What does piano sound like with guitar FX pedals?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 2. 08. 2024
  • Try my new course at Artmaster.com with a free trial: www.artmaster.com/course/piano-2 and use promo code IMAGINE15 to get 15% off your purchase 🎹🎹
    Today I'll be seeing what the Digitech Whammy, the Big Muff and the Vox Wah pedals sound like with a regular piano sound!
    And, an extra special thanks goes to Peter Keller, Douglas Lind, Vidad Flowers, Ivan Pang, Waylon Fairbanks, Jon Dye, Austin Russell, Christopher Ryan, Toot & Paul Peijzel, the channel’s Patreon saints! 😇
    SUPPORT ME ON PATREON: / davidbennettpiano 🎹
    0:00 Introduction
    1:02 Digitech Whammy
    4:05 Big Muff fuzz
    6:13 My course on Artmaster.com
    7:05 Wah-wah
    8:35 All the pedals!
    11:13 Outro

Komentáře • 705

  • @JustinKahrs
    @JustinKahrs Před 7 měsíci +377

    I would love to see more sound design sort of stuff on this channel!

    • @R.Akerman-oz1tf
      @R.Akerman-oz1tf Před 7 měsíci +2

      I was just thinking how keyboards are a bit inhibited (hushed My mouth!).

  • @pst_uk
    @pst_uk Před 7 měsíci +258

    Fender Rhodes and wah pedal was a very popular combination early 70s (Pink Floyd, Alan Parson project spring to mind but there were many others), Chorus pedals have been used extensively with keyboards from electric pianos and early synths which didn't have in-built effects. Phaser was one Jean-Michael Jarre used a lot especially on the emininet string synth to give the sweeping effect on his early albums.

    • @illegal_space_alien
      @illegal_space_alien Před 7 měsíci +12

      Tony Banks used a Fender Blender fuzz during the prog days with Genesis. They just reissued the Fender Blender, so there's a good option. The Big Muff is not a good match for a keyboard, but other dirt can be. A Strymon Deco has subtle tape overdrive that sounds wonderful on keyboards, as does the drive circuit in rotary sim pedals like the EHX Lester K. So any other low-gain effects like that will sound better than a sloppy-sounding Muff.

    • @NBrixH
      @NBrixH Před 7 měsíci +5

      What floyd songs use it?

    • @LeifNelandDk
      @LeifNelandDk Před 7 měsíci +4

      The big muff just make the keyboard sound like an electric guitar, which doesn't make sense to do, unless you don't have a guitar (player)

    • @MrmiK3
      @MrmiK3 Před 7 měsíci +10

      ​@@NBrixH First one that comes to mind is Money during the sax solo

    • @illegal_space_alien
      @illegal_space_alien Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@LeifNelandDk You reminded me of the first iteration of The Misfits. A rare instance where a punk band had no guitarist, but a fuzz keyboard played by singer Glenn Danzig. czcams.com/video/RCAtTQf5T1E/video.htmlfeature=shared
      I wonder what fuzz he used though, as it actually doesn't sound half bad, even with the crappy recording.

  • @AnthonyHVids
    @AnthonyHVids Před 7 měsíci +74

    The whammy pedal with the piano has such a magical sound. It’s reminds me a lot of Thom Yorke’s music, especially “Pink Section”

    • @puggaboi4339
      @puggaboi4339 Před 6 měsíci

      I’m glad I found this comment. It reminds me of the album A moon shaped pool!

    • @hobbified
      @hobbified Před 6 měsíci

      Incubus - Stellar.

  • @settingfiretogiants
    @settingfiretogiants Před 7 měsíci +378

    Very nine inch nails with the Big Muff

    • @davidozab2753
      @davidozab2753 Před 7 měsíci +28

      And like Muse with the arpeggios

    • @jaymarkle2444
      @jaymarkle2444 Před 7 měsíci +12

      I was thinking either Muse or My Morning Jacket

    • @user-du1yk7uk9v
      @user-du1yk7uk9v Před 7 měsíci +9

      Very SHIT sound indeed

    • @bigboy6704
      @bigboy6704 Před 7 měsíci

      ooh look at me, I'm so much better than you because I don't like things ​@@user-du1yk7uk9v

    • @rapho_
      @rapho_ Před 7 měsíci +2

      very daft punk also

  • @TLGProduktions
    @TLGProduktions Před 7 měsíci +62

    A lot of Canterbury-based bands like Caravan, Soft Machine (and other bands that couldn't afford synthesizers in the 70s) used electric organs/pianos with fuzz and wah pedals hooked into guitar amps. It makes for a really unique sound that would be great to hear again. Guess it became a lot more convenient to gig with a synthesizer than a big setup with an organ + amp.

