Alot of well made points in this discussion by Bill, Marty and Donnel and I agree with each from each individual perspective.
So, I guess Im saying that subtle effects can be important overall, even if they are complicated and not immediately noticed by the audience. Plus, noodling with gear is fun I think we all agree on that!
Exactly Bill and probably the reason I'll end up with a Strymon.
the two things that matter most to most, is, yes whether it sounds good or bad, but most importantly--how good are the vocals, and how consistent is the rhythm(how good is the drummer), the two fundamentals of music
Absolutely Marty. Most people on the floor are listening to/ watching the vocalist- and it's great when they acknowledge what people are playing/ solos etc.
Drummer can make or break everything-and you do have to lock in- no argument. It's easier when they are rock solid as we all know.
Also, I would be happy(though not satisfied) with the mix in the room being more favorable than my own sound, because it doesn't matter HOW good you have it dialed in, a bad mix will deem it irrelevant right quick.
Totally correct Marty. What we hear isn't the final mix which is in someone else's hands/ ears. So even when we think we sound good it can end up a truth or a relative truth.
when it comes to delay details, or rate settings on phaser, flangers, etc...that's all good, but in the end it's just fluff for our heads as the degree that it has a substantial impact on the audience takes a nose dive, compared to whether or not your core clean and dirty tones are happening.
I think this gets to the heart of what I was saying Marty. Sum of the parts etc.
I'll want it as perfect as human error will allow for. I even have outlets for expression pedals on the AD-900 to control time and repeats which can be nuanced when playing. But the clean and overdrive sounds centrality stands well.
I mean, there's something to be said for Santana STILL getting to sound check early to make sure everything is spot on...it's another if you're of the Eric Johnson/Tom Scholz camp and take 8 years to make a follow up record
Yep and rehearsal is where most of it happens. Over the summer we'll be playing festivals where you won't even get a soundcheck and you're plugging in while the last mob is walking off while the MC is announcing you let alone 8 years to tweak a delay( I've got it down to 5
).
From a performance psychology point, all the things you guys are touching on make total sense. The player is going to be closer to his max performance when a certain set of variables are in place.
Absolutely Donnel.
That's where the right delay can be the right tool and all I was saying was for me the AD-900 will be that more often than most.
I'll tweak till the cows come home when time allows and will probably buy an El Capistan I was just saying it's a solid workhorse under pressure that will allow you to play wthout sweating the minutiae which the OCD in me will always strive for.
I mention this because I really do believe that there is a "sonic" artist role that can surface for musicians of any playing level.
There is more exploration on the fringe of sound and song structure that can be hard to put your finger on, but it works.
Yep...it's why some guys will use a chorus for The Police as well as the Pretenders- and some will HAVE to have the Electric Mistress in preference to the Hartman on the board........
Thanks for all viewpoints and for Donner moving it into this forum.