Archive for Effects

Review: Rocktron Banshee Talkbox

If your are in the market for a talk box you more than likely have heard of the Heil Talk Box. The Heil is the classic talkbox made famous by such guitarists such as Peter Framptom, Joe Walsh and others from the 70’s and 80’s including Bon Jovi’s “Living On Prayer” and “It’s My Life” tones.

Normally I am a stickler for sticking to the original. Not in this case.

The Rocktron Banshee Talkbox is equal or superior to the Heil in just about every way.

The biggest plus is the ease of use of the Banshee. In order to use a Heil Talk box you need to connect the speaker outs from your amp to the unit to drive the internal speaker. Most of us with combo amps do have have the luxury of speaker out jacks. Plus if you use your speaker out how are you supposed to play through the amp for normal tones ?

The Banshee has a built in preamp/amp to drive the speaker. The diagram below is a basic setup. You can use the footswitch to bypass the Banshee. There are three controls. Gain, tone and output level.

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The unit is plenty loud to practice with without mounting the tube to a microphone.

The tone out of the Banshee is excellent. It totally nails the classic tones of the Heil Talk box.

If you are in the market for a talk box do not hesitate to buy the Rocktron Banshee over the Heil.

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[phpbay]rocktron banshee, 5[/phpbay]

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DigiTech Vocalist Live 2 and Vocalist Live 4

All of the sudden I have GAS to get a Digitech Vocalist. I don’t have the greatest voice in the world and I can get a bit pitchy at times especially if the song is not in my range. I was always intrigued with the vocalist since the initial releases. It just didn’t seem worth the $300+ investment since I am just a studio hack. My own voice was usually good enough or I would have my wife sing.

Digitech is about to release new generation of Vocalists. The Vocalist Live 2 and Vocalist Live 4.
The Vocalist Live 2 can output your voice and two more harmonies. That is plenty for my needs. Also the Vocalist 2 will do one harmony above and one harmony below your voice. I kind of wish it had the option to do both harmonies higher. It seems like the Vocalist 2 does not have pitch correction, which is a bit of a bummer, but maybe it can. One of the harmony options is “Unison”. The manual states:

When Unison 1 is on (and Unison 2 is off), it doesnâ??t track notes in a chromatic scale, so it produces a tight double sound, even if youâ??re singing slightly out of pitch. When Unison 2 is on (and Unison 1 is off), it tracks chromatic notes. This can help you sing on pitch better.

So maybe it can do pitch correction. I emailed Digitech about this matter. There aren’t manuals available for the Vocalist Live 4 yet on the site.

These particular products are geared towards guitarists. Rather than create harmonies based on the key of the song or scales it actually tracks the chords you are playing on guitar and creates the harmonies based on what you are playing. It’s a pretty amazing concept and early reports are that it tracks well.

Being the “bang for the buck” guy that I am I am on the lookout for a used Digitech Vocalist Performer on Ebay. Another candidate may be the Vocalist Workstation EX will seems like it may have do pith correction capabilities.


I am also looking for Cakewalk/Sonar plugins that would be able to accomplish this same task.

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Neil Schon using a BOSS GT6

I was poking around the Neil Schon web site. I notice a picture in the gallery of Neil Schon playing what looks to be a Korg GT6. It looks like he was playing the Star Spangled Banner at a baseball game.

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Rockman Gear

rockmanhead.jpgIn the early 80’s Tom Scholz introduced the Rockman X100. Scholz is an MIT graduate and the Rockman gear was designed to let everyday people achive guitar tones that took hundreds or thousands of dollars of studio gear and knowledge to achieve. It was revolutionary at the time and was truly one of the first stack-in-a-box devices.

The Rockman line was expanded to include rack mountable modules. Including the Rockman Sustainor, Chorus and Echo.

If you have any questions or comments about Rockman gear please leave a comment on this page.

