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Guitar Overdrive

Guitar Overdrive
Guitar Overdrive

Pedals For Electric Guitar - Boost The Entertainment Of Your Show With Impressive Effects

Guitar pedals are on the market for electric guitar so that you can completely change the quality of your performance without much work on your part. It's possible that you might not be the type of person that enjoys pedals, but some of them are essential for playing a near-flawless show.

More and more guitar pedals are being created every day and it can be confusing to know what they all do to the sound of your electric guitar. Here is a short list of pedals for your electric guitar that can add more practicality, awesome style, or killer tone.

1. Go back to the 60s and 70s with a wah pedal. There's a few signature electric guitar sounds that came out of the 60s and one of them was the unforgettable wah pedal. Connect your guitar to a wah pedal and you can transform your tones into psychedelic waves that can really get your crowd in the mood to protest.

2. Get rid of amplifier hum with a noise gate. Sometimes your guitar amplifier might have a very powerful distortion channel that hums and hisses in the background when your strings are not vibrating. To get rid of that hum, connect to a noise gate pedal and when you're not playing your electric guitar, you'll hear silence.

3. Check your string pitches live with a tuner pedal. Whether you like it or not, the pitches on your electric guitar are going to go out of tune at the worst times and you need to be prepared. Get a tuner pedal to hook up to your guitar live on stage and you won't have to worry about crazy strings again.

4. Compression pedals will level the muscle you put into strumming. If you're the type of guitarist that varies their strumming during a show, but wants almost all of the material to stay level, you might get a lot of use out of a compression pedal. Compressors not only give balance to the level of effort you use to strum, but can add some attack to your electric guitar's notes as well.

5. Boost your distortion with an overdrive pedal. Sometimes an electric guitarist just needs some more distortion and buying an overdrive pedal is the way to solve that problem. The next time you feel you need more pump on a solo or raging verse, just stomp on your overdrive and blow the roof off the auditorium.

6. Mess around on stage with a loop pedal. If you're a guitarist that likes to repeat sections often and then add new riffs over-top, then a loop pedal will be perfect for you. Imagine playing your electric guitar once and then having that section to play along with while it repeats over and over again. It's your own personal back-up guitarist!

Guitar pedals are easy to abuse since they can distort sounds, alter pitches, and block noise, but using them in their context is the most important part. Think about this list of guitar pedals for your electric guitar the next time that you go to the music store.

About the Author

STOP! Before you buy ANY sort of guitar courses online, read Kyle Hoffman's important FREE report on finding the best fast electric guitar lessons for your hard-earned cash! For even more awesome guitar skills and tips, visit his popular guitar blog, How To Guitar Tune

Rock Band Overdrive Guitar?

Are there known issues with the overdrive on the guitar (tilt sensor) not working properly because I am having difficulties getting it to work properly. What is the remedy for this?

The tilt sensor is very fussy in the rb guitar, i just press the BACK button on the guitar, and it activates overdrive he same way tilting would. You could use the gh guitar, if you like the whole tilting thing.

Guitar Overdrive
1979 Dumble Overdrive Deluxe guitar amp


Jet City GSOD Overdrive Guitar Effects Pedal


Jet City GSOD Overdrive Guitar Effects Pedal


$79.95


The Jet City Overdrive pedal is designed by GuitarSlinger for exceptional quality. Designed by international guitar hero Alex Beyrodt and engineered in Germany, each pedal is built by hand, one at a time.

Boss SD-1 Super Overdrive Pedal


Boss SD-1 Super Overdrive Pedal


$49


The SD1 produces the warm, smooth distortion of an overdriven tube amplifier while maintaining the subtle nuances of your picking technique. Boss's unique asymmetric overdrive circuitry delivers a genuine overdrive effect for a classic guitar sound. A tone control is also provided for precise tonal adjustment.

DigiTech Bad Monkey Tube Overdrive Pedal


DigiTech Bad Monkey Tube Overdrive Pedal


$49.95


The Bad Monkey Tube Overdrive gives your guitar amp a boost just when you need it.

Danelectro D2 Overdrive Guitar Effects Pedal


Danelectro D2 Overdrive Guitar Effects Pedal


$29.61


Unlike any other device this pedal authentically simulates the breakup that occurs when a tube amp is run at full volume. You will occasionally see an original in the stage rig of a major artist. Danelectro puts this classis in your hands without damage to you financial portfolio. Realistic tube overdrive. Responsive. Versatile. Level Tone and O.D. (Overdrive) knobs.

Boss OS-2 Overdrive and Distortion Pedal


Boss OS-2 Overdrive and Distortion Pedal


$79


The OS-2 gives players a choice of overdrive or distortion or lets them combine both -- all in a single compact pedal. Its distortion maintains the subtle nuances of single-coil guitar pickups.

Guitar Tapping Tips And Techniques

Although made popular recently by Eddie VanHalen, guitar tapping or right hand ‘legatos' is a technique players have been executing for years. Country players know the benefit of laying down a nice subtle lead and just putting in those quick hammers with clear guitar tapping. And while it's not the easiest thing, guitar finger tapping techniques are really nothing much more then fast hammer on and a pull offs. Whether you use your middle finger or your first, most times you can hold the pick as usual to execute your guitar tapping and get the speed and positioning essential to good guitar tapping techniques. But like anything else, guitar tapping takes practice and patience.

Since this is a highly specialized, yet popular way of playing we hear a lot of player's guitar tapping these days...and just as many tapping badly. Especially when a guitar is cranked through distortion, a whole host of extra noises will come out if the player's guitar finger tapping techniques aren't the cleanest. An important trick to ‘clean-up' when you are cranked through that Marshall Stack and you're in "overdrive", is to rest the back of your right hand on the lower strings for muting; what you want to avoid is these string making a lot of extra noise while you get that guitar tapping in one steady movement. Of course, if you're a rock player you are most likely already dreaming of the all-too flashy ‘cross-handed tapping' but this is so impractical it only ever works when playing live (and even then it is a hard to get those guitar tapping progressions cooking in this way!) Admittedly though, this particular type of guitar tapping, above all other types of guitar finger tapping techniques, creates a truly distinct tone.

There are hundreds of videos and books that show guitar tapping tips, but as it is with everything else, you can't even begin to understand how guitar tapping works until you get up and do it yourself. Although modern listeners have been conditioned to want speed like Eddie V., it is more important to get the strong and clear sound of each note then to sacrifice technique for potential sloppiness. Guitar finger tapping techniques are only good if you can do them; nothing sounds worse then reaching for a flashy technique and not being able to pull it off. As with everything else you learn on guitar, if you mater a technique on acoustic then you can feel all that more confident trying it on electric.

Playing a difficult and flashy exercise, such as guitar tapping or lightening fast arpeggios, sometimes seem to be easier on an electric; you get-off on the sound you are creating, the noise, but don't catch nuisances or mistakes. Try tapping on an acoustic guitar (or you want a big challenge-try guitar tapping on an acoustic bass!) Guitar finger tapping is hard on an acoustic; cross-handed guitar tapping is almost impossible (it takes a ton of strength and precision), but master guitar tapping on an acoustic and you'll find you are that much more prepared for what you might do on your electric.

About the Author

Brad Finley is senior editor of MyGuitarWorkshop -
Guitar Tips and Music Theory
. Website provides guitar lessons and instructions for all level guitar players. Click for more
Guitar Tips And Techniques

Guitar Overdrive

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