! Simply use the code EFFECTSBAY10 at checkout and save 10% off of your order.  This offer is good til the 15th of November. Thanks Chad!

Popularity: 5%

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Sep 9 2011

Good deal on the M-182 MXR El Grande Bass Fuzz at Amazon

Good deal on the M-182 MXR El Grande Bass Fuzz at AmazonHello bass players… this one is for you! I found a good deal on the MXR M182 El Grande Bass Fuzz at Amazon. If you’re looking to fuzz up your bass tones, this might be the deal you’re looking for. The MXR El Grand Bass Fuzz lists at $165.63. You usually see it available for $99.99, but is currently on sale for $80.51 and ship with FREE Super Saver Shipping. Not bad.

Here is the official description of the MXR M182 El Grande Bass Fuzz:

The El Grande Bass Fuzz, the latest offering from MXR Bass Innovations, is a versatile and brutal fuzz designed just for bass. We took a classic 70′s fuzz circuit, re-tuned it for more low end, and added a DEEP switch that delivers up to +15dB of monstrous bass that is internally adjustable between 87Hz – 113Hz. And that’s not all: Volume, Tone, and Fuzz controls let you sculpt your tone with precision to get everything you need – from searing, sustained upper-register chords to punchy, growling low B’s – without sacrificing low end or clarity. The El Grande comes in a lightweight but durable aluminum casting with the same high-quality jacks and switches that have made MXR pedals the road-ready standard on pedal-boards around the world for over 30 years.

Here is a video by BassGuitarMag demo’ing the El Grande Bass Fuzz:

Again, the MXR M-182 El Grande Bass Fuzz is on sale for $80.51 at Amazon and ships for free with super saver shipping

Popularity: 3%

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Aug 30 2011

Awesomer deal on the Carl Martin Bass Chorus Pedal

Awesomer deal on the Carl Martin Bass Chorus PedalA couple of days ago I mentioned the killer price on the Carl Martin Bass Chorus Pedal (was $205). I was surprised to see it even lower today! Right now, the Carl Martin Bass Chorus is available for only $184.89 at Amazon.com (that’s $275 below their MSRP).

Here is the full description of the Carl Martin Bass Chorus:

The Bass Chorus is the first in Carl Martin’s new line of bass effects. Although similar in function to the older Chorus XII, it is housed in the new wider/lower metal housing with ‘chicken-head knobs’ for adjustment. Of course, the quality remains the same, and the new housing also encloses the regulated +/-12V power supply for maximum headroom and clarity. So why design a special chorus just for bass? Most chorus effects in the marketplace are designed for guitar use and therefore are mid-range heavy. The Bass Chorus has been extensively fine-tuned so that the full effect of the chorus is evident as far down as low B. Like its’ predecessor, the Bass Chorus is a dual stereo effects pedal with independent sets of speed and depth controls. The ‘Select’ button allows you to use or bypass the effect and the ‘On’ button allows you to choose between your two chorus settings. There is an LED to show the effect is on, and each chorus has its’ own LED indicator which flashes at the speed setting. An added feature with the Bass Chorus is found when switching from a slow chorus to a faster chorus, the effect speeds up slowly for that ‘phat’ vintage Leslie effect! The Bass Chorus is the only choice for bass artists when you compare features….. Carl Martin quality, simplicity, flexibility and transparency

Popularity: 3%

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Aug 28 2011

Awesome deal on the Carl Martin Bass Chorus Pedal

Awesome deal on the Carl Martin Bass Chorus PedalHere is another alert on a great deal going on at Amazon.com. This is another Carl Martin pedal that is WAY below normal pricing. The pedal is the Carl Martin Bass Chorus Pedal. This pedal lists at $460.00, you usually see it available for $322.00, but is currently on sale for $205.43 and is available with FREE super saver shipping. At the time of this posting, there were only 5 left in stock. Usually, when it gets down to 1 the price changes.

Here is the full description of the Carl Martin Bass Chorus:

The Bass Chorus is the first in Carl Martin’s new line of bass effects. Although similar in function to the older Chorus XII, it is housed in the new wider/lower metal housing with ‘chicken-head knobs’ for adjustment. Of course, the quality remains the same, and the new housing also encloses the regulated +/-12V power supply for maximum headroom and clarity. So why design a special chorus just for bass? Most chorus effects in the marketplace are designed for guitar use and therefore are mid-range heavy. The Bass Chorus has been extensively fine-tuned so that the full effect of the chorus is evident as far down as low B. Like its’ predecessor, the Bass Chorus is a dual stereo effects pedal with independent sets of speed and depth controls. The ‘Select’ button allows you to use or bypass the effect and the ‘On’ button allows you to choose between your two chorus settings. There is an LED to show the effect is on, and each chorus has its’ own LED indicator which flashes at the speed setting. An added feature with the Bass Chorus is found when switching from a slow chorus to a faster chorus, the effect speeds up slowly for that ‘phat’ vintage Leslie effect! The Bass Chorus is the only choice for bass artists when you compare features….. Carl Martin quality, simplicity, flexibility and transparency.

