Thanks for sharing the love! Long live HAIR METAL!!🤘👍 I've had my Headrush pedalboard for over a year. Only the third time I've played with it LOL. I'm more of a tube amp and pedalboard kind of guy! Thanks for your help and your channel!! ROCK ON!!!
I purchased my first ever Headrush, mx5. Your instruction movies are very critical references. I wish you would upload more movies about mx5. Thank you for your efforts.
Wonder why i do not get those adjustment boxes on the right side as i have the mx5 as well. But i did not start with a new rig screen yet either so that could be the case
Would really dig you shortly showing us how to really exploit the looper in the pedal board latest update version. All the old videos don't talk shit about the update because it wasn't invented yet.
I like that you are using the Headrush. But for my taste the sound is waaaaaayyyyyyyy to thin sounding, lacking all Bass and no body or fullness to it, sorry.
Thanks for the feedback. And I agree that the sound is thin. If you think about it though, that was kind of the challenge with hair metal. Most of those sounds lacked an extreme depth. Obviously there were exceptions back then but when grunge and alt styles emerged in the late 80s/early 90s guitarists really started focusing on introducing more depth to their sounds, which is something that we're more accustomed to these days.
Most of your 80s tones were drenched in reverbs and delays. Without boosting those highs and mids the guitars would have been lost in the wash. It all had to do with the frequencies surrounding the fx. Most of the time the bass was following the guitar lines so to prevent mud the guitars were mixed to stand alone. Listen to the Scorpions on most songs with guitar intros. Rock You Like A Hurricane or Blackout and it becomes really apparent.
@@sonic-dna7742 My sense was that they boosted mids and highs before the amp (via a TubeScreamer or SD-1) and then cut some out post amp. Typically at the mixer when recording so it would sit in the mix properly.
Thanks for sharing the love!
Long live HAIR METAL!!🤘👍
I've had my Headrush pedalboard
for over a year. Only the third time I've played with it LOL. I'm more of a tube amp and pedalboard kind of guy! Thanks for your help and your channel!! ROCK ON!!!
Rock on!
Great video
Thanks
I purchased my first ever Headrush, mx5.
Your instruction movies are very critical references.
I wish you would upload more movies about mx5.
Thank you for your efforts.
Thanks. Not to worry. More MX5 vids are coming.
Totally AMAZING!!!!! 💪😉
Thanks
What Headrush pedal do you have? I do not get those boxes on the right. I have to double tap to adjust settings of a pedal in a rig on the mx5
This was the standard Headrush.
Wonder why i do not get those adjustment boxes on the right side as i have the mx5 as well. But i did not start with a new rig screen yet either so that could be the case
How do you set up a clean rhythm and lead channel
Man has a Shark Island sound I dig it.
Thanks
Would really dig you shortly showing us how to really exploit the looper in the pedal board latest update version. All the old videos don't talk shit about the update because it wasn't invented yet.
Thanks for the feedback here too. I will look to revisit the pedalboard looper soon.
the one thing you didn't show was going from the rhythm to the solo, man!
I don't know what each amp is. Lol
👍
I like that you are using the Headrush. But for my taste the sound is waaaaaayyyyyyyy to thin sounding, lacking all Bass and no body or fullness to it, sorry.
Thanks for the feedback. And I agree that the sound is thin. If you think about it though, that was kind of the challenge with hair metal. Most of those sounds lacked an extreme depth. Obviously there were exceptions back then but when grunge and alt styles emerged in the late 80s/early 90s guitarists really started focusing on introducing more depth to their sounds, which is something that we're more accustomed to these days.
Most of your 80s tones were drenched in reverbs and delays. Without boosting those highs and mids the guitars would have been lost in the wash. It all had to do with the frequencies surrounding the fx. Most of the time the bass was following the guitar lines so to prevent mud the guitars were mixed to stand alone. Listen to the Scorpions on most songs with guitar intros. Rock You Like A Hurricane or Blackout and it becomes really apparent.
@@sonic-dna7742 My sense was that they boosted mids and highs before the amp (via a TubeScreamer or SD-1) and then cut some out post amp. Typically at the mixer when recording so it would sit in the mix properly.
İs it heavy metal rig ?
More glam metal than heavy metal