Outstanding rundown of these pedals - by far the best and most comprehensive on UA-cam. Attention acoustic gear companies: Hire this guy to demo your products!
Great video Aaron. In the type of gigs I play, I play just as much acoustic as I do electric. For many years I've put money into all sorts of acoustic pedals. But when I got the HX Stomp all that changed allowing me to really dial in a great acoustic signal chain. I always felt I was chasing the tone I couldn't have. There is so much emphasis on the electric side of things that acoustic pedals and modeling have taken a back seat.
I agree but I think that may start to change as the solo acoustic thing is getting so big now. I like when companies make pedals that are aimed at the acoustic market. I would love to see Fishman make a multi effects pedal for acoustic guitar and vocals.
Aaron I really enjoyed this video, started watching at home and continued at the gym while working out. I found myself stopping and replaying sections of it. Great job in explaining practical application of the various pedals. I have an old acoustic Epiphone with me this Summer with a Fishman matrix that I’ll experiment with the various pedal emulations in the Spark Go with headphones. (Makes me want to revisit my old Boss GT3 that I used for years with my Gibson J200 with a LR Baggs IBeam for live shows) but the Voice Live 3 Ex is waiting at home so that learning curve is in front of me. Great job.
@@woodsteelband Ah yes in that case you can use it as a pickup selector which is actually a great idea as the selector on the guitar makes noise through the acoustic pickup which you change it on the guitar. Very cool!
That's one way. But the best way is metal zone to big muff to additional metal zone to ring modulator. And for you singer songwriters, anteres auto tune will sound great with this set up.
Outstanding rundown of these pedals - by far the best and most comprehensive on UA-cam. Attention acoustic gear companies: Hire this guy to demo your products!
That means a lot. I worked hard on this one!
Absolutely first class guide to pedals for acoustic, think I might be tempted to purchase.
Thanks. I enjoyed taking this slightly different approach.
Very through, well done.
Thank you!
Great video Aaron. In the type of gigs I play, I play just as much acoustic as I do electric. For many years I've put money into all sorts of acoustic pedals. But when I got the HX Stomp all that changed allowing me to really dial in a great acoustic signal chain. I always felt I was chasing the tone I couldn't have. There is so much emphasis on the electric side of things that acoustic pedals and modeling have taken a back seat.
I agree but I think that may start to change as the solo acoustic thing is getting so big now. I like when companies make pedals that are aimed at the acoustic market. I would love to see Fishman make a multi effects pedal for acoustic guitar and vocals.
Great demos and information, Aaron. I use Reverb and EQ on every gig
Thanks!
Thanks, Aaron, excellent rundown. New subscriber.
Thank you!
Thanks for providing this information. Great video! I will check these out.
Cheers John!
@@aaronshortmusic I actually watched several of your videos today. They are highly informative!
@@johnwashburn3793 Thanks!
Aaron I really enjoyed this video, started watching at home and continued at the gym while working out. I found myself stopping and replaying sections of it. Great job in explaining practical application of the various pedals. I have an old acoustic Epiphone with me this Summer with a Fishman matrix that I’ll experiment with the various pedal emulations in the Spark Go with headphones. (Makes me want to revisit my old Boss GT3 that I used for years with my Gibson J200 with a LR Baggs IBeam for live shows) but the Voice Live 3 Ex is waiting at home so that learning curve is in front of me. Great job.
Thank you. I thought I’d try a more ‘informative review’ style for this one.
Hey Aaron, do you think the blender pedal would be useful with a Cole Clark system, or would it be redundant?
The Cole Clark does not have separate outputs. It would work best with the dual source Fishman pickups or the K&K pure mini with fantastik etc.
I guess I should have clarified that. I have the Cole Clark thinline acoustic hybrid with the 3 way pick up and a humbucker. It has dual outs.
@@woodsteelband Ah yes in that case you can use it as a pickup selector which is actually a great idea as the selector on the guitar makes noise through the acoustic pickup which you change it on the guitar. Very cool!
Do you use the fishman rare earth blend with the bass role switch up (towards the Low e String) or down?
For the dreadnought in this video it would have been off but for an OM I may turn it on. It depends on the guitar.
So for the Dreadnought the switch up for more mag and less mic and for a om switch down for more mic as possible? If i get it right...😊
@@stephanbockholt5976 No that is a different thing. I usually set the blend around 50% but again it depends. Just choose what sounds best to you.
@@aaronshortmusic thank you..i didnt me the mixing wheel on the pu. I mean the the bass role switch underneath it... Kind regards ✌🏻😉
@@stephanbockholt5976 It’s just a bass boost for the microphone.
That's one way. But the best way is metal zone to big muff to additional metal zone to ring modulator. And for you singer songwriters, anteres auto tune will sound great with this set up.
lol!