Showing posts with label tone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tone. Show all posts

Godin Redline Electric Guitar (Trans Black Flame, Roseword Neck) Review

Godin  Redline Electric Guitar (Trans Black Flame, Roseword Neck)
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Brand new Godin Redline HB guitar arrived today ahead of schedule (good thing), but I've already processed a return for it. Why? Because of numerous rusted/shoddy frets, buzz on all strings, regardless of open or fretted notes...even after tuning, and a small chip on the fret board. Other than those flaws, body/neck/pickup construction appeared ok, nothing spectacular, as was the included gig bag. But considering I just paid nearly $500 for this guitar, and out of the box it had the aforementioned problems, that's just unacceptable. And to boot, I got stabbed...even bled!, by a string end on one of the tuners (at the headstock) while repackaging the item for return - this just added to the irritation. I ordered this specifically because it was a handcrafted, North American made guitar, but I bought a $200 Ibanez Jumpstart package for a family member over a month ago, and that guitar was better quality than this one! Overall, I'm very disappointed with this product and that in itself is disappointing...'cause I hate returning things!

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Godin Freeway Classic Electric Guitar (Lightburst Flame Leaftop RN) Review

Godin Freeway Classic Electric Guitar (Lightburst Flame Leaftop RN)
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I had gotten to a point where my $100 pawn shop special wasn't going to cut it anymore. I needed to step up to a proper instrument, but I didn't need to go overboard. After some research I determined that I was looking for something in the $600 - $700 range. I actually intended to walk out with a Fender Stratocaster. I looked a quite a few in the range, and I looked at some Ibanez guitars, and I looked at some epiphones and gibsons.
Problem is, $700 pays for the logo and the brand name - and not much else. Most of the guitars in this range were set up and finished about as well as one might expect from a $300 guitar. Frets hanging over the edge, or not completely tapped in, buzz in the action, sloppy binding... Now, at this point you might be thinking I'm just nitpicking. However, if the frets and binding aren't clean, you can bet they cut some corners on the parts of the guitar that you can't see.
I was about to give up, when I saw the Godin. The top is beautifully figured, and I like the HSH setup, but what the heck is a Godin? I put it through the inspection, and the neck is straight, the finish is free of pits and dents, the frets are perfect, the binding is completely clean. It's got straplock buttons installed by default. It even comes with a QA tag, that shows each of the quality assurance tests it had to pass before it was put up for sale.
Big deal. So the guitar is cosmetically perfect, that doesn't mean it'll play.
Except that it does. It plays better than any guitar I've ever seen in this range. It plays better than any USED guitar I've seen in this price range. The sound is sweet and the neck is very playable, and even though the action is insanely low, there is no buzz. It's made in Canada.
See, Godin doesn't really have a name to bank on. So what you are paying for is all guitar.
The stock pickups were fine, but I wanted to customize my sound a bit, So I threw in a dimarzio fred in the bridge and a dimarzio fs-1 in the single coil position.
All in all, it's a pretty sweet guitar.

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Godin Redline Electric Guitar, Trans Red Flame, Rosewood Fingerboard Review

Godin Redline Electric Guitar, Trans Red Flame, Rosewood Fingerboard
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I purchased this guitar on a Lightening Deal. Well worth what I paid. It isn't the Redline 3 model. The one I got was the Redline 2 w/o the tremolo. Also included was a soft gig bag. The only thing I had to do to the guitar was adjust the truss rod(had some fret buzz) and tune it up. Wasn't crazy about the color when ordering but when I received it, I changed my mind. The transparant red with the black outline looks killer. Love the EMG's in it. The EMG's alone will set you back a couple hundred dollars. The only reason for the 4 stars was because it was the wrong guitar. But I was satisfied with what I got for the money. Godin makes a good product.

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Godin Session Electric Guitar - Vintage Burst SG MN Review

Godin Session Electric Guitar - Vintage Burst SG MN
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I was looking for a guitar hand made in North America under $1000, which is not easy. I was also looking for something like a Strat, as I've already got a Les Paul copy. I'm very happy with the look and feel of the Godin Session, the neck is very comfortable, and the pickups sound great. I'd highly recommend, and would buy the same guitar again if lost or stolen.

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Godin Redline Electric Guitar (Natural SG RN Flame) Review

Godin Redline Electric Guitar (Natural SG RN Flame)
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Guitar does everything it is supposed to do, plays well, looks good, sounds good. I would heartily recommend this for someone who is looking for a good no-frills backup guitar.

