Very helpful to clear a few things up for me. I play an Electric-Acoustic mostly, and they always seem to need a little help to color the sound. Thanks!
This was really helpful! Will you please do other effects too? I know you probably don’t play lots of distortion or fuzz live, but you take on how to use them tastefully would be helpful. Also, chorus and overdrive.
This helps a lot. I play exclusively acoustic fingerstyle, mostly acoustic blues, and my interpretations of American songbook and Tin Pan Alley, and really want to incorporate some effects and even looping into my performances. I'm pretty lost when it comes to what I need and how to make it work because most of the videos about gear and how to use it are for electric performers. I have no idea what I should have and what I don't need and all the jargon and music engineering stuff has me confused.
I've been using a tiny amount of hall for the most part lately. I use so little that sometimes I'm not sure if I can even hear it. I only play electrics though, not sure what I would prefer on an acoustic.
reverb is the garlic of acoustic guitar, if you can taste it, you've used too much. it's a flavour, and enhancement, it's meant to be subtle, not burn the senses. i almost like casper esman, but he does this song out in the countryside somewhere, that has so much reverb it's like having the track played twice, but it looks so daft, standing out in the middle of nowhere a million miles form a power outlet, with reverb.
so Fishman's idea of replacing the wet/dry with a "level' knob makes this reverb "specifically designed" for acoustic guitars....ok..? I mean, it sounds good, but the "specifically designed"? ok, ....how?
It handles the signal differently apparently. It lets the original acoustic signal through and adds layers of effects on top. Unlike other pedals that just change the original signal. Apparently!
Thanks for demoing and showing some of the pitfalls when using reverb on an acoustic guitar.
Very helpful to clear a few things up for me. I play an Electric-Acoustic mostly, and they always seem to need a little help to color the sound. Thanks!
This was really helpful! Will you please do other effects too? I know you probably don’t play lots of distortion or fuzz live, but you take on how to use them tastefully would be helpful. Also, chorus and overdrive.
That was really helpful, please do more like this.
This helps a lot. I play exclusively acoustic fingerstyle, mostly acoustic blues, and my interpretations of American songbook and Tin Pan Alley, and really want to incorporate some effects and even looping into my performances. I'm pretty lost when it comes to what I need and how to make it work because most of the videos about gear and how to use it are for electric performers. I have no idea what I should have and what I don't need and all the jargon and music engineering stuff has me confused.
I met Sean in Amsterdam the other day. Was great to have a chat and hope you enjoyed your trip 👌🏼
Ay Max!!! Thanks for saying hi! Amsterdam was great!!
As hard as it is I think a kinda remix(new and improved Sean,Verse young NEW at guitar😮 Sean). Just a thought love what you do thanks.
Still waiting for the RUclips analytics on your lounge pants video. Also, will you be making an analytical video of the analytic video
I've been using a tiny amount of hall for the most part lately. I use so little that sometimes I'm not sure if I can even hear it. I only play electrics though, not sure what I would prefer on an acoustic.
Speaking of knobs, what was the Council of Acoustic Wizard's vote on finger-armor? 🤔
reverb is the garlic of acoustic guitar, if you can taste it, you've used too much. it's a flavour, and enhancement, it's meant to be subtle, not burn the senses.
i almost like casper esman, but he does this song out in the countryside somewhere, that has so much reverb it's like having the track played twice, but it looks so daft, standing out in the middle of nowhere a million miles form a power outlet, with reverb.
so Fishman's idea of replacing the wet/dry with a "level' knob makes this reverb "specifically designed" for acoustic guitars....ok..? I mean, it sounds good, but the "specifically designed"? ok, ....how?
It handles the signal differently apparently. It lets the original acoustic signal through and adds layers of effects on top. Unlike other pedals that just change the original signal. Apparently!