    • @CentipedeMKDS
      @CentipedeMKDS Před 7 měsíci +9

      In The Land Of Grey And Pink, Rotters’ Club and Soft Machine’s Third are my favourites

    • @nbnewman
      @nbnewman Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@CentipedeMKDS You took the words straight out of my keyboard. I prefer "Fourth" to "Third", though

    • @polbecca
      @polbecca Před 7 měsíci +1

      *Mike Ratledge has entered the chat* 😂

    • @GRMNCVS
      @GRMNCVS Před 7 měsíci +2

      Oh man I love Caravan so much.

    • @Symphonicrockfran
      @Symphonicrockfran Před 7 měsíci

      Richard Sinclair is my favorite bassist

  • @OurgasmComrade
    @OurgasmComrade Před 7 měsíci +167

    At 4:48 it almost sounded like you were going to play the electric version of Neil Young's "Hey Hey, My My (Into The Black)" cool sound!

    • @davefiano4172
      @davefiano4172 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Haha…YES. BUT would also be great for “Spirit In The Sky”. Often imitated, never duplicated. 😅

  • @DanVilliomPodlaskiChristiansen
    @DanVilliomPodlaskiChristiansen Před 7 měsíci +33

    This is basically the entire spiel behind “Is it any wonder” by Keane: Just a singer, drummer and heavily distorted electric piano. They use it to great effect; it’s a very unique sound 🙂 Just from the title, that song was my forest thought, and I had to pause this video to relisten… Also, the video is simple, but awesome!
    I love that song, but the point is not the effects… They’re cool and all, but it’s the artistry that matters!

    • @Saturnuria
      @Saturnuria Před 7 měsíci +2

      ⁠@luke5100 I was actually with Keane for part of the Hopes and Fears tour and I’m not aware of them using any effects pedals, at least on the CP-70B. They did use a number of piano effects on Under the Iron Sea. I’m happy to be corrected though.

    • @Tredenix
      @Tredenix Před 6 měsíci

      Keane, and especially their _Under The Iron Sea_ album, was my first thought after watching the video, since they use such a unique piano sound for it that it left a pretty big lasting impression on me. Very glad to see others bringing them up here too!
      I did find a video on the making of _UTIS,_ and about 7 minutes in they show Rice-Oxley experimenting with the sound for _Is It Any Wonder?_ with a ton of effect pedals stacked on top of the piano, adjusting some individually and then combining them all. It's quite a fascinating process that I'm a little disappointed that I never looked into sooner.
      Listening back to the _Hopes and Fears_ album, it seems like there are a few tracks that do more minor distortions to the piano, but none of it is as extreme as _UTIS_ and they usually stick to a clean piano sound instead.

  • @slyfoxx2973
    @slyfoxx2973 Před 7 měsíci +8

    As a guitarist who dabbles in piano I've long thought it an interesting idea to make a solid body electric piano. Imagine the pickups on that sucker!

  • @OriginalMorningStar
    @OriginalMorningStar Před 6 měsíci +19

    Fun fact, Keane's entire album Under The Iron Sea (2006) was deliberately recorded using piano/synth and guitar effects, making it completely different to their debut album Hopes and Fears. It has this otherworldly quality to it, what sounds like an electric guitar suddenly has overtones because the chords are built differently to guitar chords.

  • @btkenobi2
    @btkenobi2 Před 7 měsíci +23

    Nice David! Would love to see a part 2 on this focusing on modulation pedals i.e. chorus, phase, flanger, tremolo, vibrato, uni vibe, etc
    Some fantastic sounds to be had with those, and more suited to keys 😊

  • @althealligator1467
    @althealligator1467 Před 7 měsíci +23

    David actually had to put shoes on for this one

    • @tlazohtlalia
      @tlazohtlalia Před 7 měsíci

      Or he just wears his shoes but never actually shows them in videos because there's no need to for most of the time

    • @althealligator1467
      @althealligator1467 Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@tlazohtlalia Frankly weird if that's the case

  • @jameslewis2635
    @jameslewis2635 Před 7 měsíci +98

    The Wah pedal was originally imagined as an effect for organs which (I think) generally take effects better than a piano. If you want a great example of how an organ can sound with something like the Big Muff you should check out the version of 'Speed King' by Deep Purple on their Made In Japan Album. Admittedly Jon Lord is running his Hammond B3 into an overdriven Marshall guitar amp but the effect is pretty similar.

    • @b00ts4ndc4ts
      @b00ts4ndc4ts Před 7 měsíci +1

      All a whammy is an middle EQ pot so you can get the same affect scooping the middle on any amp.

    • @kentl7228
      @kentl7228 Před 7 měsíci +10

      It was a pot circuit taken from a Vox amp. The engineer was playing with the sweep using his fingers on the pot. It was suggested to mount it into a volume pedal. So they did and used it on a guitar. The leader of the company said it sounds like a trumpet with a mute and wanted to sell them for trumpet players. He couldn't be convinced by the inventors it was a guitar product. He even got Clyde McCoy (a then popular) to put his name on it to sell more units. So a trumpet player who never used it, got a commission for each one sold, which was almost exclusively used on guitars.