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Godin SD 22 Electric Guitar (Amber Flame Leaftop RN) Review

Godin SD 22 Electric Guitar (Amber Flame Leaftop RN)
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Bought the Godin SD 22 but not from Amazon. Bought it from a private owner who bought it new and never used it. I own both an American Telecaster and Les Paul. This guitar is somewhat a combination of both and maybe a little Stratocaster in there too. You will find the wood quality excellent, (Canadian) The guitar has a balanced feel where it is not too heavy like my Les Paul. The frets are flush to the sides when you run your fingers over them. The knobs are knurled metal and have a nice feel. The single humbucker pickup gives some nice tones. The two single coil pickups are OK too but not as good as my telecaster. All in all, a very versatile guitar with excellent quality for the money. I would buy it again.

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The SD 22 combines the easy feel of a short scale with the added snap of a rock maple neck. The short scale reduces string tension, which provides easy string bending and augments the low frequency response. The compact feel of the neck and the diagonal radius carved into the body produces exceptional balance and comfort. In short, this guitar is fun to play, and lends itself to classic rock and R&B sounds.


Maple and Poplar Body
The SD 22 is constructed with a blend of two tonewoods. A center of silver leaf maple serves as an anchor for the neck and is flanked by poplar sidepieces, resulting in Godin's stated goal of making electrics that begin with a great acoustic sound. Solid body instruments may not produce much in the way of volume, but make no mistake, wood weight and density, type (and quality) of the neck/body attachment, type of bridge and nut material all have an impact on that final sound.
One Godin GHB1 humbucker and two Godin GS1 single-coil pickups, along with a five-way switch for serious tonal options.

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Godin Progression Electric Guitar (Trans Cream, Maple Neck) Review

Godin  Progression Electric Guitar (Trans Cream, Maple Neck)
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Recently I ordered the Godin Progression in a trans cream colour.
The guitar looks, feels and sounds great. If you like a floating tremolo as I do, you need to adjust the settings. Standard the tremolo is resting on the body for the people that don't use a tremolo. My guitar was with the standard setting ok.
As with any new guitar I always service the guitar to set my personal settings (string height...etc.). It's a very versatile guitar including the High Defintion Revoicer. I use this feature mainly to have a bit more punch for clean rhythm parts. The fretwork is excellent as well as the overall finish. The neck feels smooth, more comfortable than a standard Fender strat. Taking into account the price/quality, this guitar is a great deal and can easily compete with the major league. You'll be impressed with the natural sound which is also reinforced by the extra big magnets in the single coils. With the 5 way switch you can retrieve all the classic sounds and more. For sure a guitar to recommend.

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Digidesign Eleven Rack Guitar Multi Effects Processor Review

