Trying My Friend's Schecter Tempest |
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Trying My Friend's Schecter Tempest |
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Jul 5 2012, 03:19 PM |
Hell guys! The guy that is playing rhythm guitars in Cirse has bought a new guitar. He got a Schecter Tempest Custom which is a very nice axe, with a powerful sound. Compared with my Gibson, it's sound has more mid frequencies but less bass, maybe because of the type of wood. It's has a fat neck so it's cool for rocking but difficult for shredding.
I recorded this short jam, I basically played a solo from my band: -------------------- My lessons
Do you need a Guitar Plan? Join Gab's Army Check my band:Cirse Check my soundcloud:Soundcloud Please subscribe to my:Youtube Channel |
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Jul 5 2012, 03:23 PM |
Unusual looking guitar but it sounds cool
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Jul 5 2012, 03:26 PM |
Unusual looking guitar but it sounds cool yeah, the only famous player that I know that uses it is the guy that plays in Papa Roach: -------------------- My lessons
Do you need a Guitar Plan? Join Gab's Army Check my band:Cirse Check my soundcloud:Soundcloud Please subscribe to my:Youtube Channel |
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Jul 5 2012, 07:15 PM |
Sounds pretty cool! And looks great! I like it! It would be cool if you will play the same thing on your Gibson so we can compare the sound! Great idea! I will do a comparison video!! We did that in the rehearsal and the Gibson won the match, but the tone is different so maybe it's a matter of taste. -------------------- My lessons
Do you need a Guitar Plan? Join Gab's Army Check my band:Cirse Check my soundcloud:Soundcloud Please subscribe to my:Youtube Channel |
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Jul 7 2012, 05:44 AM |
You nailed it "Good for rocking, not so much for shredding" not to say you CAN"T shred on it, as folks can shred on whatever. But generally speaking, I agree 100 percent. That pretty much sums it up. Of course, others mileage may vary, but yeah, the neck is sorta fat/thick, upper mids are boosted, low end bass is sorta not really there. The good news is, it sits in a rock mix better than average as it does not compete with the bass guitar for low frequencies that badly. And it stands out for rock lead playing with strong mids. It has a MEATY neck for a comfy grip for power chords. PERFECT for RAWK, custom built just for it. Todd Todd... you described the sound so PERFECTLY. That's the prefect definition, and I want to remark what you said about how its tone fits in the mix, that's the most important thing after all... and Schecter does the job great for modern rock. -------------------- My lessons
Do you need a Guitar Plan? Join Gab's Army Check my band:Cirse Check my soundcloud:Soundcloud Please subscribe to my:Youtube Channel |
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Jul 11 2012, 04:54 PM |
The Schecter guitars really do seem to sit in the mix well across the line. I"ve recorded/mixed bands that used them and you don't have to cut the low end out to try to make it fit. It just sorta fits in by itself. They use the same EMG's as the LTDs do in many cases (81 85) but have a vastly different sound/tone it seems when placed in a mix. The LTD instruments I've mixed seem to sometimes be either bass heavy or bass light. So I end up adding or dropping low end EQ. Most schecters seem sonically balanced in 6 string form. (never recorded/mixed ERD schecters). What is the reason? The wood? The shape? That's a good question, maybe the combination of wood, shape and pick ups made this guitars balanced. This one that I tried comes with some passive seymour duncan instead of EMG. These ones give the guitar a more rocker sound, less metal. -------------------- My lessons
Do you need a Guitar Plan? Join Gab's Army Check my band:Cirse Check my soundcloud:Soundcloud Please subscribe to my:Youtube Channel |
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