    • @joermnyc
      @joermnyc Před 7 měsíci +4

      @@kentl7228it’s funny because the original Maestro Fuzz was marketed as “make your electric bass or guitar sound like a brass instrument”. It was a FLOP until Keith Richards used it on “Satisfaction”(and he was actually using it to mimic what he thought would be replaced with an actual trumpet!)

    • @kyleh1127
      @kyleh1127 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@kentl7228 One of my favourite parts of music/instrument history is that there's so many examples of people trying to make one instrument sound like another that end up becoming staples of either a particular genre or instrument for completely different reasons, the first overdrive pedals were marketed towards making b sax or brass sounds, as were the wah, and the early uni-vibe, which was the precursor to chorus, phase and flange pedals, was apparently marketed to make your guitar sound like a sitar, hell, the entire synthesizer industry is built upon trying to emulate various instruments and not doing a very good job. I think some of what is missing in modern music creation is that aspect of failed emulation leading to new and interesting sounds. Kinda hard to mess around with a half-assed trumpet sound and get something new when you've got 100's of genuine trumpets available at a click.

  • @jeffmansfield914
    @jeffmansfield914 Před 7 měsíci +24

    Guitar player here. There are no hard rules for pedal order; do what sounds good to you. However, Wah-wah is usually better earlier in the chain, especially before fuzz/distortion. With the Big Muff first, it generates all those high fuzzies and static-sounding frequencies then the wah-wah sweeps those as well as the fundamental tones of the instrument. If you, instead, put the wah first, it sweeps the instrument tone, then the fuzz is applied to that sound. It’s hard to describe, but just try swapping the order of the pedals around to see what you like. No wrong answers if you like what you’re getting. 😎

    • @Gekiko7167
      @Gekiko7167 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Wah after muff is at least for me, someone who is into garage rock, almost like the correct way to do it.

    • @zantetsuken-zero
      @zantetsuken-zero Před 6 měsíci

      you should put your equalizer at the end of your pedal chain though

    • @jeffmansfield914
      @jeffmansfield914 Před 6 měsíci

      @@zantetsuken-zero
      EQ at the end of the chain does a perfectly valid nice thing… as does putting it at the front of the chain. It just depends on personal preference and what your goals are.

    • @NotDingse
      @NotDingse Před 6 měsíci

      @@jeffmansfield914EQ at the end gives the most control. The point of an EQ is to sculpt/filter the final output so that any frequency you want less or more of can be adjusted accordingly.
      Granted an EQ at the start of the chain or between two pedals in the chain can help achieve interesting effects but the intended use is most effective if placed at the end of the chain.

    • @jeffmansfield914
      @jeffmansfield914 Před 6 měsíci

      @@NotDingse
      That last sentence is where you stop making sense.
      “The intended use is most effective when…”
      Well… that depends on what the intended use is. If *your* intended use is to shape the final sound, then putting it at the end works great. If, however, someone else’s intended use is to cut some low frequencies coming from a particular guitar before it hits an overdrive pedal which gets a bit mushy with too many lows, then having the EQ near the front of the chain makes sense. In that scenario, low frequencies might cause the overdrive to break up a certain way that highs and mids don’t, and simply taking the lows out at the end of the chain isn’t going to change the characteristics of that breakup.
      Simple test: if you have access to an EQ pedal and an overdrive pedal, hook just those two pedals up and run 3 or 4 different settings of each pedal. Without changing any knobs or sliders, swap the order and see if it makes a difference, then go to the next settings, play, swap, etc. You’ll find that shaping the EQ before the OD makes the OD respond differently, whereas using the EQ to shape the tone after the OD works in a different way. Neither is wrong. It’s all a matter of your total rig, your priorities, and your preferences. What is “most common” is irrelevant. What a CZcamsr recommends is irrelevant. What *I* say is irrelevant. There is no “most effective”, there’s only “most effective in giving you the sound you want”.

  • @bvabildtrup
    @bvabildtrup Před 7 měsíci +15

    I love that piece at the end, sounds a bit like tape-flutter. Very beautiful.

  • @d_dave7200
    @d_dave7200 Před 7 měsíci +54

    I think the wah wah pedal would be really interesting to play with just for the two different tones

  • @johnvender
    @johnvender Před 7 měsíci +23

    Compressor, phaser and chorus pedals are also worth experimenting with. And echo of course :)

    • @Tanshanomi
      @Tanshanomi Před 7 měsíci +3

      Yes, chorus pedal specifically would be interesting.

  • @DCJayhawk57
    @DCJayhawk57 Před 7 měsíci +10

    There's a pedal called the Screen Violence by Old Blood Noise Endeavors which was developed for the group CHVRCHES for their last album. It's a stereo modulated delay and reverb into a distortion (or the reverse, you can change the order), very shoegazey, and sounds incredible with keys.

  • @dliessmgg
    @dliessmgg Před 7 měsíci +10

    i actually loved how the big muff and the wah pedal interacted

  • @map-reduce
    @map-reduce Před 7 měsíci +7

    Several people have already mentioned flanger, and I'm a +1. Jan Hammer uses one to get some great timbre controls (not exactly piano I know, but he definitely created the state of the art for keyboards + effects back in the day.)

