Hey. I have a musical background, but I am not guided by chord names. I first hear the harmony in my head and produce it in notes. As a rule, harmony in shoegaze is I-major, V-minor, 1-major, II-major, V-major. There are plenty of options. If you are interested in chords specifically, then I advise you to look up the names of the chords in popular songs of this genre
for metal guitars - Electric Mint with a clear signal + TPA-1 + Neural DPS Archetype Nolly + Abbey Road Saturator + Tall Reverb 4 + EQ for bass guitar - Shreddgad Precesion with a clear signal + TPA-1 + Neural DPS (Fortin or Nolly) + saturator + reverb + EQ for dream guitar - Electric Mint with a clear signal + JCM900 + reverb + chorus + EQ for synth - Element Stereo + reverb+ EQ
thankss!! Is the distortion from the Archetype Nolly overdrive/distortion pedal or from the amp itself?? And also for the dreamy guitar what is the full name of the JCM900 amp sim?? And last question, Did you use Tall reverb on the dreamy guitar?? what are the settings please I love the guitar tone so much
@@mandy8600 I can tell you the exact effects chains of this video, but I wouldn't recommend them as they are outdated for me Now the most relevant for the fundamental tone of electric guitars is shreddage 3 stratus + Amplitube 5 Then you duplicate the signal 2x, and on one you throw a distortion (any saturator, for example from SoundToys) and throw it into the right ear. And you send the original guitar into your left ear. And you make the 3rd signal completely reverb (and process it with eq) Also a very good guitar for dreamy chords is the Shreddage 3 Telos. But for the main rich guitar tone I don't really like it. As for reverbs, the Tal 4 Reverb is very good. Valhalaa UberMod and Valhalla Retro are good too. A special type of perversion is Reberberate 2 and impulses from the MidiVerb II device But still, if you critically need the tone from this video, then I will give clearer instructions one of these days
@@jassyss8246 thankk youuu for making time to answerr!! I would love to know the chain and the settings of this video can I add you on discord to ask further questions regarding shoegaze tone?
@@jassyss8246 what made you switch to electric mint?? thats all i have atm but the guitar vsts in your other videos seemed to have much more options. electric mint is a pretty good vst but i struggle to make heavier sounds on it
@@weeniebop9825 Electric Mint produces a good dry signal, where you can feel the interaction with the strings and their resonance. For heavy sound or any other with amplification, you need the Neural DSP plugin. The Guitar plugin serves as a dry signal source only. Why I doubt the comfort of the Electric Mint is because it doesn't have a string setting, without fine-tuning notes in Piano Roll. Meaning you can't feel the strings being hit up or down. But the advantage of Electric Mint is that the notes lend themselves well to Velocity correction in the Piano Roll, so you can try to create this effect through the Piano Roll, by adjusting the desired duration and volume of the notes. For example, Shreddage 3 has a function for emulating up and down strings, but the notes themselves in Piano Roll are not subject to Velocity correction, unlike Electric Mint. So Shreddage 3 has more potential, but it’s very difficult to master the settings
that mid-song bpm shift was really dope
This was not intended, this is just a demonstration of the general tone :)) By the way, the bass guitar doesn’t sound very good here :c
This is absolutely sickkkkk
Great sound on this.
What chords are you using for this type of Shoegaze stuff ?
Hey. I have a musical background, but I am not guided by chord names. I first hear the harmony in my head and produce it in notes. As a rule, harmony in shoegaze is I-major, V-minor, 1-major, II-major, V-major. There are plenty of options. If you are interested in chords specifically, then I advise you to look up the names of the chords in popular songs of this genre
Thanks man@@jassyss8246
so good. which guitar plugin are you using for distortion.
Neural: Archetype Cory Wong or Archetype Nolly
you so good!
woowowow what vst pedal are you using for your lead guitar
for metal guitars - Electric Mint with a clear signal + TPA-1 + Neural DPS Archetype Nolly + Abbey Road Saturator + Tall Reverb 4 + EQ
for bass guitar - Shreddgad Precesion with a clear signal + TPA-1 + Neural DPS (Fortin or Nolly) + saturator + reverb + EQ
for dream guitar - Electric Mint with a clear signal + JCM900 + reverb + chorus + EQ
for synth - Element Stereo + reverb+ EQ
thankss!! Is the distortion from the Archetype Nolly overdrive/distortion pedal or from the amp itself??
And also for the dreamy guitar what is the full name of the JCM900 amp sim??
And last question, Did you use Tall reverb on the dreamy guitar?? what are the settings please I love the guitar tone so much
@@mandy8600 I can tell you the exact effects chains of this video, but I wouldn't recommend them as they are outdated for me
Now the most relevant for the fundamental tone of electric guitars is shreddage 3 stratus + Amplitube 5
Then you duplicate the signal 2x, and on one you throw a distortion (any saturator, for example from SoundToys) and throw it into the right ear. And you send the original guitar into your left ear. And you make the 3rd signal completely reverb (and process it with eq)
Also a very good guitar for dreamy chords is the Shreddage 3 Telos. But for the main rich guitar tone I don't really like it. As for reverbs, the Tal 4 Reverb is very good. Valhalaa UberMod and Valhalla Retro are good too. A special type of perversion is Reberberate 2 and impulses from the MidiVerb II device
But still, if you critically need the tone from this video, then I will give clearer instructions one of these days
@@jassyss8246 thankk youuu for making time to answerr!! I would love to know the chain and the settings of this video can I add you on discord to ask further questions regarding shoegaze tone?
@@mandy8600 deadoutside3838
this sounds super clean. I try making shoegaze a lot in ableton as well, what guitar vst are you using?
Now I'm standing between choosing Electric Mint and Shreddage 3 hydra/stratus - for bass guitar Shreddage Precision
but these libraries for Kontakt serve only as a source of dry signal. For basic guitar processing I use plugins from Neural DSP
@@jassyss8246 what made you switch to electric mint?? thats all i have atm but the guitar vsts in your other videos seemed to have much more options. electric mint is a pretty good vst but i struggle to make heavier sounds on it
@@weeniebop9825 Electric Mint produces a good dry signal, where you can feel the interaction with the strings and their resonance. For heavy sound or any other with amplification, you need the Neural DSP plugin. The Guitar plugin serves as a dry signal source only.
Why I doubt the comfort of the Electric Mint is because it doesn't have a string setting, without fine-tuning notes in Piano Roll. Meaning you can't feel the strings being hit up or down. But the advantage of Electric Mint is that the notes lend themselves well to Velocity correction in the Piano Roll, so you can try to create this effect through the Piano Roll, by adjusting the desired duration and volume of the notes.
For example, Shreddage 3 has a function for emulating up and down strings, but the notes themselves in Piano Roll are not subject to Velocity correction, unlike Electric Mint. So Shreddage 3 has more potential, but it’s very difficult to master the settings
@@weeniebop9825 also i don't like Electric Mints's pitch bend, in Shreddage its much better
amazing bro, i can't do that even with a real guitar , you are cool
Что за барабаны используешь
superior drummer 3