@@hermankarels Thanks Herman! It took a long time to "master" this solo, and I say "master" because I keep making mistakes sometimes when I play it haha
Hello man, great cover! I would really love it if you could tell me some of your settings for that electric guitar tone. I'm trying to create a strong, energetic ,powerful ,bright tone that's good for shredding and sweeping, but without the distortion hitting like a death metal riff. What should I watch out for?
@@Rwko. Hi, thanks! Glad you liked it. It depends, if you want a lead tone, with the Archetype Petrucci, focus on having good mids but not sound twangy (for this, make sure you have good mid bass and keep the central mids balanced), don't go overboard with the treble because the tone will be earpiercing and will lose body, and do not pass the bass at 3/4 or half, use the distortion between 1 and 2 o'clock and then activate the overdrive with the volume at maximum and the drive at 0 and adjust the tone to taste. Those settings are the ones that work with my guitar but on each guitar it will be different. Hope that helps!
Haha thanks for the compliment Arn! It's one thing to do it in the comfort of my studio, but to be able to do it in front of many people, I would have to calm my nerves somehow haha
I just realized that when I bought my Falling into Infinity CD in 1997, in my teens, you were not born yet. But you play these early DT stuff so well. It’s as if you heard them as they came out.
@@ArnHaz I was born 10 days after Falling into Infinity came out haha, I started listening to DT approximately 12 years ago, and for many years it was the only thing I listened to, that's why I pay close attention to the details, whether in tone, vibratos, bends, etc.
@@lucianorosica Why did you gravitate towards DT, if I may ask? Somebody else in the family listened to them? Your own discovery? Prog metal is kind of thriving all the time so may be that's the reason?
@@ArnHaz My parents listen to a lot of music, my father more towards the rock side, progressive rock, hard rock, funk, and my mother more towards music like The Beatles, Creedence, The Police, Michael Jackson, INXS and all that style of music. You could say that growing up in an environment of such good music was important. My father's favorite bands are Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin and I grew up listening to that along with many other bands that they listened to. And the riff of Smoke on the Water always caught my attention and because of that riff I started playing the guitar. And well, after several years of playing, what usually happens is that you start to want to play more difficult things and your ear also begins to train and looks for more complex things. One day, my mother, by chance, watched the Liquid Tension Experiment concert on television and called me to listen to it (I was 15 years old). From there I fell in love with that style of music and from there I knew who Petrucci was and I saw that his main band was Dream Theater and I started listening to it, and I never stopped listening to it haha.
Maravillosa interpretación., y el tono perfecto. Luciano Petrucci
Muchas gracias Daniel!
Обожаю Ваше исполнение DT! ❤
@@irasound Большое спасибо!
Tremendo profesional!! Muy buen tono! 🔥🔥
Gracias amigazo, va mejorando jaja
Omg, how could you learn the song so fast? Very well done!!!
@@cailloux44 Thanks Cailloux44!
yea fantastic as expected. good job
Thank you Rudy!
Yessss!! Nice man! I'm working on this solo 3 Years🤪🤪🤪
@@hermankarels Thanks Herman! It took a long time to "master" this solo, and I say "master" because I keep making mistakes sometimes when I play it haha
Same here😅😅😅😅
@@kalaisai680 keep practicing it, it's worth it!
wooow!
@@max_mccolly Thanks Max!
Hello man, great cover! I would really love it if you could tell me some of your settings for that electric guitar tone. I'm trying to create a strong, energetic ,powerful ,bright tone that's good for shredding and sweeping, but without the distortion hitting like a death metal riff. What should I watch out for?
@@Rwko. Hi, thanks! Glad you liked it. It depends, if you want a lead tone, with the Archetype Petrucci, focus on having good mids but not sound twangy (for this, make sure you have good mid bass and keep the central mids balanced), don't go overboard with the treble because the tone will be earpiercing and will lose body, and do not pass the bass at 3/4 or half, use the distortion between 1 and 2 o'clock and then activate the overdrive with the volume at maximum and the drive at 0 and adjust the tone to taste. Those settings are the ones that work with my guitar but on each guitar it will be different. Hope that helps!
@lucianorosica you are a legend, I will try it. Thank you!
@@Rwko. You're welcome!
Moldy vs Simons Cigarette
@@jonatanbaktiantamba4270 🔥🔥
Vibratos ans bends on point... as expected. If anything happens to Petrucci, you could be good replacement for covering his guitar parts.
Haha thanks for the compliment Arn! It's one thing to do it in the comfort of my studio, but to be able to do it in front of many people, I would have to calm my nerves somehow haha
I just realized that when I bought my Falling into Infinity CD in 1997, in my teens, you were not born yet. But you play these early DT stuff so well. It’s as if you heard them as they came out.
@@ArnHaz I was born 10 days after Falling into Infinity came out haha, I started listening to DT approximately 12 years ago, and for many years it was the only thing I listened to, that's why I pay close attention to the details, whether in tone, vibratos, bends, etc.
@@lucianorosica Why did you gravitate towards DT, if I may ask? Somebody else in the family listened to them? Your own discovery? Prog metal is kind of thriving all the time so may be that's the reason?
@@ArnHaz My parents listen to a lot of music, my father more towards the rock side, progressive rock, hard rock, funk, and my mother more towards music like The Beatles, Creedence, The Police, Michael Jackson, INXS and all that style of music. You could say that growing up in an environment of such good music was important. My father's favorite bands are Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin and I grew up listening to that along with many other bands that they listened to. And the riff of Smoke on the Water always caught my attention and because of that riff I started playing the guitar. And well, after several years of playing, what usually happens is that you start to want to play more difficult things and your ear also begins to train and looks for more complex things. One day, my mother, by chance, watched the Liquid Tension Experiment concert on television and called me to listen to it (I was 15 years old). From there I fell in love with that style of music and from there I knew who Petrucci was and I saw that his main band was Dream Theater and I started listening to it, and I never stopped listening to it haha.