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DigiTech Vocalist Live 2 and Vocalist Live 4

All of the sudden I have GAS to get a Digitech Vocalist. I don’t have the greatest voice in the world and I can get a bit pitchy at times especially if the song is not in my range. I was always intrigued with the vocalist since the initial releases. It just didn’t seem worth the $300+ investment since I am just a studio hack. My own voice was usually good enough or I would have my wife sing.

Digitech is about to release new generation of Vocalists. The Vocalist Live 2 and Vocalist Live 4.
The Vocalist Live 2 can output your voice and two more harmonies. That is plenty for my needs. Also the Vocalist 2 will do one harmony above and one harmony below your voice. I kind of wish it had the option to do both harmonies higher. It seems like the Vocalist 2 does not have pitch correction, which is a bit of a bummer, but maybe it can. One of the harmony options is “Unison”. The manual states:

When Unison 1 is on (and Unison 2 is off), it doesn�??t track notes in a chromatic scale, so it produces a tight double sound, even if you�??re singing slightly out of pitch. When Unison 2 is on (and Unison 1 is off), it tracks chromatic notes. This can help you sing on pitch better.

So maybe it can do pitch correction. I emailed Digitech about this matter. There aren’t manuals available for the Vocalist Live 4 yet on the site.

These particular products are geared towards guitarists. Rather than create harmonies based on the key of the song or scales it actually tracks the chords you are playing on guitar and creates the harmonies based on what you are playing. It’s a pretty amazing concept and early reports are that it tracks well.

Being the “bang for the buck” guy that I am I am on the lookout for a used Digitech Vocalist Performer on Ebay. Another candidate may be the Vocalist Workstation EX will seems like it may have do pith correction capabilities.


I am also looking for Cakewalk/Sonar plugins that would be able to accomplish this same task.

vocalist2.jpg

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ESP M-350

I have a ESP M-350. I really wanted a Floyd Rose guitar again since I kind of miss my Kramer American Pacer from the 80’s. It’s fun to have a reverse headstock shred machine in the arsenal.

Anyhoo I hated the EMG HZ pickups in the ESP. I had a Seymour Duncan JB that I stole from my Korean Kramer for the bridge. I ordered a GFS Crunchy PAF for the neck position from GuitarFetish.com. If you’re not familiar with GFS pickups they are excellent quality pickups at a fraction of the cost of Duncans. I paid $22.95 for the GFS Crunchy PAF and I ordered a set of pickup rings. To my surprise the pickup came with a ring already installed and ready to go for the neck position. I lowered the middle pickup as low as possible to reduce magnetic drag on the strings.

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The installation took a bit longer than I expected. I really don’t care for working on guitars anymore. I managed to change the pickups without changing the strings. Try that without a Floyd Rose.

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I was little concerned about phasing of the pickups. I think I got it right. It really doesn’t matter though. There is no position on the switch that allows the neck and bridge pickup to be ran together. The guitar sounds in phase in the 2 and 4 position. So that was a relief.

The ESP M-350 has a mahogany body. The JB balances well with the ESP but it still has some nice bite. The GFS Crunchy PAF is not as “woody sounding” as it would be on say a Les Paul. With a 24 fret guitar the neck pickups closer to the bridge pickup than a regular 22 fret guitar. The sound difference is not as dramatic as it is on a standard guitar.

Let’s face it though, the neck pickup will not be getting used much on this guitar.

Here is the finished product.

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The guitar next to the ESP is a Kramer (Korean) that I have had since 1983 or so. I have painted it a number of times, one time it was surf green. It has a totally crap plywood body. I had the Duncan JB in this Kramer prior to putiing it in the ESP. Although the Kramer body was totall crap the neck is actually half way decent and it sounded ok with the Duncan in it.

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My DOD FX55 Distortion Pedal

I just wanted to pay tribute to my DOD FX55 distortion pedal. I bought it new around 1985 or so. I didn’t know better. I really can’t say anything good about this pedal. It sounds nasally but not in a fuzz face kind of way. It’s not even good for slamming the inputs of a tube amp.

If you ever have the chance to buy one…don’t

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