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Sound
Samples
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Well, I get a
lot of questions about the difference
between the G.I. and the Neo, so what I
thought I'd do is record 2 sets of
everything, one with the G.I. and the other
with the Neo. They're presented here next to
each other so that you can A/B them to hear
the difference for yourself. Warning: My
playing sux. These samples are meant to
demonstrate features, not chops.
Also, note
that there's quite a bit of high frequency
artifacts from the mp3 encoding. They're not
there in the original wav files.
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The guitar
parts were played with my beat-up 'SX' Strat
copy, a Peavey Classic 30 (clean channel,
flat EQ, volume very low,... about 1.5, and
a touch of spring reverb), miced with a pair
of ADK condenser mics, through a Behringer
mixer into the computer.
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Neo Low Gain |
GI Low Gain |
Fuzz -
15%
Everything else Flat |
Notice
how 'clean' the Neo is. you start
to get grit as you go down. It's a
great blues sound! The GI on the
other hand, is already starting to
sound mean. |
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Neo Medium Gain |
GI Medium Gain |
Fuzz -
50%
Everything else Flat |
The Neo
sounds SOOO fat, almost like a
gorgeous overdrive. The GI is pretty
mean! |
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Neo High Gain |
GI High Gain |
Fuzz -
100%
Everything else Flat |
The Neo
starts to get serious here. But
notice still how smooth it sounds.
I'm playing as aggressively as I
can, but notice how even on the
power chord, you get this smoothing
compression, the kind that only a
germanium will do. The G.I.,... well
what can I say. Very focused. You
can hear harmonics fighting for
dominance on that last note. |
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Neo Tone Sweep |
GI Tone Sweep |
Tone
goes from 0% to 100% and back to 0%.
Everything else is flat |
Notice
the HUGE tone control range. There's
so much that you can do with just
that one knob |
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Neo Body Sweep |
GI Body Sweep |
Body
goes from 0% to 100% and back to 0%.
Everything else is flat |
You can
hear clearly the difference in the
'girth' of these 2 pedals. The Neo
sounds fat, not honky or mid-rangy.
The GI, on the other hand can do a
serious scoop, but at the top of the
range of the body control, it sounds
very full. |
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Neo Bias Sweep |
GI Bias Sweep |
Bias
goes from 0% to 100% and back to 0%.
Everything else is flat |
Mucking
around with the bias control has a
HUGE effect on the tone. You can
hear what happens to both pedals
when you sweep the bias. You go from
nothing, to gated, to fat and
symmetrical, to squishy and back
again. |
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Neo Bias Demo |
GI Bias Demo |
Sample 1
- bias at 50%
Sample 2 - bias at 20%
Sample 3 - bias at 100% |
I
thought that the bias demo above
didn't give you enough of an idea
about what the guitar sounds like.
So I recorder the same phrase 3
times. The first is with the bias
set flat, which is the symmetrical
setting. Notice how stable the sound
is. The second sample is with the
bias tuned down to 25%. This creates
that really cool gated sound. The
3rd sample is with the bias turned
all the way up. This creates a
completely different sound. It's a
very compressed sound. The notes
take some time to settle.
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Neo Load Demo |
GI Load Demo |
Sample 1
- Load at 0%
Sample 2 - Load at 25%
Sample 3 - Load at 50%
Sample 4 - Load at 100% |
Once
again, one phrase played 4 times,
each time with increasing load. Hear
how at the load all the way down,
the pickups sound very weak. What
you're literally doing is trying to
suck too much current out the
pickups, and they just can't
deliver. As you turn the load up,
the pickups can relax a bit more,
and you start to get top end detail
back in. By the time you get to 100%
load, the pickups sound very bold
and articulate. |
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Neo Clean-up |
GI Clean-up |
Everything flat |
I'm not
turning down the guitar volume too
much. It's just on 50% for the first
section, and then at the end, I turn
it up for the last few notes. Notice
how sensitive both pedals are to
volume position? Also note the
difference between the GI an the
Neo. The GI is a lot meaner,... |
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Neo Different Pickups |
Go Different Pickups |
Everything flat |
Same
phrase, starting with the neck
pickup, and working my way down to
the bridge to demonstrate how each
pedal handles the unique tones of
each pickups. These are fuzz pedal,
so you can't expect super clarity,
but notice none the less, how each
pickup can still be distinguished.
This clarity can be increased even
further by turning up the load
control. |
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