As much as I love your heavy playing, the ambient improv from 8.24 stole the show..wowwwww I must have heard it like a 100 times, seeking the progress bar back and forth. Bmaj/G#min - now my favorite key
I know you've got Vower as a main focus now, but I would love to see a full playthrough of When Genghis Wakes honestly (and to hear Leave No Meat On The Bones but a guy can dream)
Just wondering why 27" scale over 28" scale, other than peoples opinions I have heard I do not know much. Any noticeable difference? What would you do and not do vs the other where you perhaps would?
If you tune a baritone guitar to B-B there’ll be less tension on the strings the longer the scale. If you intend to drop below the ‘standard’ B-B baritone tuning the strings get quiet slack/flappy beyond a 27” scale instrument. Obviously the string gauges also make a difference.
@@shaundarley4108 So say I was playing songs in Drop A, A standard, Drop G, Drop G#. Would it be better to go for 28" over 27". i do get the whole longer the scale the better for lower tuning but most companies that have production model baritone 6s are 27" but I wondering if 28" would be better suited to for me.
@@shaundarley4108 ...This is quite literally just plain false. For the same given tuning and string gauge, the strings get TIGHTER with a longer scale. Please, if you don't know, just keep your fingers off the keyboard. Really no need to chime in with such drivel.
@@wanderergrim There really is no "better", it's what you prefer the feel of, and there's no other way than trying it out. There are undeniable physical qualities to the scale-gauge-tuning relation, but it's impossible to guess what YOU will like. Personally I like 27"(12-68) for drop A, 28"(not settled on gauge yet) for drop G and 29¾" (14-74) for drop F. If you want a safe starting point, 27" is widely considered fine for drop A but not very much lower, and if it's your first foray into baritones, maybe slightly lighter strings, 11-60 maybe, the girth of the 68 can be a bit daunting at the start.
@shaundarley4108 but strings get tighter with a longer scale, which is why you can tune bass strings to E comfortably on a 34" scale but not on a 25.5". Strings get looser when tuned to pitch on SHORTER scales, not longer. On the flipside, a longer scale allows you to get away with a lighter gauge of string to stay in tune at pitch than you'd need on a shorter scale. E.g. you might need a minimum of 14s on a regular scale guitar to tune to B standard, but can get away with 12s or even 11s on a baritone scale
You always get the best tones out of everything but the demos with the Victory amps are just insane.
Stunning tones and playing and such a musical use of FX. Wonderful!
Looks and sounds like an absolute workhorse. Great spec.
opening chord progression is unreal. would love a close up of it on the ig as I wanna learn that asap. great vid dude
This relaxed me hard, thank you! Huge tones
I could watch and listen to you play all day.
But then i wouldn't get any playing....
You sound so good man
The hotter than usual pickups sound great with your rig!
Please more videos like this, we could just vibe out to your playing.
As much as I love your heavy playing, the ambient improv from 8.24 stole the show..wowwwww I must have heard it like a 100 times, seeking the progress bar back and forth. Bmaj/G#min - now my favorite key
Purpose indeed,fullfilled, And so much more.Nice
Oh man that little run at 4:10 - 4:15 sounded like it was about to get so comfy.
All Sounds just wonderful
Amazing axe, and awesome playing as usual!
Awesome video and guitar. Would love to see the guitar in a more natural finish but being able to see the grain with the black paint finish is nice.
Amazing guitar, can’t wait to get my hands on one 🖤🙏🏼
Bro the tone is screaming final boss and I'm so for it!
Sounded soooooo much better through amps
I know you've got Vower as a main focus now, but I would love to see a full playthrough of When Genghis Wakes honestly (and to hear Leave No Meat On The Bones but a guy can dream)
Those pickups are absoluty nuts
7:43 - Bea looking over his shoulder at the amp thinking: 'ffffff.... me, what do we got here!"
6:25 "I think I'm waking up..." 🤟🏻
Holy cow that intro
I love it when guitars go "BWAH"
thall
Bea + Baritone + Kraken = :)
Just wondering why 27" scale over 28" scale, other than peoples opinions I have heard I do not know much. Any noticeable difference? What would you do and not do vs the other where you perhaps would?
If you tune a baritone guitar to B-B there’ll be less tension on the strings the longer the scale. If you intend to drop below the ‘standard’ B-B baritone tuning the strings get quiet slack/flappy beyond a 27” scale instrument. Obviously the string gauges also make a difference.
@@shaundarley4108 So say I was playing songs in Drop A, A standard, Drop G, Drop G#. Would it be better to go for 28" over 27".
i do get the whole longer the scale the better for lower tuning but most companies that have production model baritone 6s are 27" but I wondering if 28" would be better suited to for me.
@@shaundarley4108 ...This is quite literally just plain false. For the same given tuning and string gauge, the strings get TIGHTER with a longer scale. Please, if you don't know, just keep your fingers off the keyboard. Really no need to chime in with such drivel.
@@wanderergrim There really is no "better", it's what you prefer the feel of, and there's no other way than trying it out. There are undeniable physical qualities to the scale-gauge-tuning relation, but it's impossible to guess what YOU will like. Personally I like 27"(12-68) for drop A, 28"(not settled on gauge yet) for drop G and 29¾" (14-74) for drop F. If you want a safe starting point, 27" is widely considered fine for drop A but not very much lower, and if it's your first foray into baritones, maybe slightly lighter strings, 11-60 maybe, the girth of the 68 can be a bit daunting at the start.
@shaundarley4108 but strings get tighter with a longer scale, which is why you can tune bass strings to E comfortably on a 34" scale but not on a 25.5". Strings get looser when tuned to pitch on SHORTER scales, not longer.
On the flipside, a longer scale allows you to get away with a lighter gauge of string to stay in tune at pitch than you'd need on a shorter scale. E.g. you might need a minimum of 14s on a regular scale guitar to tune to B standard, but can get away with 12s or even 11s on a baritone scale
I want a Hapas so bad 😔😔
Oh ya freaking Godzilla tone 👍😮
Toska at 6:25 🎉🎉🎉❤
Buckethead vibes
i misread the title: Steroid Guitar Rig. Fits anyway
YUGE!!
The fact that UA-cam is asking if I want to translate your comment to English is hilarious.
@@nickgjenkins 😆
This sounds so fat!!!