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Gorecki

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Posts posted by Gorecki

  1. not to hijack but did yngwie invent scalloping (by invent i mean introduce it to the world)

    Richie blackmore from deep purple used scalloped fingerboards too.

    Some other guy did it even earlier but I cant remember his name.

    And...Yngwie was a huge Blackmore fan as a youth, oooh how ironic. :D

    John McLaughlin made some work of it and let's not forget India whose music is based on the exact same idea and the ability to bend a string hard. It's been around a very long time, but for many applications it's not practical.

    I'd like to see someone play a Maj6 , dom7#5#9 chord shapes on a scalloped board and keep it in tune. :D

  2. i'm brand spankin new here, in fact, i registered because i wanted to get some feedback on these ravenwest guitars.

    what is the general concensus on them?

    In a nutshell, they're cheap. Setup well will play but I suspect they won't last a long time. The quilts are a material finish (not real wood) and I saw one with a ding in it, looked like peeling wallpaper. :D

    Don't get me wrong, I think they *look* okay but looks is pretty much a temporary thing if the guitar isn't made to last.

  3. I agree as well, this is a common jazz player technique. Pick & three fingers is all you need, the tune never uses more than four notes/strings during the intro. :D

    I recommend that technique too... Recently, I've been trying to get it, since a lot of players do that and it's a good skill to have as a guitarist... And Stairway to Heaven is also a really good practice at doing that! :D

    Anyways, good luck.

  4. He tried using cheaper pine for the bodies for a while, too.
    :D That's interesting - when I was (a lot) younger, we were always told that the original switch from pine to ash was because ash was cheaper (at the time) and looked better under the translucent finishes - since the impetus for the first rosewood fretboards was the fact that maple looked "dirty" under TV lighting, I wasn't surprised. I wonder which is actually true.

    Didn't Gibson make their guitars from mahogany because they had a ton of it available?

    I would suspect in part, yes, and in part because mahogany's a very traditional guitar wood, and Gibson was always a traditional company (mahogany back/sides/necks, even tops, are very common in acoustics). Alder and Ash...not s'much.

    Maple is/was also a readily available wood in Michigan, Alder and Ash...not much of that around there.

  5. If there's a guitar I really can't stomach, it's a Tele modified to be something completely different, like a Tele with humbuckers, or a Tele with a Floyd, or a Tele with a Jackson neck, that kinda stuff roils my innerds, but I'm sure some of mine would roil the innerds of some Telecaster purists too, so oh well. :D

    So I take it you're not interesting in building a tele with hums and putting .011 flat's on it either. Bummer. :D Thought that could make a mello combo. B)

  6. Hey guys!

    Yea SPL - Sound pressure level hehe my Music Technology A levels kinda get drilled into your head :D

    Although its a Transfex, as far as im aware there are NO physically tubes in there, just uses "transtube" technology (Peaveys answer to tubes?)

    However there is a rather mean looking heatsink system hanging down in the back of the cab and vents along the top so heat must be an issue origanally

    So hows plan B sound, Use this as a head unit and buy myself a nice 2x12 closed cab to run from this so i get a true 2x12 closed back sound?

    Should i opt for 4x12?

    ~~ TS ~~

    I'd have to be honest and say go for the 2x12, you'll get really tired of hauling around 4x12. Here's my rig after I sold off the bottoms and the puppy still doesn't move now. :D

    346546670_l.jpg

  7. Yeah, I presume he means sound pressure level. The only thing I would add is 1. It may not sound better. It may incorporate resonance points because of the enclosure that don't sound 'good'. 2. It is possible to 'resonate' a poorly constructed enclosure to the point of falling apart but I highly doubt it.

  8. I think its going to be hard to find a 7 string that cheap with a floyd rose as wel dude :D

    Washburn has made one that are still around. WG-587V

    I have one, after a refret and some Dimarzio blaze pickups, it turned out pretty okay. :D

    They feel IMO much like a lower-end Jackson.

