Legacy Of The Night wrote:
Adveser wrote:
Yeah Noodles, same here. any chord I try sounds good if not better than it does acoustically
I mean Alex Lifeson uses the most insane chords imaginable and he had an insanely thin distorted and overdriven sound from P/G to Roll the Bones. I'm just not buying that distortion makes non-power chords sound dissonant.
Rush isn't Metal, dude. The distortion used on any given Rush track is nothing compared to something from Aborted. Using big weird fully-voiced jazz chords with Death Metal levels of distortion would be a waste of time, because that much distortion would kill all the things that make that chord sound good. It would actually sound pretty ugly.
...but if you're aiming for ugly, then hell yeah, go for it. It works for Gaza, Converge, and Deathspell Omega.
Uhh, go listen to Middletown Dreams and get back to me on that. The chords are not "heavy" but they are extremely distorted. They go to 11.
That is why me and apparently Alex Lifeson pick softly. It creates much less oscillations and distortion in the actual sound waves and keeps the volume on the strings very consistent. To me, A fatter string at the same tension should vibrate with the same string excursion as the lighter one.
You guys are aware that you can bend unwanted oscillations (notes beating together) out of a chord right? AC/DC do this selectively at times even with standard chords.
That kind of technique is so advanced it is practically impossible to use for most. In fact I have found that it is almost never discussed since it is something you can't teach. You can't teach someone how to hear notes, you can only tell them what sort of mood or feeling a note or chord has and hope they can hear it. This is why Alex is the guitarist I think has the most technical ability out of anyone ever. Bar None. I don't know if Yngwie does this or not, but a scalloped neck is ideal for this situation.
It really makes no difference what the pitch is on notes that are not the fundamental of the chord since they doing nothing but adding their individual color to the note.
These colors are like light. you can mix and match by bending pitch to get the exact color you want to. an F# that is a bit flat sounds a lot like an F#, but just a little bit like an F too. The nasty sounding oscillation that would occur would in turn cancel out another nasty oscillation.