Total Guitar

Build Your Pedalboard

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1. Volume

Where to put it At the start of your chain. Placed here, it’s like having your guitar’s volume knob in pedal form.

Alternativ­ely If you don’t want trails from delays and reverbs, and want the signal’s decay, place it at the end. It can be quite dramatic to gradually roll off large, heavy guitar parts in a studio-like fade while playing live.

2. Compressor

Where to put it Ideally, any compressio­n should happen before the rest of the signal chain, so as to tame peaks, while still allowing for a jump in volume. Since compressor­s work by evening out the signal and adding gain, pedals after them, especially drives, might need their output level tweaking. Once they’re dialled in you’re set. Placed in front of drives, compressor­s can smooth their response while delivering a hotter signal to their input and a ‘fatter’ sound.

Alternativ­ely Put the compressor at the end of your chain. This will lessen the difference in amplitude between different potential signal paths within your board and result in a more consistent signal level. After all, when you record in a studio, there will almost certainly be compressio­n put on your guitar post-amp and post-mic.

3. Whammy

Where to put it After compressio­n but before drives. Pitch shifters mangle your signal and compress it, so having drives after can clip and smooth some of the unpleasant artifacts and add additional complement­ary harmonics of their own.

Alternativ­ely Put it after delays so that you can dynamicall­y use momentary effects to, say, mess with the trails of a decaying signal. A common math-rock trick is to put a pitch shifter after a Boss DD-3 with the time on minimum and the feedback on full for a momentary sci-fi sound effect.

4. Wah

Where to put it Before drives for a full musical filter sound like Hendrix and Satriani. When placed before reverb and modulation, moving the wah slowly can result in an almost phaser-like filter that can be controlled dynamicall­y with your foot for subtle, psychedeli­c motion under arpeggiate­d sections.

Alternativ­ely Place after fuzzes for a wild, extreme filter sound. Think Billy Corgan’s solo sounds on Smashing Pumpkins tracks like Slunk.

5. Preamp / Drive

Where to put it Before drives and fuzzes. Smashing the input of drives makes a clipped, compressed, fatter tone.

Alternativ­ely After drives and fuzzes to function more like a lead boost. Here, it will still

fatten the sound, but won’t increase the compressio­n or clipping.

6. Fuzz/ Distortion

Where to put it Before delays and modulation­s, after drives and pitch shifters. Compressed or clipped signals can make the perceived volume of the guitar greater; given that delays and reverb work by creating copies of the signal, placing distortion after them can result in volume jumps or muddy tones. Placing them before makes the cut-off between repeats cleaner.

Alternativ­ely Put them before pitch shifters. As they’ll clip the guitar signal heavily, they’ll send a more compressed signal to the pitch shifter. This could be a radically different tone, depending on the fuzz and pitch shifter pedals used

7. Delay

Where to put it After drives; before reverb and modulation.

Alternativ­ely Put after reverb, or stack multiple delay and reverb pedals in series for huge ambient tones. The general rule of thumb tends to be: for clarity, stack from a moderately long delay time, and get longer as you move down the chain. For ambient players, start with a shorter initial time and get longer from the second delay on.

8. Reverb

Where to put it After delays, so that your delay is still clear. The combinatio­n of delay and reverb can be great for ambient noodling, but using them in such a way that they don’t become an indistinct wash can be tricky. With reverb placed after delay, rolling off the treble on a reverb is sufficient to get a huge pad sound, or an ambient tone for clean, atmospheri­c sections, without the reverb becoming overpoweri­ng.

Alternativ­ely Put your reverb in front of your drives, or run it into a dirty amp. This dark tone can be brooding. It’s a great trick to try in the studio if you’re experiment­ing with alternativ­e signal orders, and is allegedly the preferred pedal order of Steven Wilson from Porcupine Tree, who runs his delays and reverb into the dirt channel of his amp.

9. Modulation

Where to put it At the end of your chain, so that all of the other effects in the chain are consistent­ly filtered. The sound of something like a phaser or a flanger after drive can be powerful – think Van Halen’s Ain’ t talk in ’’ bout love or the solo from The Mooney Suzuki’ s Alive and amplified.

Alternativ­ely Although you may lose the consistent, audible ‘cycle’ of the modulation effect, putting it before your delayscanm­eana disorienta­ting wash of modulated echoes, particular­ly with a tape-echo style delay that has the addtional option to addmodulat­ionor wow and flutter settings.

The golden rules of effect order on your ’board… and when it’s okay to break them

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