  9. I have Sonar 4 and was wondering, is recording through an amp the best way? Or should I just go straight into my audio interface? I am new to recording and am curious!

    I really depends on what you want as results and what you have to work with. If your amp has a direct out, modeling 'stuff', what have you...give it a try. Simple way to get decent results (no worries about environmental noise, mic'g..etc). Sometimes you may want the sound of a collective environment, the sound of a room, the reasonance of speaker cabinets, the tone produced through those speakers...etc...these things are more difficult to achieve because what you hear standing in that room vs what you get recorded will possibly differ greatly. Take's some time and patience but often produces super results if handled well.

  10. That said, there are some thousand-dollar units (Mackie) out there that are not as good as the Behringer.

    Sorry but that is pretty much one of the least exprienced expressions I've heard in a while. :D

    Pretty much every Behringer mixer or pre made has cheap pots and cheap faders and if you get one that all channels still work after 3 years, you're lucky.

    When it comes to mixer's or pre-amp units (especially pre-amp units), you get what you pay for!

    I'd suggest the Mackie 1202-VLZ PRO or Mackie 1604-VLZ PRO (this one's over budget a bit). Really depends on application, how many buses you'll need...etc. The pre's are very clean, the pots, faders and switches on both are the same quality. Just go to a music store, move a fader up and down on a Behringer then go do the same on a Mackie. You'll see. :D

  11. I have to agree with Robert_the_damned, I've been using a tiny SpiderII 30 in a Jazz club ever week. I expected the little guy to explode but people really like it and the reason I got it had nothing to do with Jazz! :D

    Also, I like my GuitarPort a lot, the TonePort is great as well! :D

  12. I don't know for sure but I think a good guess would be that the DC resistance is in the 8-9K range. I managed to find out the ACH-2 is 17k and following the overal theme of the artcore series I think about 8 or 9k would have been the approprate value. :D if you've got the guitar there its not hard to measure it yourself if you've got a ohm meter of some kind if you stick a cable in the input and turn all controlls to 10 and select only that pickup you can measure it on the other end of the lead without taking the guitar to bits.

    I've never really looked at Benedetto pickups before but the A6 looks like a good choice for a neck pickup. B) though I do like a fair bit of oopfh with my neck pickups so its your choice really. you shouldn't have any probelms with balacing it against the ACH-2 at least

    pfft..didn't even think of using a super short cable to test it out..duh. :D

    Not worried at all in balancing out with the bridge pickup, actually don't ever expect to use the bridge pickup so figured I'd leave the stock in, no one would know. The stock pickup isn't aweful but doesn't seem very defined so I started thinking of options!

    Thanks dude! :D

  13. I just ordered a Peavey PV10 http://www.musiciansfriend.com/product/Liv...xers?sku=631368 we just need a small one for practicing I got the Nardy because it was 300W's but that doesn't mater if it doesn't work. At least with Peavey I've got a good named brand mixer. I'll send the Nardy back Monday just in case the Peavey doesn't make it in by Saturday.

    Well if you look into the spec's of the Nady, I'll be willing to bet its 300w is at 10% THD (total harmonic distortion) or something and when broken down to a REAL power rating (.05%) will probably be more like 50w-75w.

    Amplification spec's can be twisted heavily so knowing *what* that rating is based on is the *truth teller*.

  14. Holy cow! Guessing Google doesn't know it's offering this stuff up.

    Just for clarification, the act of piracy is bi-directional, giving away of commercial material and receiving of commercial material without payment, is theft.

    I know, I'm a buzz kill. :D

  15. well some of thsoe things i would consider Phrasing. to me phrasnig is note choice and how you play them. i know exactly what you talking bout, but i cannot apply it. i took AP music and passed the test w/ a 4 but the teacher taught the whole class relative to vocal and piano. i cant get my knowledge from the piano/vocal to guitar. this is why i beleive i need a guitar teacher. melody is a hard thing for me to write.

    i was thinking maybe just mimic some vocal lines in pop music to get the hang of it, to see what theyre doing thats so catchy and nice. i guess im better at practicing than writing and thats what got me into this problem. i really like marty friedman and paul gilberts styles. but i do not want to be them. to me they are a great example of a melodic and technically good guitarist.

    thanks for the help

    The most practical way of creating melody is to sing it. If you can't sing it, it's probably not a melody. Music doesn't care what the instrument is, only the notes that are expressed. The guys you mentioned are good technical players and do play the correct structure over their changes but ARE NOT the greatest examples of melody. Take things to the simplest level, Mary had a little lamb. Now what just went through your head? A melody. Twinkle twinkle little star.....again, what did you hear in your head?

