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Guitar equipment, Part 2/2 2/20/13 MUS1472 Brendan Lake.

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Presentation on theme: "Guitar equipment, Part 2/2 2/20/13 MUS1472 Brendan Lake."— Presentation transcript:

1 Guitar equipment, Part 2/2 2/20/13 MUS1472 Brendan Lake

2 Overview Pedals Cables Microphones Things everyone should have ONLY SLIDES IN BLUE WILL HAVE INFORMATION ON THE MIDTERM

3 Electronic Pedals Units that alter the signal going from the guitar into the amplifier

4 Video Demo: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H43qtMmgeVU Overdrive/Distortion: adds distortion/”fuzz” to the sound Chorus: Thickens your sound by reproducing the signal slightly off, several times over Wah: varies the timbre from muffled to bright, imitating a vocalist widening and closing their mouth Digital Delay: creates an echo effect Loop: allows you to record music and play back in a repeating loop

5 Cables Two main types of connection: XLR and TRS – XLR: microphones (primarily) – TRS: Guitar and speaker cables (both use ¼”) TRS = Tip/Ring/Sleeve, also used in 3.5mm headphones

6 Guitar cables vs. Speaker cables Both use ¼” TRS, but should not be mixed up Guitar cables: connect your guitar to the amplifier, to/from pedals, to/from a mixer Speaker cables: from the mixer/power amp outputting into loudspeakers/cabinets (for instance, in a half stack from the head to the cabinet)

7 Cable mix-ups Guitar cables handle very low current signals and are shielded to maintain clarity Speaker cables carry power and large currents Using a guitar cable where a speaker cable should be can melt some cable components and will pose a risk to your amp Using a speaker cable instead of a guitar cable is less harmful, but you’ll get buzzing from the lack of shielding

8 Microphones Terms/things to know – Dynamic Mic: basic microphone, cheaper, good for low level musical performances and public speaking – Condenser Mic: fancier, more expensive, more sensitive, quicker response, requires “phantom power” (electricity flowing to/from the mic to assist with signal clarity)

9 More terms: – Omnidirectional – collects sound from all directions – Cardioid – standard uni-directional, collects sound from one direction (with a little pickup from behind the mic) Hyper-Cardioid – Tighter areas of sound collection Super-Cardioid – Tightest area of sound collection

10 Things every serious guitarist should have Capo – to quickly change keys String winder/cutter – to assist in changing strings Microfiber cloth and a good guitar polish Good tuner, preferably a contact-tuner Metronome (also available online) Back-up cables (for electric guitarists) Humidifier (for acoustic guitarists) Depending on your preferred style, this list will obviously vary

11 Questions?


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