  • @dojyaan.0
    @dojyaan.0 Před 7 měsíci +18

    I love this channel. Thanks for teaching me stuff I never knew existed!👍❤️

    • @waslucyinthesky
      @waslucyinthesky Před 7 měsíci +1

      I like your profile picture and banner as well

  • @ianwills2697
    @ianwills2697 Před 7 měsíci

    So many times when I'm watching your videos I find one little thing that inspires me to produce a song, this time the octave slides at the beginning got me excited and I've just made a project I'm really happy with. Thank you for doing what you do!

  • @basslobster
    @basslobster Před 7 měsíci +7

    Reminded me of George Duke's guitar solo on synthesizer back in '83. Fooled alot of guitarist 😀 And it's all in the phrasing.
    Cheers from 🇸🇪

  • @LesPaulDavis
    @LesPaulDavis Před 7 měsíci +5

    Great video. I love experimenting with timbre. I once put my Clavinova through my Leslie rotary speaker in an attempt to recreate the piano sound from the beginning of Pink Floyd’s Echoes and it sounded so good. Don’t know why I hadn’t thought of it before!

  • @Heathaze813
    @Heathaze813 Před 7 měsíci +4

    Tony Banks messed around with keyboards through guitar pedals in the past. Phasers and such. They sound very interesting!

    • @ulfbergqvist8250
      @ulfbergqvist8250 Před 7 měsíci +1

      And when he doubled with Hackett it was wonderful, wasn't it?

  • @seangarland
    @seangarland Před 7 měsíci +3

    Effects pedals are “inspiration in a box”. Using them can send you into places you might never have thought of. Definitely recommend experimentation!

  • @GNVS300
    @GNVS300 Před 7 měsíci +8

    I've played around with this before and got some pretty good results out of it. Tim Rice-Oxley from Keane is well-known for using guitar effects with keyboards, and I believe the intro of 'Forever Chemicals' by Placebo is a distorted piano.
    Also, I've tried using wah and whammy at the same time on guitar. Can confirm I couldn't get them to work well.

  • @jonnyosteo5984
    @jonnyosteo5984 Před 7 měsíci +6

    That muff sounds the bollocks!! Would love to hear it on an album or live.

  • @lucastperez
    @lucastperez Před 7 měsíci +1

    I absolutely loved this. The other I was talking with a friend about trying this sort of things with a mic'd sax. I also offered a phaser pedal I have to the keyboard. I absolutely love this kind of experimentation. In fact, I think that creating and trying different things is the fun of music. Congratulations on such a great video! ❤🔥👏

  • @mxvega1097
    @mxvega1097 Před 6 měsíci +2

    This is cool, and you've discovered the secret to big effects on keys - play as if it were not polyphonic. I have an entire board set up with a Moog Sub37, which is not strictly monophonic, but it doesn't like playing too many notes at once either. The board started off with "spares" from my main guitar board - OD, delay, trem, Mel9, phaser, yet another delay. Two tips: two pitchy effects in the same chain start to get weird with digital artifacts (esp EHX), the Whammy IV can be touchy but works beautifully to get the "I wish my keyboard had a proper whammy bar" feel - as you played at the end. The dive bomb works nicely in reverse too, which I did on an EP a couple of year ago - start dug in to the centre of a black hole and then haul the tone out into open space. So to speak (!).

  • @TheJayTeeGee
    @TheJayTeeGee Před 7 měsíci +26

    Those were interesting choices for pedals. Wah with keys, especially a Clavinova can sound amazing. I would suggest using an overdrive over a fuzz as fuzz just gets too chaotic. Modulation effects such as chorus, flanger, phaser, and tremolo all sound good with keys. Time-based effects such as delay and reverb also sound good, especially if you get a good modulated delay to use.

    • @illegal_space_alien
      @illegal_space_alien Před 7 měsíci +3

      As soon as he started playing with the wah, I could totally hear Stevie Wonder with a wah and a clavinet.

    • @kentl7228
      @kentl7228 Před 7 měsíci

      Absolutely correct. He should have demonstrated a capable delay pedal, but like you said, tremolo, flanger and phaser too. He should do a part two.

    • @jlewwis1995
      @jlewwis1995 Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@kentl7228yeah when I first saw the pedal choice in the video it really left me scratching my head since i was thinking reverb delay and chorus are no brainers for piano and those are some of the first kinds of pedals I would think to use for a video like this, idk how he thought a distortion pedal would sound good with a piano, I've tried it a lot in DAWs before and I can guarantee you it never sounds particularly great 😂

  • @seventeendegree
    @seventeendegree Před 7 měsíci +5

    5:04 heavy My Bloody Valentine vibes with the distortion going on while holding the keys. Mindblowing video! The Beatles experimented with piano sounds by putting them through an amp. Imagine the possibilities with all the effects pedals out there! There needs to be a second part.

