Wrong? That's a pretty strong word. I don't think there is a wrong way
to play amped, it's not exactly rocket science, and you discover that a
tight cup on the mic gives you the driven sound, and then take that away
and you get the lighter sounds... I grabbed a big amp (Fender Bassman
410 reissue) and mic pretty early. Didn't know what I was looking for at
the time. Had a ton of fun with that rig though. Now I've taken a step
back, a reboot as it were, to refine techniques etc, I haven't played
that same rig in at least 5 years. Do I still have an amp? Yeah, a
better one (imho). I picked up one of Purdy's Harpgear I amps. An amp
that size will color your tone, let you hear the different settings on a
delay pedal, make you work to produce a lick amped correctly... Either
way, garbage in, garbage out. You have to know the harp before you
become an amplified virtuoso.
Or you could put a smile on your face and just play. One thing Harp-L is
notorious for, since day one almost, is the need to pick apart the big
picture, until you have pieces of info, so minute in detail, you forget
what you were looking at.
Keep blowin' the chrome,
Kim
On Jan 10, 2009, at 2:19 PM, Howard Chandler wrote:
Ray Beltran wrote:
It's really not as simple as picking up a mic and blowing.
This is a statement I can whole heartedly endorse.
I also agree if it ain't fun you're doing it wrong.
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