Electro- Harmonix 'Small Clone'

£9.9
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Electro- Harmonix 'Small Clone'

Electro- Harmonix 'Small Clone'

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
£9.9 FREE Shipping

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Description

First and foremost, we are guitarists, and we want other players to find the right product for them. So we take into careful consideration everything from budget to feature set, ease of use and durability to come up with a list of what we can safely say are the best chorus pedals on the market right now.

Unique LFO shape-warping features transform the modulation shape from a smooth sine to asymmetric waves With an all-analog signal path, the Warped Vinyl Hi-Fi can be dialed in to produce a plethora of chorus and vibrato tones. The pedal has rows of rotary knobs across the top of its face. Firstly, the TONE (RAMP) control affects the prominence of the chosen chorus of vibrato. The LAG control is particularly interesting, allowing you to affect the delay time of the chorus and therefore alter its tonal properties, making your instrument sound more bright or transparent. The CS9 was released alongside the TS9 Tube Screamer, which is the pedal that most people know. But the CS9 is a really classic pedal. This has a really cool shade of purple, so cool that I actually hunted this color down to use on the Emperor Chorus of mine. Purple is also just my favorite chorus color. If you’re doing a chorus pedal, it’s gotta be blue or purple.Tone City and Movall always seemed to share the same pedals too. But Movall seem to not be around anymore.

Indeed, the only way to figure out which of these methods will produce your desired results is to dive in and give them both a try. You might find that for certain songs or styles of playing; using the direct input method is best suited. For a raw, live recording that needs plenty of energy, using your amplifier is likely to fit the bill more effectively.

A little HISTORY

The age-old discussion of whether you should go for analog or digital effects pedals is a frequent topic of debate amongst guitarists. Whether a pedal is classed as analog or digital depends on the inner circuitry that is employed by the manufacturer. The result is that the signal gets sent straight to the amplifier, and doesn’t mar the performance or clarity of other pedals in any way. The signal remains uncompromised and passes through the circuitry of the effects pedal without coloring the tone or weakening the signal or particular frequencies. Famously, the Centaur had a buffer which some people lionise to the point of building it into a separate pedal. Thus, most klones are either buffered bypass or selectable between buffered and true bypass. Chorus is arguably the least intense of these three popular modulation effects. Although it works in the same way, the difference is caused by the use of pitch-shifting and detuning, which gives the chorus pedals their distinctive, slightly “off” tone. Commonly Found Controls on a Chorus Pedal

It’s quite common to find that modulation pedals also can produce multiple effects. Combination pedals usually feature phasers, vibrato, and flangers, because all of these effects fall under the modulation category and use similar mechanisms for their production. The Neo Clone is capable of producing lush analog chorus whilst taking up minimal space on your pedalboard. With a Depth switch and a single rotary knob controlling the Rate of the chorus, it’s one of the simplest pedals you’ll ever use. Featuring total analog circuitry and design and the ability to be powered by a 9-volt battery, this convenient chorus pedal will slot nicely into your rig and add warm layers of the slightly detuned chorus into your output.My Review: TC Electronic’s Corona is part of the direct lineage of the now legendary SCF Stereo Chorus Flanger pedal, designed initially over four decades ago by two brothers in a remote town in Demark. That pedal was way ahead of its time, and it became the spark that ignited the flame of TC Electronic. These old-school sounds have been taken into new territory by more recent efforts from the likes of Fender and Walrus Audio, who have served up additional waveforms to adjust how angular the chorus sounds.

Of course, there’s no one-size-fits-all approach to positioning your pedals. Many of the most interesting and iconic guitar tones have been produced as a result of an accident, or going against the grain and tearing up the rulebook. Electro-Harmonix (also commonly referred to as EHX [1]) is a New York City-based company that makes electronic audio processors and sells rebranded vacuum tubes. The company was founded by Mike Matthews in 1968. It is best known for a series of guitar effects pedals introduced in the 1970s and 1990s. EHX also made a line of guitars in the 1970s. [2] Who is this best suited for: Although the Rowin Analog Chorus pedal is very simplistic, it still produces a decent range of chorus tones that will be of value to a beginner or someone who wants a bargain pedal. Alternatively, if you desire to reproduce your live sound as closely as possible, it might be a better idea to mic up your amplifier, run the chorus pedal into the amp and your guitar into the pedal’s input, exactly as you would on stage. The advantage of this method is that it allows you to predetermine your tone by adjusting the settings on the amplifier or the tonal controls of your guitar. Bear in mind, however, that your recording will be affected by the coloration of the amplifier and the microphone you choose to employ for this purpose. blue Chorus with the old pointed knobs, in a more square box, with no chrome bezel on the LED, and it does not sound great.

Stereo bypass options (standard mono chorus is always true bypass)

This pedal was famously used by Kurt Cobain as his main chorus unit and you can hear in the grunge anthem Come As You Are (you know the sound!) The Level control is useful for keeping tabs on the dynamic output of the pedal, and ensuring that it interacts well with any other effects pedals that make up your guitar rig. With singular inputs and outputs that are solidly built, this Ibanez pedal performs reliably. is not just a Smashing Pumpkins song. It’s also the year that we got the BOSS CE-2, AKA, maybe the greatest year in music history. The second pedal is also from 1976 (what can I say? It was a good year for pedals), but it came from a little Danish company that was just getting started, TC Electronics. Their product was the TC Electronic Stereo Chorus Plus.



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