Visualdistortion a écrit :
Je suis justement dans la Boss GE-7, elle est placée après mes drive, je cherche le moyen ultime de faire un son radio/lo fi, pour des break et repartir plus fat après. Vous avez une idée des settings?
( La mienne est modifiée)
Lo-Fi Sounds
Used often in rap and hip-hop styles, ‘lo-fi’ describes sounds that have been deliberately manipulated to convey a low quality, which in most cases is achieved by using drastic EQ settings. The opposite of ‘hi-fi’, lo-fi sounds have poor audio fidelity and will lack a broad range of frequencies.
EQ pedals can therefore be used to produce these lo-fi tones, and a common sound that some try to imitate is that of a vintage radio. An old-school radio would typically lack a lot of low-end frequencies, due to the poor signal quality of decades past and the tiny speakers installed in portable devices.
To recreate this peculiar sound, taking the frequencies sub-600Hz down to zero on your pedal will get you in the ballpark. With these settings, your EQ pedal works like a high-pass filter, only letting the top-end frequencies through. You’d be surprised, but this type of sound is actually used in music production quite often, usually in the introduction of a song.
An example of this can be heard in the song “I Believe in a Thing Called Love” (2003) by The Darkness, where the opening guitar riff has a lo-fi, radio-style sound. This is used to create tension, giving more impact to the main hook/riff when the rest of the band joins. As a dynamic tool, lo-fi sounds can be used to great effect when arranging songs:
copié du blog d'anderton's
https://blog.andertons.co.uk/l(...)pedal