  • @geraldhills41
    @geraldhills41 Před 7 měsíci +18

    Love the sound of Fender Rhodes with phaser or chorus !

    • @johanneschristopherstahle3395
      @johanneschristopherstahle3395 Před 7 měsíci +2

      I guess most Rhodes we hear on recordings will have been sent through some kind of effects. Tremeolo/Panning would probably be the most common.

    • @Piktor201
      @Piktor201 Před 7 měsíci

      Oh yes! A friend of mine uses a Roland Jazz Chorus amp for his Rhodes. The built-in Chorus of this amp fits perfectly to the Rhodes.

  • @HammyDownConsole
    @HammyDownConsole Před 7 měsíci +6

    The Digitech Whammy would work well for synth leads. You'd simultaneously get the full octave pitch bend, similar to Chick Corea on a Minimoog, at your feet; and half/whole step bends, similar to Jan Hammer, at your fingertips on the keyboard. It's easier to play smaller intervals on the keyboard pitch wheel when the wheels range is a half or whole step. Save giant steps for your feet ;)

  • @paulrobertson3326
    @paulrobertson3326 Před 7 měsíci +4

    The Band's Garth Hudson played a Clavinet fed through a wah-wah pedal on "Up on Cripple Creek" (1969).[1] Keith Emerson played the instrument on Emerson, Lake & Palmer's cover of "Nut Rocker", heard on 1971's Pictures at an Exhibition. Thanks for another great video

  • @Panttts
    @Panttts Před 7 měsíci

    love it. personally this is my favourite recent video of yours - and I'm someone who loves the music theory side but also am a guitarist and have pedals

  • @vanceg18
    @vanceg18 Před 7 měsíci +4

    One along these lines that you might want to explore is a sound used by Pink Floyd on their song Echoes. They ran an acoustic piano through a Leslie rotating speaker and hit a high note to create something that sounds like a sonar ping in movies involving submarines.

  • @aylbdrmadison1051
    @aylbdrmadison1051 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Haha! Your enthusiasm and creativity reminds me of when I first got my first Boss flanger and delay pedals back in the 80's.

  • @marekgitarzysta5193
    @marekgitarzysta5193 Před 7 měsíci

    This is the comment I made under one of you videos earlier, praising how me, a guitar player, loves piano-focused lessons... and now this great channel featured something most guitarists can't live without - guitar effects ;))))
    One of the very best channels of this type, period.
    First of all the focus is on content not on the youtuber showing off. The content is very well crafted, prepared and explained in a an easy to follow fashion. The modules are bite size and easy to digest. The actual examples put all the theory into context. For me, a guitarist, it is so refreshing to watch this channel where everything is explained using a piano keyboard. I have always thought piano is the most logically laid out instrument to teach music, where notes and chords all connect in the easiest way possible. Last but not least the author focuses on practical use of the theory he teaches, which is far more important than the theory itself, if it makes sense.....
    And by the way: whenever I see anything "The Beatles" I click like, therefore I like every video of yours 🙃
    Greetings from Poland! I hope for more excellent content in 2024 😍

  • @callumhawkins2937
    @callumhawkins2937 Před 7 měsíci +19

    I tend to use a Digitech whammy alot with my band I feel like when you pitch shift up it sounds glassy. kind of fragile but when you drop it down it gets really beefy.

  • @TableSalt_
    @TableSalt_ Před 7 měsíci +2

    As a guitar player, when i played a digital piano for the first time i was sad to find out none of the foot pedals was a wah wah pedal

  • @dominolexington9435
    @dominolexington9435 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Tony Banks from Genesis ran his piano/keyboards through a Fuzzbox for leads - especially after Anthony Phillips left the band, and Tony had to try to play or cover for some of the missing guitar parts.

  • @umbertoyltp
    @umbertoyltp Před 7 měsíci +1

    That put a smile on your face!
    Both Rhodes piano and Hammond organ are great for use with distortion.

  • @lysdexiar31
    @lysdexiar31 Před 6 měsíci

    this was fantastic, please do this regularly!!

  • @jameslangridge1674
    @jameslangridge1674 Před 6 měsíci

    I am a guitarist and am getting my piano delivered tomorrow. Very excited to dive in and think/hope your course will help me.

  • @richardbeaton7324
    @richardbeaton7324 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I've always done this , Putting a phaser on an organ sound for dub reggae is perfect !

  • @Paul-dw2cl
    @Paul-dw2cl Před 4 měsíci

    Dude, I can’t tell you how much I love your videos

  • @ConnorBaxter
    @ConnorBaxter Před 6 měsíci

    Really enjoyed this one David, hope you're keeping well! Guitar FX are super under used with other instruments, glad to see they are getting some love! Try the Whammy before the fuzz for some different sounds also! Would be interested to see how how make use of some Delay pedals. so many options there!

  • @adamjohanbergren
    @adamjohanbergren Před 7 měsíci +1

    Reverb, delay, tremolo, and the Chase Bliss MOOD!

