Holy Grail -> DIRGE Soiled Mass Prototype -> MXR Delay (mix output to Sovtek stack, delay only output to Verellen)

Moderator: Ghost Hip



KLON KLON KLON KLONTom Dalton wrote:Like a phoenix's butt, it will rise from the asses.

skullservant wrote:Last night.
Holy Grail -> DIRGE Soiled Mass Prototype -> MXR Delay (mix output to Sovtek stack, delay only output to Verellen)

Iommic Pope wrote: Skip, you rule. You hate people so much, you're willing to discredit all human progress, its awesome.

Music out on all streaming services and bandcamp and what not.


skullservant wrote:Thanks Ancient.
And YES, Goroth I've been highly considering a second Goodbye24 because how how many sounds are in it

rfurtkamp wrote:The only transparent thing I own is a set of drinking glasses.

goroth wrote:Re: goodbye 24: It is awesome. Almost genius in the way it takes a known concept and messes with it. It's kinda a delay, except not.
It's like a bucket, that you constantly fill with what you're playing. As it fills it empties too. One knob controls the bucket size, the other varies how fast you tip sounds out of the bucket, and what direction you tip the sound, and the other knob controls how much of the sound gets recycled out of the bucket and back in again.
Fourth knob is a mix knob
You can vary the size of the buffer (bucket in the analogy) so it's tiny and sounds like a ring mod, or tremolo, or longer like a delay.
By adjusting the rate the buffer plays back your delay can be unison or faster (pitch shifted up) slower (pitch shifted down) or forwards or backwards. Depending on the buffer size and play back you can get octave sounds or flangey sounds, or octave delays.
By adjusting the feedback you can get long delays or rainbow machine unicorn jizz.
The best thing is the algorithms are kinda lofi, so when feedback is low it sounds fairly pristine, but increasing the feedback introduces a bunch of great artefacts.
I could easily have three on a board, seriously. I can't even count how many radically different and useable sounds I can get out of this pedal.
I'm sold, must have.oldangelmidnight wrote:This is the classic ILF I love. Emotional highs and lows. Scooped mids in my heart all day long.

goroth wrote:Re: goodbye 24: It is awesome. Almost genius in the way it takes a known concept and messes with it. It's kinda a delay, except not.
It's like a bucket, that you constantly fill with what you're playing. As it fills it empties too. One knob controls the bucket size, the other varies how fast you tip sounds out of the bucket, and what direction you tip the sound, and the other knob controls how much of the sound gets recycled out of the bucket and back in again.
Fourth knob is a mix knob
You can vary the size of the buffer (bucket in the analogy) so it's tiny and sounds like a ring mod, or tremolo, or longer like a delay.
By adjusting the rate the buffer plays back your delay can be unison or faster (pitch shifted up) slower (pitch shifted down) or forwards or backwards. Depending on the buffer size and play back you can get octave sounds or flangey sounds, or octave delays.
By adjusting the feedback you can get long delays or rainbow machine unicorn jizz.
The best thing is the algorithms are kinda lofi, so when feedback is low it sounds fairly pristine, but increasing the feedback introduces a bunch of great artefacts.
I could easily have three on a board, seriously. I can't even count how many radically different and useable sounds I can get out of this pedal.
Gunner Recall wrote:This thread is bad and everyone in it should feel bad.
https://soundcloud.com/hbombgraphicsIommic Pope wrote:This thread is mediocre at best, but I encourage everyone posting in it to feel as awesome as possible.


goroth wrote:Re: goodbye 24: It is awesome. Almost genius in the way it takes a known concept and messes with it. It's kinda a delay, except not.
It's like a bucket, that you constantly fill with what you're playing. As it fills it empties too. One knob controls the bucket size, the other varies how fast you tip sounds out of the bucket, and what direction you tip the sound, and the other knob controls how much of the sound gets recycled out of the bucket and back in again.
Fourth knob is a mix knob
You can vary the size of the buffer (bucket in the analogy) so it's tiny and sounds like a ring mod, or tremolo, or longer like a delay.
By adjusting the rate the buffer plays back your delay can be unison or faster (pitch shifted up) slower (pitch shifted down) or forwards or backwards. Depending on the buffer size and play back you can get octave sounds or flangey sounds, or octave delays.
By adjusting the feedback you can get long delays or rainbow machine unicorn jizz.
The best thing is the algorithms are kinda lofi, so when feedback is low it sounds fairly pristine, but increasing the feedback introduces a bunch of great artefacts.
I could easily have three on a board, seriously. I can't even count how many radically different and useable sounds I can get out of this pedal.

KLON KLON KLON KLONTom Dalton wrote:Like a phoenix's butt, it will rise from the asses.

insubordination wrote:Officer Bukowski wrote:Thanks!
I wish I had the coordination to throw my flanger and maybe my pitch shifter on there, but for what I'm doing this setup rules
Nah, why spoil a good thing? Simple is good. I can see a lot of fun happening with that!
skullservant wrote:Last night.
Holy Grail -> DIRGE Soiled Mass Prototype -> MXR Delay (mix output to Sovtek stack, delay only output to Verellen)
So how's the MXR?

hbombgraphics wrote:goroth wrote:Re: goodbye 24: It is awesome. Almost genius in the way it takes a known concept and messes with it. It's kinda a delay, except not.
It's like a bucket, that you constantly fill with what you're playing. As it fills it empties too. One knob controls the bucket size, the other varies how fast you tip sounds out of the bucket, and what direction you tip the sound, and the other knob controls how much of the sound gets recycled out of the bucket and back in again.
Fourth knob is a mix knob
You can vary the size of the buffer (bucket in the analogy) so it's tiny and sounds like a ring mod, or tremolo, or longer like a delay.
By adjusting the rate the buffer plays back your delay can be unison or faster (pitch shifted up) slower (pitch shifted down) or forwards or backwards. Depending on the buffer size and play back you can get octave sounds or flangey sounds, or octave delays.
By adjusting the feedback you can get long delays or rainbow machine unicorn jizz.
The best thing is the algorithms are kinda lofi, so when feedback is low it sounds fairly pristine, but increasing the feedback introduces a bunch of great artefacts.
I could easily have three on a board, seriously. I can't even count how many radically different and useable sounds I can get out of this pedal.
I think we need a whole thread where you just describe what pedals do,
Music out on all streaming services and bandcamp and what not.

skullservant wrote:The MXR RULES! It's one of the few delays that I've tried that has a 'delay only' output which contains no dry signal. So I've got it biamped with my Sovtek and Verellen, the Verellen has nothing but trails and echos and the Sovtek has the mixed signal. Super lush, and I've set it up for the max delay time RIGHT on the edge of oscillation. I'm really in love with how it pans things as well. Tonight I'm going to throw my Stereo reverb after the MXR and see how it sounds, but I have a feeling it won't disappoint!
And I'm super stoked on this dirty boost! I'm still testing out the prototype in different situations such as a pedal with a buffer in front of it to see how it reacts, and with different pickups and stuff, but I think I'm pretty close to figuring out the final concoction! PM me if you want to try out the proto!!