Chankgeez wrote:We should have a game show à la Name That Tune
Inconuucl: I can shoegaze that tune with 5 pedals. other contestant: I can shoegaze that tune with 4 pedals. Inconuucl: I can shoegaze that tune with 3 pedals. other contestant: OK, shoegaze that tune! Inconuucl:
I had been giving some thought to finally getting another vintage Memory Man, but this Syncopy demo sounds great. Considering the cost of 70s units and possible maintenance fees involved, maybe this is a better acquisition. Those warbled sounds around 4:00 are especially nice. I could do that with a Replicator, but it's even more lo-fi and intrusive than this clip.
Quietly there were 10+ reverb pedals at NAMM back in January, but now the weirder & deeper stuff is rolling out. The Kilpatrick Redox should be shipping shortly. It's a desktop unit with 99 internal presets and a built-in looper. Redox was designed with electronic instruments in mind, and you're supposed to be able to add several modulation and distortion effects to the reverbs. I'm definitely intrigued by something that was made with synths in consideration.
It's been implied that the new Alexander will be available by year's end as well. I'm not sure if that will be a Sky Fi NEO or something that channels the old Alesis Quadraverb.
Chase Bliss’s YouTube series Analog Heart Season 2 has had hints like a whiteboard with “analog reverb?” written on it. Some people assumed fake out. Probably based on the MN3011 multi-tap bbd (or two to make the individual taps less distinct?). If so, it won’t be a replacement for a Neunaber or Strymon. I’m hoping that some of the awesome artifacts and weirdness like the Thermae produces is part of the mix.
D.o.S. wrote:Broadly speaking, if we at ILF are dropping 300 bucks on a pedal it probably sounds like an SNES holocaust.
friendship wrote:death to false bleep-blop
UglyCasanova wrote:brb gonna slap my dick on my stomp boxes