  • @adelaideloop9732
    @adelaideloop9732 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Thanks for your videos David. The theory stuff is always fascinating and well presented. This video is a bit different, which is good, and got me thinking which of my guitar pedals might work well with my Nord. Thanks.

  • @theeniwetoksymphonyorchest7580

    Excellent. There was really good prog on Radio 3 ages ago where I was surprised to learn that medieval musicians added all sorts of things to their instruments to change the timbre. Love the thought that musicians have always looked to change their sound.

  • @d4nt3sw0rd
    @d4nt3sw0rd Před 6 měsíci

    thanks for the idea I'll try it for sure

  • @henrychinaski2890
    @henrychinaski2890 Před 7 měsíci

    Please let me like this video twice. You rock dude, you let your rocker side take over and it was great fun, please make more videos like this one!

  • @johnplaysgames3120
    @johnplaysgames3120 Před 7 měsíci +2

    I actually really love the sound of some of these and could imagine using them to great effect in a song, not just as a fun goof on the internet. The way you're using the whammy and wah-wah was interesting because a few of the pieces you played with each (and both) reminded me of the sort of manipulation hip-hop producers do to samples for trap music. They use a lot of that kind of "hey, there's something wrong with the record" tweaking with effects to give samples a weird vintage, distorted, dissonant, and/or glitched vibe.
    As far as other pedals for future videos, I don't have any particularly good ones jumping out of my brain at the moment (I just recovered from a nasty case of the covid and am running on only about half my cylinders presently), but I'd love to hear you try to use the whammy pedal again (by itself or in conjunction with the other pedals) in a more targeted way to get the effect a good guitarist gets when playing a soulful solo. Y'know, bending the notes in a more meaningful way/time/distance rather than just sort of dropping it in as a rhythmic accent or glitch-moment like you were doing. Something like the way David Gilmour might play a guitar solo, for instance. I think you could get some real bluesy vibes going and bring emotion to a piano piece in a different way than you might normally.
    Anyway, great video! I love this kind of "experimenting with unusual equipment combos" type stuff.

  • @GizzyDillespee
    @GizzyDillespee Před 7 měsíci

    That was fun!😮😂🤣 You really had that Muff dimed!!

  • @reenchanted
    @reenchanted Před 7 měsíci

    Very cool! I’ve gotten some subtle but nice effects with a compressor pedal set to pump on a Clavinova. But pretty much all the effects here were fantastic. I’d love to see some of these jams worked out to full songs.

  • @TigerRogers0660
    @TigerRogers0660 Před 7 měsíci +2

    David, that's an interesting experiment !! I like the Wah/Whammy combo. I think a stereo delay with a ping pong effect would sound interesting!!

  • @BathedInMilk
    @BathedInMilk Před 7 měsíci +3

    Did this for years when doing function gigs. Big Muff, Cry Baby and a Flanger which I used for a Leslie effect. Amazing sound.

  • @giri.goyo_yt
    @giri.goyo_yt Před 7 měsíci

    Brings to mind DEVO, Stevie Wonder, U-Ziq, Cornelius and also Jonny Greenwood whom you mentioned. Even though Im no pro, I have done this and I love the directions you taken these pedals in with the keyboard. Kudos on out of the box thinking! Tasty noodling, too!

  • @cakemartyr5794
    @cakemartyr5794 Před 7 měsíci +2

    When I saw the title I immediately thought of Is It Any Wonder? by Keane. I am sure they used lots of effects on the Under the Iron Sea album, though I'm not sure exactly what technology they used. Your demo of the Big Muff does sound like it though.

  • @andrewpappas9311
    @andrewpappas9311 Před 7 měsíci +8

    The Big Muff was the first guitar pedal I bought back in 2016 when I was 17 because my band at the time was playing Today by the Smashing Pumpkins and I wanted to get closer to Billy Corgan's guitar tone (since he's one of the best known users of those pedals) and it's still one I love using but this was still incredibly cool to watch nonetheless, the fuzz and Whammy setup was definitely reminiscent of Jack White's sound since he used both of those extensively with the White Stripes and the wah by itself instantly made me think of Money by Pink Floyd since that was what Richard Wright used for his keyboard part. If you decide to try this again I'd love to see it with modulation pedals like chorus, phaser, flanger, tremolo/vibrato or delay and maybe a different kind of gain pedal like an overdrive because fuzz can get pretty harsh, but great vid as always David, and it was super cool getting to catch the premiere as well

    • @TLGProduktions
      @TLGProduktions Před 7 měsíci

      Canterbury bands like Caravan and Soft Machine among others used electric organs paired with fuzz pedals, wahs, guitar amps to get a really cool tone in the 70s. The big muff was a great useful pedal when I played keys in a band too!

    • @wingracer1614
      @wingracer1614 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Big Muffs work great on bass too. Chris Wolstenholme uses 2.

