Y
ykarkason
New member
Well, So I'm at a concert, the master level is maybe just below the 1/8 of the knob.
I'm starting to get some feedback
o) , checking as fast as possible, turning down the volume, It was the end of their instrumantel song, very moody, and the feedback goes to an higher frequency, I turn some knobs around, happend to be some bus EQ,
It changes the pitch. Highly appropriate for the song's end, I keep playing with it.
I've found it at last, it was a cable running from my mixer's mono out into one of the inputs, I took the volume down slowly, took the cable out, returned everything to how it was, and the concert continued.
It didn't go out of my mind,
I went back to the studio the day afterwards and started playing with it.
I found out that you have to keep the master level down so it won't start to clip, but to have the other levels quite high.
I took one cable, threw it on one of to L out, and panned it center,
It made such a beautiful noise, following some simple known rules I played with EQs,
If you take the low end the pitch goes higher,
If you add to the mids, you get some kind of overdrive,
If you take some mids, you lower your pitch,
And if you take the highs out you just lose the treble.
It was really cool, I started playing with it, even sampled it and auto-tuned it, turned out to be a rocking lead.
Then a thought came to my mind, "What if I add a second cable?",
I took another cable, pluged it into the Right out, panned it Left, took the left out and panned it Right.
No feedback, the intersting thing was, that if you even take one of them and pan it even the slightest to the side it starts to feedback.
Really cool, only has it pitch lower(as there's more power to the input, it goes lower), and gives you a more accurate control over the pitch.
Try that out! the most awsome thing I ever stumbled across.
(But turn your monitors down first, you don't want to become deaf!
)
I'm starting to get some feedback

It changes the pitch. Highly appropriate for the song's end, I keep playing with it.
I've found it at last, it was a cable running from my mixer's mono out into one of the inputs, I took the volume down slowly, took the cable out, returned everything to how it was, and the concert continued.
It didn't go out of my mind,
I went back to the studio the day afterwards and started playing with it.
I found out that you have to keep the master level down so it won't start to clip, but to have the other levels quite high.
I took one cable, threw it on one of to L out, and panned it center,
It made such a beautiful noise, following some simple known rules I played with EQs,
If you take the low end the pitch goes higher,
If you add to the mids, you get some kind of overdrive,
If you take some mids, you lower your pitch,
And if you take the highs out you just lose the treble.
It was really cool, I started playing with it, even sampled it and auto-tuned it, turned out to be a rocking lead.
Then a thought came to my mind, "What if I add a second cable?",
I took another cable, pluged it into the Right out, panned it Left, took the left out and panned it Right.
No feedback, the intersting thing was, that if you even take one of them and pan it even the slightest to the side it starts to feedback.
Really cool, only has it pitch lower(as there's more power to the input, it goes lower), and gives you a more accurate control over the pitch.
Try that out! the most awsome thing I ever stumbled across.
(But turn your monitors down first, you don't want to become deaf!
