Greetings from the former/current Saigon. (Technically Ho Chi Minh City but many of the locals call it Saigon). I had hoped to post a couple of blog updates up before I left, but instead was running around checking things for the trip. Now a jet lagged – iced coffee and soon to be bahn mi – fueled post:
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1 lick or 2?
So first – here is a lick that works off of the swept pentatonic idea (alternating 3 and 1 note per string ideas) that I explored in the last online lesson (you can find a pdf of that lesson here). While the online lessons have focused a lot on pentatonics – I wanted to add the tritone to make “the blues scale” and show how this approach could be adapted. Here is the idea ascending:
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It’s very scalar – but I added a couple of points of interest:
1. the little descending turn around allows you to play the basic ascending idea starting on both up and down strokes.
2. I started on the tritone (if played over E minor) or the b3 (if played over G major) instead of the root. If you’re playing this over G – think Bluegrass metal ; )
3. The motion is more diagonally oriented than the strict pentatonic example but is the same basic approach. I start the lick with my first finger and then shift positions for the D on the 12th fret of the D string and the D on the HighE.
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Here is an mp3: Lick1
As variation – I took the same concept and applied it in a more positional approach. Be careful with this stretch! If it hurts stop immediately!!!
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Here is an mp3: Lick 2
And finally here are the 2 licks played back to back: backtoback 1
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Laptop Rig
So I bit the bullet and got an apogee duet. WOW! It really has made a stunning difference in resolution and I suspect will help a lot with future mixes I’m working on. With that in mind I wanted to share with the rig I used for the mp3s above.
Here was the basic amp setting I used in Pod Farm 2.0. This was based on a customtone forum patch called Electric Gypsy. I just swapped in a tube screamer and bypassed the cab (using the Recabinet impulse responses instead). One of the big revelations that I found in pod farm is that I could put preamps AFTER the power amp. Adding that in to the signal chain opened it up a lot.
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I blogged about using impulse responses over the cabs before. The lie 6 cabs sound good – but to my ears the IR’s add a whole other area of depth. Here are the IR’s I used – these were from the Modern 1960 4×12 set. The screen shot is from LA convolver.
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Finally – a screenshot of how it all lays out in AULab. I just hit the record button in au lab and edited out the noise before and after the take in fission.
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FNH Guitar –> Apogee Duet–>AULAB–>PSP Vintage Warmer–>Pod Farm 2.0–>La Convolver (w. Recabinet IRs)–>Sooperlooper
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I’m still tweaking things – but I think that soundwise everything is improving a lot from where it was even a month ago. Once I get an A/B set with the floorboard – I think that the laptop is going to be the rig du jour.
One last note – the macbook has is using 4 gigs of ram and was updated with a 7200 rpm Seagte internal drive. (500 gig from OWC). My computer accepts a 4gig chip in 1 slot – so I may go up to 6 gigs – but the faster internal drive made a big performance difference in the machine. I’d say you’d really need to have that if you’re going to try to go this route.
* Note – I’ve recently posted more on this topic here which may be of interest to you.