    • @GNVS300
      @GNVS300 Před 7 měsíci

      @@wingracer1614 does he use the Bass Big Muff? Because I have the Big Muff Nano and it sounds dreadful with my bass.

    • @wingracer1614
      @wingracer1614 Před 7 měsíci

      @@GNVS300 Probably but i'm not sure to be honest. Could be the old russian greens for all I know

    • @finctank
      @finctank Před 7 měsíci

      @@GNVS300there’s not much difference between guitar and ‘bass’ effect pedals, usually just one capacitor swapped out to respond better to lower frequencies. The best thing to do for your bass is get an EQ pedal and put it before the rest of your pedals

  • @niveketihw1897
    @niveketihw1897 Před 6 měsíci

    This was excellent!

  • @matthew.wilson
    @matthew.wilson Před 7 měsíci +1

    Effects like fuzz + distortion tend to benefit from the tone shaping of a cabinet or other IR downstream. It gets rid of some of the harshness.

  • @keeganmet257
    @keeganmet257 Před 7 měsíci +1

    This is something I love to do all the time digitally, in my daw.

  • @shadowcat4372
    @shadowcat4372 Před 6 měsíci

    The whammy set to the full step bend gets you in the world of pedal steel guitar a very underrated way to use that pedal

  • @markjfannon
    @markjfannon Před 7 měsíci +2

    Distorted piano sound was a very instrumental part of Keane's "Under The Iron Sea" album - songs like Is It Any Wonder and Crystal Ball in particular! Worth a listen for sure

  • @guitarplayer20xx
    @guitarplayer20xx Před 6 měsíci +1

    The fuzz pedal sounds like NIN! Is that what Trent Reznor has been doing all these years, using guitar pedals with his keyboards (amongst other unknown effects and equipments, of course)? The point being, it's a great idea!

  • @EmilienBandrac
    @EmilienBandrac Před 2 měsíci

    I love your channel David !

  • @chrishowe8614
    @chrishowe8614 Před 7 měsíci

    Nice video! Thanks!

  • @vaporman442
    @vaporman442 Před 7 měsíci

    One of my favorite effects for keyboards is the talk box. Not necessarily a guitar pedal, but usually considered a guitar effect. It sounds great with an organ!

  • @MrStefanDittrich
    @MrStefanDittrich Před 6 měsíci

    I love all the pedals together

  • @Jay.Jay-za
    @Jay.Jay-za Před 7 měsíci

    Some lovely Glitchmob sounds with whammy and big muff. ❤❤❤

  • @stephanemelo
    @stephanemelo Před 6 měsíci

    Props to you for playing the expression pedal with your left foot ! That is hard enough, haha.
    Sean Lennon has a song ("on again, off again") where the piano solo is played with a delay and a heavy chorus.

  • @MrTheBaron
    @MrTheBaron Před 7 měsíci

    One notable use of keyboards with guitars was Tony Banks. Before Steve Hackett joined Genesis. Tony would cover lead parts with his electric piano by running it to a fuzz pedal. He even had a RMI Electra Piano modded to have a Fender fuzz pedal and MXR Phase 100 hardwired to the piano's electronics. The MXR was to be an alternative to bringing a Leslie speaker.
    During the lockdown, I've mucked around with my Yamaha DX7 running through a Line 6 POD HD500X. Playing the famous E.Piano 1 preset through the POD's chorus or rotary speaker gives it that 80s touch when tweaked right.

  • @crunchyfrog555
    @crunchyfrog555 Před 7 měsíci

    I often use FX pedals on my piano sounds. One of my favourites is to use the saturated Hammond organ sound and melding it with a piano with distortion on. Goes quite well.

  • @kyher
    @kyher Před 7 měsíci +3

    The big muff sound almost reminds of Pokémon music on an old Gameboy 😂

  • @choimdachoim9491
    @choimdachoim9491 Před 6 měsíci

    Look again: Big Muff Pie! It was clever. Bought my first in 1977. Lots of pedals give greater variety of effect when hooked to a voltage regulator.

  • @kunaikai
    @kunaikai Před 25 dny

    The wah is really nice to leave cocked. It doesn’t have to always move. If you do that you can use it to reduce the overtones in the big muff

  • @LeoDurman11
    @LeoDurman11 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Hi David!!love your videos got me into music and jazz theory thanks!
    Ps I would love it if you did more videos on Jacob collier. I’m big fan :)

  • @UC-Music
    @UC-Music Před 7 měsíci

    Nice idea!! 🎉

  • @michaelvarney.
    @michaelvarney. Před 7 měsíci +1

    Alt Title: “Pianist discovers the joy of being a guitarist!”