Again, the Carl Martin Bass Chorus is on sale for a great price of $205.43 at Amazon.com. Get it while you can!

Awesome deal on the Carl Martin Bass Chorus Pedal

Popularity: 6%

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Aug 13 2011

MXR M-182 El Grande Bass Fuzz

Jim Dunlop M182 Mxr El Grande Bass FuzzLast night I had some friends over at the house. We talked about guitars and projects going on. It’s always a fun conversation. It’s almost a universal language of sorts – gear and music.

This morning I woke up a little foggy. Desperate for coffee, and while hearing it percolating in the background, one word popped into my head. Fuzz. I stumbled across the MXR M-182 El Grande Bass Fuzz and wanted to take a little closer look. Especially, since I had a chance to talk about a bass pedal. Bass players like pedals too right?

Here is the official description of the MXR M-182 El Grande Bass Fuzz (say it out loud, it’s fun to say – El Grande Fuzz. Make sure you roll your Rs).

The El Grande Bass Fuzz, the latest offering from MXR Bass Innovations, is a versatile and brutal fuzz designed just for bass. We took a classic 70′s fuzz circuit, re-tuned it for more low end, and added a DEEP switch that delivers up to +15dB of monstrous bass that is internally adjustable between 87Hz – 113Hz. And that’s not all: Volume, Tone, and Fuzz controls let you sculpt your tone with precision to get everything you need – from searing, sustained upper-register chords to punchy, growling low B’s – without sacrificing low end or clarity. The El Grande comes in a lightweight but durable aluminum casting with the same high-quality jacks and switches that have made MXR pedals the road-ready standard on pedal-boards around the world for over 30 years.

I found this video by jimdunlopusa

As of right now, the MXR M-182 El Grande Bass Fuzz is on sale at Amazon for only $80.51 and ships with FREE super saver shipping.

 

 

Popularity: 4%

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Aug 8 2011

Stranglehulled and Boss BF-3 Flanger

Strangle Hulled and Boss BF-3 FlangerThe following is a guest post by Dave Parsons. If you are interested in guest posting, please contact me! Dave is struggling with his Boss BF-3 for his bass, and he writes about it below. If you have any suggestions, please comment below!

Nobody asked me but if they had, I would tell ‘em that there’s only one band who should be covering “stranglehold” by Ted Nugent, and the name of that band is Killdozer.  There’s a remote chance that some of the personnel in the cover band I play bass for has heard of the movie, but there’s no way any of them have heard of or listened to Killdozer, and I am certain that most 46 year old guitar players who still wear asics wrestling shoes on and off stage haven’t either.

So we (the cover band) are playing on a flatbed at the end of main street in Ione, Wa.  I have my Boss BF-3 flanger sandwiched between a fender tuner pedal and a tube screamer.  The reason why I’m running a tube screamer is because a friend of mine turned me on to the concept of a “buffer”, after I whined to him about how un-flangey my flanger was the last time I used it for this song.  Conceptually, the powers that be in the band told me to keep the flanger effect off until the song breaks down in the middle, that way when I get to the flanger part it will be “really special”.  Anyway, back to the show, here comes the “really special” part, I step on the flanger…not enough enveloping, not sounding very special.  I step on the tube screamer, and that helps a little.  The tube screamer is set with hardly any distortion, because I didn’t want the low-end of the bass to be zapped out by it.  There’s a dude who looks to be in his mid-50’s, and he’s loving it, but he most likely did way too much spray-painting out in the garage with all the doors closed back in the day, so I’m not trusting his reaction.  My ears are hearing total suckage, compared to what I am envisioning the sound should be.

I can’t remember what the occasion was (I’m thinking it was a DARE sponsored event?) but Ted Nugent spoke in front of the students at Hellgate High several years ago, and apparently was dropping fuck bombs every other word.  I would earmark this as the last interesting thing I ever heard re: the ‘Nuge.  I saw him years later on TV, crawling around his compound/home on a “hunt” or whatever, he seemed so completely un-interesting.  I listened to a fair amount of Double-Live Gonzo and Weekend Warriors back in 6th grade, and he occupied that “wild-man” section of likeability with me, but I never really cared much for what he was doing.