Digidesign Eleven Rack Guitar Multi Effects Processor
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To qualify this review, I must first inform you:
I have no affiliation with Pro Tools or Avid, so if I say something positive you can trust it.
As a professional studio musician ( since the 1970's) I have had experience using every original amp and effect this ( or any other) modeling preamp claims to emulate. If you ever listened to the radio in the 80's and 90's, you have heard me playing most of these real amps on real records. There's a good chance you might have seen me on TV with some of these amps too.
Good features: KNOBS
The front panel has large rotary encoders with smooth-operating silent knobs. That's great, because they lay these out to provide tone and volume adjustments in real time... "On-the-fly" as they say. This feature is not new or unique, but it demonstrates that they consulted with real players during the design. This means you can use it like the front panel of whatever amp you are modeling and that the controls operate very much like the real thing. A+ !
TONE: very good for a modeling amp... one of the best. Because I have owned and toured with all the famous amps, I know not only how they sound, but how they react to different guitars / pickups... how they "Feel" to the player. "Feel" is a subjective term because it includes so many variables. One of the most important variables that most reviewers forget is VOLUME. It is impossible to describe the experience of playing to 17,000 people at full volume on a large stage. The whole point of using modeling amps is to recreate all the nuances of of tone and response that a REAL amp has at REAL stage volumes, yet do that at low volumes for smaller gigs, sessions or home recording. In that area, this is one of the best sounding and feeling preamps I have used.
Versatility:
It is designed to work either as a recording front-end, a direct out to a mixer / PA... AND a front end to any professional amp you currently have. I'll explain all three of those briefly:
If you already have a good amp, (or two for stereo) you hook this up for live playing easily. Three button presses get you to the cab-sim defeat function, so you can turn OFF the internal cabinet simulation. That is also not new or unique, (Much less expensive modelers have that) but it is absolutely necessary for any professional with a REAL amp. You don't want the artificial simulations in addition to the natural variables of your amp and speakers. Once you learn how to navigate this machine, it only takes a few seconds to set that function ON or OFF. So, that's a A grade in this sub-category, but not A+. Why? Because they should have made it possible with a single press of a dedicated button.
Interface with a live PA or mixer to power-amp: Many working guitarists love the sound of their real amps, but have discovered that for amplifying modeled sounds, nothing beats a professional power amp. I won't discuss the relative merits between Class A, AB, or class-D topologies here. The bottom line is you get more clean raw power in a smaller, lighter package with professional power amps. They do not "color" the sound as much, which is desirable when you have a modeling preamp. Also, professional solid state power amps are far more reliable and require far less maintenance.
This thing works perfect well with either powered speakers or your own power-amp / passive speaker combo. (my preferred rig). Not only that, but you can operate it in two modes at once. That is: you can use a real amp for your stage-monitors and simultaneously run a direct out to the FOH mixer. That makes a sound-tech's job easier. That's especially important if YOU are the sound-tech. I just wish they used dedicated outs for each "mode" and had balanced lines for everything. This has balanced-outs for the direct out and buffered un-balanced outs for everything else. You'd think for the price their asking, they could include two-extra balancing transformers!
Recording and re-amping. Many hobbyists and home recording studio owners will want this because it excels here; especially if you already use any version of pro-tools on a MAC. If you use any other recording software environment it still works, and you can still use its internal processing to relieve your computer form all the heavy number-crunching. That's great. This also allows you to "re-amp." That is when you devote a separate track to recording a dry, unprocessed guitar signal. That way you are not "locked-in" to a preamp sound during mix-down. You can choose a different amp-model, effects, EQ... anything, AFTER the recording is done. This feature is of no use to me, however tweaky amateurs love to play with tones without having to perform. Producer-types like to stamp their talentless imprimatur on other people's labor. So this feature is a big hit among inexperienced geeks and pretentious producers too. This category therefore deserves a special two-pole rating: for Tweaky geeks who can't play and have endless time to play with toys, or for egotistical yet talentless engineering nerds, this is an A+ feature. For any professional with decades of hard-won experience the rating is "who cares?" Well, sorry... I take some of that back. I suppose an up-and-coming studio cat MIGHT get more calls if the producers knows he can screw with the player's tones AFTER the session. Producers universally enjoy wrecking decent tracks with their imbecilic post-prod voodoo. This thing allows them to do that in spades!
EASE of operation: Manufacturers are stupid. They want to create a hot product, but they forget they must sell to musicians, not computer geeks. True, some of us are actual engineers who can operate computers, graphing calculators, know math and how to use slide rules. ( I'm giving away my age here.) But as musicians, we do not enjoy tweaking when we are playing. We need the instantaneous adjustments of real knobs and dedicated buttons. So why do so many manufacturers, including this one, make the same mistake? Because they are cheap and stupid. They are so worried about making profit that they refuse to put simple buttons with clear labels like; Chorus, reverb, delay, boost, distortion, overdrive, leslie, etc.. Instead, they group effects under "categories" based on the type of processing algorithm that makes that effects. Reverbs are different than delays. Those are different from other time-based modulating effects like chorus or flanging. They are basically just putting their software into a metal box so that it LOOKS like a real machine.
OK... so I have exposed my prejudice here... I despise software driven commands, menus and scrolling. I prefer dedicated buttons for every function. Also, I know enough about engineering and product design that I see why they are ripping us off. They claim to give maximum flexibility, and they do, sort of. But it is at the expense of intuitive control.
NOTE TO ALL MODELING preamp DESIGNERS:
WE NEED BUTTONS. ANY PRODUCT YOU MAKE SHOULD BE SO SIMPLE THAT IT REQUIRES NO MANUAL.
Finally, the few amp models and effects this thing has are very good. Not the best for every guitarist or situation though, but certainly one of the best. The original GP100 by Roland is still as great today as it was before it was discontinued. Mine still works and sounds as good as this for the BIG THREE models: Marshalls, Twins and AC30's. In fact the GP100 is BETTER than this much newer device at the Marshall plexi tone. For that matter, the sansamp GT2 ($160) does that single thing as well as any preamp on the market. The ROCKTRON PROPHESY got the "buttons plus knobs" thing right. Why can't AVID?
EVEN CHEAP modelers (

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