  • @ukaszwasielewski4802
    @ukaszwasielewski4802 Před 6 měsíci

    Piano with whammy and wah sound like typical chill and study lo fi song, and I really like it XD

  • @claudevieaul1465
    @claudevieaul1465 Před 6 měsíci

    I love running my Hammond B3 (1961) through FX pedals - it's the main reason I added an (all tube) FX loop to that beast! 😎👍

  • @ozboomer_au
    @ozboomer_au Před 7 měsíci +1

    A fun thing for piano folks who have no experience with synthesizers and their associated filters, envelopes and other gadgets.
    Instead of the 'whammy' pedal, I'd go with a tremolo pedal; as many pianos will have a portamento/glide control anyway.
    The 'muff' being a fuzz pedal was always going to be too harsh; far better to use an overdrive pedal, which is much more subtle and controllable (my biases: BOSS BD-2 Blues Driver).
    Autowha pedals, while not giving the control, can be good for the initial (filter sweep) attacks of the 'chuck-a-whucka' sound of a manual wah.
    As sortof alluded to, making your 'keyboard' sound like a guitar is definitely a 'thing'... and I always go to Jan Hammer's "Miami Vice" theme for a good example of it... and again, he used the Fairlight CMI for some of the sounds (go Oz!)...
    czcams.com/video/dEjXPY9jOx8/video.html

  • @alvisezennaro3301
    @alvisezennaro3301 Před 7 měsíci

    You created the perfect lofi piano, only needs a chill beat and a girl studying

  • @maxturgeon89
    @maxturgeon89 Před 7 měsíci

    The big muff fuzz sound reminded me of the synth sound in The Decemberists' Severed, really nice!

  • @rodeofrancisco6130
    @rodeofrancisco6130 Před 7 měsíci

    My favorite pedal I've owned was always the Phaser Effect. So neat

  • @markowalski1
    @markowalski1 Před 7 měsíci +24

    The key to the Big Muff (dependent on variation tho) is to not crank the sustain knob too much. Anything past 1 or 2pm is really brittle and too saturated, you lose any note definition and fundamental.

    • @pontiuspilates
      @pontiuspilates Před 7 měsíci

      yep, there are sweet spots to find

    • @samsound8510
      @samsound8510 Před 7 měsíci

      Yeah, I wasn't impressed he just dimed it. Or put the wah AFTER the fuzz. Unless he tried different ways and just dug this...

    • @bongjovi4928
      @bongjovi4928 Před 7 měsíci

      Ackshuallyyyy

  • @Whenuknow
    @Whenuknow Před 6 měsíci

    A polyphonic synth through any of these would also be a world of fun

  • @rondenim9933
    @rondenim9933 Před 6 měsíci +2

    You could easily turn this into a series, I'd love to hear a phaser or overdrive on a piano

    • @Marta1Buck
      @Marta1Buck Před 6 měsíci

      Yes, this is gonna be very expensive real fast 😂

    • @GIGeorge23
      @GIGeorge23 Před 6 měsíci

      Phaser on rhodes piano was a super popular sound.

  • @paxtonmosby2050
    @paxtonmosby2050 Před 7 měsíci

    dude the jam at the end sounded amazing

  • @shaunmorrison6448
    @shaunmorrison6448 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I think the Whammy is one of those pedals you really need to write parts in mind with to get the most out of- Some of the harmonies besides just octaves are really musical, but it's not something you can just throw on a part like other effects. I've written some pieces using it to slide harmonics played on the bass around, which sounds incredible and would be totally impossible otherwise.

  • @blunderbass851
    @blunderbass851 Před 7 měsíci

    I _love_ the whammy pedal! Like another comment said, it has a wonderful tape-speed effect

  • @mrfomiatti5515
    @mrfomiatti5515 Před 7 měsíci

    Thanks for sharing.🤟

  • @xane7045
    @xane7045 Před 7 měsíci

    The outro piano piece is beautiful

  • @casssieboy
    @casssieboy Před 7 měsíci

    I once put a electric drumkit into a wah pedal, into a reverb, into a delay, into a chorus, into a boss metal zone, into my practice amp...
    The amp blew up.

  • @christopher8220
    @christopher8220 Před 7 měsíci

    AWW HECK YEAH dude! Keep experimenting!!!

  • @theoreinvikernej
    @theoreinvikernej Před 7 měsíci +1

    Great thanks for your videos and a magnificent 2024.

  • @podespault
    @podespault Před 7 měsíci

    Nice video ❤ I'd use both the Whammy and the wah in a fixed position for tone and pitch modification 😊

  • @Gary-zq3pz
    @Gary-zq3pz Před 7 měsíci

    I have the EQD Afterneath permenantly dedicated to my piano. A phaser pedal is often put just before the reverb for a bit(or a lot) of funk. You found some Funk of your own...

  • @philaesfarewell
    @philaesfarewell Před 6 měsíci

    When using guitar pedals for keyboards, you aways should have in mind, that guitar pedals are built for guitar line levels, which are significantly lower then "normal" line levels. When adding an overdrive/distortion/fuzz to a keyboard you are starting with a relatively high gain, resulting in more "effect".
    I use my Reface CP (Rhodes/Wurli kind of keyboard) with a self built Blues Driver Clone where I reduced the input gain before the circuit. It's my "always on" pedal when playing a Rhodes Sound, giving just the pinch of analog saturation I want.