    Melody comes from the head, not the hands. It takes practice, and lots of it. A good simple start, play a major scale and sing along with that major scale. Now play twinkle, twinkle little star, and sing it while playing it. You don't have to sing like Jeff Tate! Just enough to find pitch.

  16. Rob, what do you feel is your short coming? Really! Some things will make us work harder than others, but what do YOU feel you are lacking? Song writing when the ball falls is up to the listener. What point do you feel your communication with the listener fall's short?

    what i think...i need to work on songwriting and phrasing, which is what i said.

    i posted the link to see what the "general" guitar playing community would think. not just the shred heads, when i posted in a shred forum i didnt get one bad comment, so i posted here to see what the general consensus would be so i could see what other people thought.

    What do I hear? The same thing that others have fell short of, plastering harmonic, melodic minor play over and over again, it get's boring quickly?

    what exactly do you mean?

    Okay, songwriting and phrasing. It sounds as though you have a good idea of what you're emulating but it's been done and been done more correctly. Regardless of that, you're lacking correct theory behind those changes. I've heard you play straight major over suggested dominants, minor scale like phrasing over major suggested chords, minor penta's is fine, but would turn what you're doing into basic blues, not your intention would be my guess, suggesting you need theory work. Just because you're not playing the 3rd doesn't mean the listener doesn't hear it! Harmonically you've already decided harmonic scope by the key signature you're playing inside. The ear expects it, especially a trained one.

    The thing that is otherwise lacking in songwriting is the key number one required element that constitutes a song. Melody! Not just flailing over changes. Melody! Especially in the style you've chosen, melody has a higher requirement of technical correctness with correct embellishment. Listen to Bach, Mozart, Gorecki :D , you'll hear Melody!

    If your intended listener likes what you're doing, at least you're getting that result. And when presenting to a "general" guitar crowd, don't expect to get "exprienced" responses.

    Cool? :D

  17. i have actually been working on phrasing and song writing because i suck at that. thats harder to do than to learn a new technique. im having alot of trouble with it for some reason. i think im going to get lessons so i actually have someone to critique me and help me work on just song writing skills. thanks for the advice.

    Rob, what do you feel is your short coming? Really! Some things will make us work harder than others, but what do YOU feel you are lacking? Song writing when the ball falls is up to the listener. What point do you feel your communication with the listener fall's short?

    What do I hear? The same thing that others have fell short of, plastering harmonic, melodic minor play over and over again, it get's boring quickly?

    What do you think?

  18. You're not going to understand the 'whole music' through tab!

    hey the fact that i was searching for a blues saraceno tab doesnt have anything to do with me learning to be a good musician. i just wanna have the music sheet of that certain track. thats all. and another thing, it will help you a lot in understanding it easier if you analyze other player's style.. i.e. analyzing how saraceno approached the blues music then comparing it to another artist, while learning the blues fundamental itself...

    BUT, i still wanna have that tab! :D

    Okay, okay. Just so you understand, Some of us are not that remedial of players!

    What you're looking for sounds like a commercial product

    http://www.sheetmusicplus.com/store/smp_de...88&item=7204191

  19. Im not sure. lol

    I guess what Im looking for is websites with theory on acoustic playing.

    I'm trying to figure this out, theory isn't acoustic/electric specific. Most often acoustic play is associated to cowboy chords and strummin. Granted some 'method' or 'style' can be involved but I can't seem to see what you're looking for.

    Is there something specific you're looking to learn?

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