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Glorious tone.

Everyone should have the chance to play a 60's Marshall to hear what all the fuss is about. You don't really get the full experience without being in the room. I have owned and gigged with a couple of 50 watt Marshalls, which could just about knock down the walls of my rehearsal space and most of the little clubs in which we gigged. I can imagine having the 200 watt pig.

I never turn my 2204 up very loud, ever, anymore. But I have played a JTM 50 a friend owns which made me seriously reconsider my low volume only policy.
 
Glorious tone.

Everyone should have the chance to play a 60's Marshall to hear what all the fuss is about. You don't really get the full experience without being in the room. I have owned and gigged with a couple of 50 watt Marshalls, which could just about knock down the walls of my rehearsal space and most of the little clubs in which we gigged. I can imagine having the 200 watt pig.

I never turn my 2204 up very loud, ever, anymore. But I have played a JTM 50 a friend owns which made me seriously reconsider my low volume only policy.

Especially when accompanied by at least a 4x12 half stack but even more intense an experience with a full Marshall stack plugged into an old JMP head cranked up up up! Guitar now become a therapy session as the sound waves resonate through your body & allowing you to feel & experience playing the guitar like never before. This very easily can border a spiritual high.

I believe there are some cultures that actually use tones & vibration for therapy & healing. Like the Tibetans & some newer researchers are gaining insight into these fequencies way beyond what the average person is aware.

solfeggio.PNG


(Below) Tibetan singing bowls used to generate healing tones & vibration.
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Especially when accompanied by at least a 4x12 half stack but even more intense an experience with a full Marshall stack plugged into an old JMP head cranked up up up! Guitar now become a therapy session as the sound waves resonate through your body & allowing you to feel & experience playing the guitar like never before. This very easily can border a spiritual high.

I believe there are some cultures that actually use tones & vibration for therapy & healing. Like the Tibetans & some newer researchers are gaining insight into these fequencies way beyond what the average person is aware.

solfeggio.PNG


(Below) Tibetan singing bowls used to generate healing tones & vibration.
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Doug Aldrich's tone in Dio is therapeutic for me...
 
I don't mean the chord, itself. I mean how it sounds when he hits it and lets it ring for a couple of seconds!

You're talking about that gnarly tone that the amp spits out that surrounds his power chord!

Well then, at exactly 48 seconds he is hitting a Gb or F# power chord & letting it ring for a couple of seconds... (check pic below)

upload_2017-4-25_0-32-31.png

He is also tuned to an Eb. So he is strumming / hitting an open G power chord while tuned to Eb.

Copy dat?..
 
You're talking about that gnarly tone that the amp spits out that surrounds his power chord!

Well then, at exactly 48 seconds he is hitting a Gb or F# power chord & letting it ring for a couple of seconds... (check pic below)

View attachment 4311

He is also tuned to an Eb. So he is strumming / hitting an open G power chord while tuned to Eb.

Copy dat?..

I first saw this on my Android, so the screen was small. But looking at his hand placement, I see an E5. The second and middle appear to be hovering???

But regardless, a super cool tone.
 
I first saw this on my Android, so the screen was small. But looking at his hand placement, I see an E5. The second and middle appear to be hovering???

But regardless, a super cool tone.

I know, looking at hands / fingers can be deceiving, that is why the tone / power chord didn't line up with the actual note I was hearing. at 00:48 in the video. I was actually hearing the characteristics of the guitars open G power chord Like in the first power chord of 'Ziggy Stardust' but not at the A 440 scale G note. Nope, it was off & sounded low / flat.

This got me questioning just what was going on here. Was this an funny E something or other like Robert suggested?? Hmmm?

It didn't take to much to sit & figure out that the anomaly was being caused by a guitar tuned to Eb & the guitarist playing that open G power chord. Mystery solved.

Smitty, you might have secret desires towards alternate lowered tuning! And what would the fellows a church have to say about that!? Hmmmm?

upload_2017-4-25_13-30-29.jpeg
 
I know, looking at hands / fingers can be deceiving, that is why the tone / power chord didn't line up with the actual note I was hearing. at 00:48 in the video. I was actually hearing the characteristics of the guitars open G power chord Like in the first power chord of 'Ziggy Stardust' but not at the A 440 scale G note. Nope, it was off & sounded low / flat.

This got me questioning just what was going on here. Was this an funny E something or other like Robert suggested?? Hmmm?

It didn't take to much to sit & figure out that the anomaly was being caused by a guitar tuned to Eb & the guitarist playing that open G power chord. Mystery solved.

Smitty, you might have secret desires towards alternate lowered tuning! And what would the fellows a church have to say about that!? Hmmmm?

View attachment 4319


Good detective work...

I rarely tune down, unless the vocalist requires it in the studio. I have one of my own songs where I tune Drop D for a certain rhythm part. Having said that, I use derivatives of certain chords all the time, such as A5, E5, the famous Angus Young 'G,' a derivative of a 'D' held with two fingers only and a two fingered 'C' (C5-ish) shape....
 
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