Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
In this example I'm going to show, again, using the delay effect, but using it for some
different contexts. I adjusted the rate, so the rate I have it at now is. Which, if I
look at it, I am at fifty five hundred milliseconds, just so you know. If you happen to have this
same pedal, I have a digital delay petal. Anyways, so what I'm going to do here is just
show some example licks of how you can, or also with chords, how you can use this effect
and do nice multi-layerings like you may hear in the music of U2, or any number of other
acts spanning over the last couple of decades or so. So anyways, what I'm going to do here
is just basically do a E major arpeggio, and starting on the seventh fret on the A string,
which is E, and then playing on the D, the sixth fret G on the fourth fret, fifth fret
E coming back so, and then fourth fret on the E string, fifth fret on B, fourth on G,
just back to the root note of B. So what I'm going to do here is go. Because you can hear
this, I'm increasing the tempo, being a nice delay effect. What I'm getting there, it's
kind of a doubling effect with my arpeggio, so the tempo you want to be is right around
there. One, two, three, four. One, two, three, four. One, two, three, four. One, two. Have
a nice sounding, kind of spacey sounding effect with your arpeggio.