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So a lot of what's common in rock-a-billy music and early music like that, a lot of
Western music, Country and Western music, early country, was the use of a large reverb,
but most commonly it was a slap back delay. And that's an effect that was more or less
honed in on over the years and you can get that effect with a delay pedal.
To achieve that setting what you want is you want a very quick response from the note or
chord that you played. It's not a stereo effect, but it is a direct sample that happens in
you know, a millisecond later. You're not really thinking about milliseconds. You're
really just trying to get the quickest response; so that it sounds like the note or chord you
played is bouncing off a wall right back at you or you're in a cavernous hall or recording
studio; to get that effect of space.
So what I've done here in order to achieve this slap back delay is I have the; let's
start on the right; I have the blend setting right about 12 o'clock, so that I'm getting
an even amount of clean sound from my guitar versus the effect level. The middle is the
feedback, which is pretty far down, I'd say about 9 o'clock. If you listen, what ends
up happening is it reacts with the delay setting which is next to it.
The delay is; let's go over here to the *** on the left. Now you're hearing a little bit
of the pitch shift and that is very common in the analog delay pedals. Because the tape
delays that they had such as the Echoplex; when you would adjust the delay setting and
the speed you would slow down the tape; and you would get almost like the loop would slow
down, so fast that you would almost a pitch shift.
That's not intentional, but it is an effect that you can use with these pedals that's
pretty cool. So as I increase the delay setting, you hear that? That's the delay time, so what
you're hearing is you're hearing the amount of time in between each note, increasing or
decreasing in speed. As I decrease the ***, you hear it's pretty quick. Now if you adjust
the feedback setting, let's see how that is.
So now what we're doing is we're increasing to a minimum and maximum level of the amount
of the repeats. Speed of repeat with the delay setting, amount of repeats with the feedback
setting. And as far as the language, every pedal has
a different way of-- a different name they may call it, but that's basically it.