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naruki

Well-known member
Joined
May 16, 2010
Messages
104
ZVex Woolly Mammoth :D doesn't work on Music Man basses without an active/passive switch though, I use it with my Ric
 

Greg75

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 3, 2009
Messages
47
Location
DC
VT is a great choice for that Ampeg sound. Two others I really like: VanAmps Sole-Mate spring reverb, and 3-Leaf Groove Regulator envelope filter. Both absolutley awesome.
 

Caca de Kick

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 29, 2006
Messages
1,363
Location
South Seattle
To me 200-300 is alot of money for only 1....you can buy well more than 2 pedals with that! 4 if you look for good used ones, that way if you find ones that aren't your "thing", you don't take a depreciation loss selling them off.

For me it would be wah and distortion. (in that order)
 

Grga

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 3, 2011
Messages
88
Location
Taunus Mountains, Germany
Save your bucks for a Bongo, a lot of pedals just steal good bass sounds. For beeing the fundament of a classic rock band no effect is needed. For solo stuff und crazy things I use from time to time a delay, reverb and wah. No compressor for a live gig, the pure bass sound is better for my ears, for recording it's different thing.
 

spaceman

Member
Joined
Feb 13, 2005
Messages
18
A distortion and a wah will get plenty of use.

Two pedals I know. But wahs are more fun with distortion.
There is a single pedal option for this, of course, the Morley distortion-wah.
Morley Pedals - Distortion/Wah/Volume (PDW-2)
I have an older one of these (I wanted to sound like John Wetton in Crimson)- but it broke a couple of times. And it made the tone awful when switched off.
But maybe the newer version is better?
 

smallequestrian

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 10, 2005
Messages
1,476
Location
Chicagoland
Save your bucks for a Bongo, a lot of pedals just steal good bass sounds. For beeing the fundament of a classic rock band no effect is needed. For solo stuff und crazy things I use from time to time a delay, reverb and wah. No compressor for a live gig, the pure bass sound is better for my ears, for recording it's different thing.

Pedals that "steal good tone" are for the most part user error. This is to general of a statement.

Pedals, just like a bass, an amp or a pic, are just another tool that can be used or abused.
 

Grga

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 3, 2011
Messages
88
Location
Taunus Mountains, Germany
Pedals that "steal good tone" are for the most part user error. This is to general of a statement.

Pedals, just like a bass, an amp or a pic, are just another tool that can be used or abused.

OK, let me correct it and say "for my ears". I did not mean the volume pedals of EB :D

In a period I did experiment a lot with pedals, different effects from different brands.. in the end "for my ears" the pure bass sound is always better for my needs and the needs of the band. It took a time for me to understand that a bass is not a guitar.. and since I have this understanding (for me, please feel free to see it in other ways) I have no use of an effect pedal anymore.. except a tuner.
 
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Grga

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 3, 2011
Messages
88
Location
Taunus Mountains, Germany
:eek::D:p;)

oh yeah.. funny things can happen.. I just had to laugh thinking about an issue.. my tuner was not at 440 Hz and I made all the other band members crazy .. so in the end we all played at 444 Hz, I still have to say sorry.. I claimed that my tuner was right and all the others would have a problem :D
 
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nurnay

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 26, 2010
Messages
985
Location
Chico, CA
The VT Bass Deluxe showed up on my doorstep yesterday, and my first impression is WOW. Very cool pedal. I'm digging the predefined settings, although I can tell I'll need to tweak them. I was surprised at the major volume difference between each one, I'll need to make some adjustments. It was a bit late, so I couldn't really turn it up. I'll mess around again tonight, then tomorrow at band rehearsal.

I ran it first through the main input, then tried the effects return jack. Didn't notice much difference either way, but again, this was at low volume.

Thanks all for your recommendations!
 

Ur2funky

Member
Joined
Feb 11, 2011
Messages
6
I have a large pedal board, but without question the one pedal that is the only one needed is an envelope filter.

Great effect, wonderful on solos, plus adds funk and fun to any groove. Fun fun fun!
Lots of choices of filters out there, but my favorite is the 3-Leaf Groove Regulator envelope filter. More expensive than some, but extremely musical, easy to use, and has the best sound out of any I have tried.
 

Smallmouth_Bass

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 25, 2007
Messages
1,761
Location
Montreal, Canada
I don't really have any pedal I couldn't live without, but my main permanent mini-board has a SansAmp PBDDI and a pedal tuner.

I also have a bunch of others that come out occasionally for fun jams, but rarely with the main band. They include: the Red Ripper (fuzz +), an octaver, a chorus, a phaser, various distortions, a compressor, a reverb, a digital delay and an envelope filter. They're all fun in moderation.
 

cyoungnashville

Chief Fanboi-ardee
Joined
Jun 3, 2010
Messages
640
Location
Nashville, Tennessee, United States
ohh man...... only ONE PEDAL????? well if i had to narrow it down to just one, its a tossup between steelguitar-eliminator, or my cave passive supergrunt. ok.... hands down im going with the supergrunt. to my ears it sounds like an ampeg in a more musical way than the vtbass (which i used for a very long time), and doesnt need batteries, but still has an on/off l.e.d. (i love this thing!).
 

Aussie Mark

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 9, 2003
Messages
5,646
Location
Sydney, Australia
my cave passive supergrunt. ok.... hands down im going with the supergrunt. to my ears it sounds like an ampeg in a more musical way than the vtbass (which i used for a very long time), and doesnt need batteries, but still has an on/off l.e.d. (i love this thing!).

Glad you like yours too Craig. For such a simple pedal I love the way it can make any solid state amp sound like a tube amp - without batteries or power
 

Powman

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 30, 2009
Messages
1,086
Location
Oakville, Ontario, Canada
My pedal board got larger recently but for good reason. Here is the chain:
  1. Bass
  2. Tuner
  3. Big Muff Pi

At the point of the Big Muff Pi, the signal gets split into a dry and effected signal. The effected signal goes into the Markbass head. I use the Big Muff very sparingly, so this pedal is mostly acting as a splitter (Y).

The dry signal from the Big Muff Pi goes onto a further journey:
  • Dry Big Muff Pi
  • EQ Pedal
  • Bass Limiter
  • Sans Amp DI
  • Wireless transmitter
  • Wireless receivers on Cochlear Implant and Hearing Aid
  • My biological head

The purpose for the last chain is to massage the signal so I can hear better playing live. The EQ'ing I need to do to get the correct cues to monitor myself while playing live sounds like caca poop to everyone else. In a nutshell I need to have more harmonics since the cochlear implant does not convey the fundamental frequency very well.

So basically by splitting the signal, the stage and audience gets what it needs and I get what I need. If I just used the line out from the Markbass, I could not do two different EQ's and sound quality and nobody would be happy.

I know I have extreme needs due to my disability, but I think this kind of setup might be quite useful to anyone using a wireless monitoring system.
 
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