When is a Good Time to Add Guitar Effects to My Playing
- Katie McKenzie
- Jul 31, 2015
- 2 min read
You go into a gig and see a person playing a guitar with a monstrous pedal board in front of him. His hands are barely moving, yet he has tons of sounds and noise coming from his rig. Sound familiar? It's all smoke and mirrors, disguising the fact that the guitarist doesn't really have a grasp of his instrument and hides behind sound and guitar effects.
Figure Out Your Your Flavor
I didn't use a multitude of effects growing up simply because I could not afford them and I was forced to play with what I had. The beauty of this situation was that I discovered MY sound in MY fingers first. You can take the same guitar and hand it to different guitarists and they would each make it sound differently. Don't bury your playing with a lot of "cake icing" from effects without discovering your own flavor first.
Bake a Solid Cake
Baking a cake takes a while and there are no shortcuts. The same principle applies to being a truly skillful musician. Put the time and energy into your actual playing, knowledge, practice, and learning your instrument before you go effects crazy. Often, players become lazy when they rely on effects too much. There are several techniques that you can do with your hands that are easier done with a pedal, for example, a call and response delay or a harmonized guitar part, etc. Make your cake solid before you ice it.
Being More Creative With Your Icing
What I am NOT a saying is that "effects are bad." On the contrary, I believe they are awesome and extremely useful. The great thing about being a skillful muscian is that you can still make the same effects as a lesser skilled musician, but you can do things the lesser skilled musician can't do. It doesn't detract from the value of effects; it adds. It's way easier to establish your skill then add effects, than to be too effect heavy and add skill later. You won't be hiding a “so-so" cake with icing.Sorry this
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