I may set something up differently for our next gig, which is in Victor MT.  Our collective volume needs to remain low enough for the waitstaff to shout in their chicken strip orders, so even if I do get the mucho flange-o I seek, it’s going to be a totally vanilla churchey low-volume delivery. I do have one other pedal, a Marshall distortion, and I may try that in lieu of the tube screamer.

Let me know if you’re planning on attending, I’ll be sure to Febreeze my loincloth.

Popularity: 13%

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Jun 28 2011

Electro-Harmonix BassBalls (Nano) Envelope/Distortion

Electro-Harmonix BassBalls (Nano) Envelope/Distortion PedalToday, I saw that Electro-Harmonix posted a video review by jazzlavchannel of the Electro-Harmonix Bassballs. I thought it would be cool to spread the word out as well. Nice video showing what this pedal can do from a music demo point of view. I also liked that there are four bass tracks demonstrating various aspects of bass playing with the Bassballs (lead, rhythm, etc).

First, here is the official description of the Electro-Harmonix BassBalls:

The Electro Harmonix Nano Bassballs Twin Envelope Filter effects pedal has everything you loved about the original Bassballs in a pocket size. The human vocal-like sound of its two sweeping filters gives bass a strong presence under leads, or a commanding quality when out front. The resonant frequencies are engineered solidly into the full range of the bass guitar’s strongest harmonics. Bassballs will respond to every bass note. The sweep is widely variable, and harmonic enrichment is available with the distortion switch.

The Nano Bassballs comes in a small, die-cast case with rounded corners, saving valuable pedalboard space. The footswitch selects your original signal or the filtered signal as the Bassballs output. The range of the filters‚ upward sweep in pitch is set by the interaction of instrument volume and the sensitivity control. Both stronger attacks and higher (clockwise) control settings increase the sweep range. Low volume and low sensitivity settings will create little or no sweep, and Bassballs will only provide a small boost in its lowest frequencies. In its upward position, the fuzz switch introduces additional harmonic enrichment that accentuates the filters‚ action. The sensitivity pot also serves as a volume control for the fuzz, also increasing in the clockwise direction.

Here is the video by jazzlavchannel

Right now, the Electro-Harmonix Bassballs is available for only $82.50 at Amazon.com. This is eligible for FREE super saver shipping as well!

Popularity: 4%

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May 28 2011

Pedal Line Friday (Saturday Edition) – 5/28 – Ashley Emery

Apparently, after my experience with the Foo Fighters, my head is still in the clouds. I regrettably forgot to do a Pedal Line Friday submission yesterday! So today is a special Pedal Line Friday but on Saturday edition! Today we’re featuring the pedal line from Ashley Emery! If you have a pedal line (doesn’t have to be in a board) for your rig, please email me a photo, bio, description of pedals and routing to pedallineateffectsbaydotcom. Every Friday I’ll showcase a pedal line submission. Make sure you include any links to your band or music page.

Pedal Line Friday (Saturday Edition) - 5/28 - Ashley EmeryAttached is an image of my pedal line. Please note I am a bassist, my pedal choices might be strange but they work for the music we are creating.

Contents (from top left to bottom right)

- Custom built ‘Sonic Pharmacy’ Earth Bazz Fuzz pedal
- Boss DS-1 Distortion Pedal
- Boss BF-2 Flanger Pedal (modded, unclocked the flanger timing/speed settings)
- Boss DD-7 Digital Delay
- Custom build Kill Switch
- Boss SL-20 Slicer Pedal
- Custom built ‘Sonic Pharmacy’ Wormhole effects looper with a light receptive control
- Boss OC-2 Octave Pedal
- Boss TU-2 Tuner

Through the Wormhole effects looper I have placed the FL-2, DD-7 and the Bass Fuzz. This pedal allows you to loop the feedback from these three pedals creating a hellish assault of noise which can be dynamically controlled using the knobs on the three offending pedals. The feedback can be gated and controlled by the light receptive control which acts sort of like a theramin wah to phase the feedback.

The band I am in is called ‘Colonics‘ we are a three piece noise band from Brighton, UK. Our bandcamp URL is ‘http://colonics.bandcamp.com/‘ we have our first EP up for free download at the moment.

If the pedal line is included on the site could you also mention ‘Sonic Pharmacy‘ who built to of my pedals, the MD of the company is a friend/relative of the band and this would help his company reach a wider audience. http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Sonic-Pharmacy/205768589438011

I would love my pedal line to be featured on your site! It would be an honour.

Thanks Ashley

Thanks Ashley, it was a privilege to post it!

 

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