What ever is in those pots, gotta be good, on account of Jethro Bodine will eat all of it as a snack!!No tellin what Granny would give yah fer dinner.....![]()
Not all amps do the same things. My Ibanez doesn't do the Marshall thing by itself, basically it does a Tube Screamer in front of a Fender thing but throw my 89' Turbo Rat in front of it put the dials all around 1 o'clock and your close enough for the girls I go out with. Kick the boost on for leads or extra gain. Even on my DSL with my Super Signa Drive it has a separate boost on it. When on the Red channel kick that boost on and she makes it scream and on the green channel I can use the drive section for some nice gain and still have the boost. Then you throw the TS-9 in and you have more textures & dynamics coming out. It's all different flavors. In your other thread I posted about throwing monkey wrenches in because I can...lol The pic of you holding your guitar in black & white put me right in mind of the photo's he use to put out......so I happen to have his pedal and noticed you don't really have a high gain pedal and room for it on your board so it's boxed up and on it's way to you....monkey wrench thrownI never really used pedals until recently. Studio work is - generally - recorded dry, with the producer adding all effects via rack mount or - nowadays - direct from the DAW program.
My first guitar rig was a Traynor bass head and Ampeg 8x10 cabinet. This was around 1984. For some overdrive and reverb effect, I bought a DOD FX-50 and FX-90 and played through that for a few years, until I got my 2203/2034 combo in 1987.
I know fellows who have a pedalboard that is literally bigger than their guitar cases. I watch them always fiddling about with their rig between songs. To me, it's a distraction from a live performance, but to each their own.
I prefer a "set it & forget it" approach.
I would be pissed, too. All that Miller and a can of Friskies...
Where are the IPA's? 
Probably pissed that there’s no more beer!!I would be pissed, too. All that Miller and a can of Friskies...Where are the IPA's?
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Did Jimi really say that?
Plus, Jimi was a pedal pioneer in a time when most players didn't have any.Jimi was far too laid-back and cool to ever say anything like that.
Best said to kick ya in the right direction, especially if you have nice gear!!Plus, Jimi was a pedal pioneer in a time when most players didn't have any.
There's a good quote from a pretty well-known guitarist, not sure who - maybe Larry Carlton?
"Not happy with your tone? Practice more."
I used to have the dod version of that before there where so many to choose from, there has always been a pignose but I had the dodYOu need a battery powered Vox AC1 Rythm dude ----