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January 22nd, 2015, 05:57 PM
#1
Digitech Trio - plenty of potential
This looks pretty promising for the home musician and others to be creative and have fun jamming without having to call in a drummer and bass player. http://digitech.com/en/products/trio
The TRIO is your own band inside a guitar pedal!
The TRIO listens to the way you play and automatically generates bass and drum parts that match your song. Just plug your guitar into TRIO, press the footswitch to teach TRIO your chords and rhythm, then press the footswitch again to start playing with your own personal band!
"No Tele For you." - The Tele Nazi
Ha! Tele-ish now inbound.
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Post Thanks / Like - 1 Likes
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January 22nd, 2015, 06:36 PM
#2
Steve Thompson
Sun Valley, Idaho
Guitars: Fender 60th Anniversary Std. Strat, Squier CVC Tele Hagstrom Viking Semi-hollow, Joshua beach guitar, Martin SPD-16TR Dreadnought
Amphs: Peavey Classic 30, '61 Fender Concert
Effects and such: Boss: DS-1, CE-5, NS-2 and RC20XL looper, Digitech Bad Monkey, Korg AX1G Multi-effects, Berhinger: TU100 tuner, PB100 Clean Boost, Line 6 Toneport UX2, Electro Harmonix Little Big Muff Pi, DuhVoodooMan's Rabid Rodent Rat Clone, Zonkin Yellow Screamer Mk. II, MXR Carbon Copy Delay
love is the answer, at least for most of the questions in my heart. . .
- j. johnson
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January 22nd, 2015, 07:34 PM
#3
Pretty cool technology, that's for sure. In the videos I watched, the drum parts seem relatively simple, but the bass lines are pretty impressive. You can't really end the "song" you've created, it just has to stop basically. For a practice tool it would be way cooler than a looper alone, that's for sure. MSRP of $225.
Axen: Jackson DK2M, Fender Deluxe Nashville Telecaster, Reverend Warhawk 390, Taylor 914ce, ESP LTD Surveyor-414
Amphen: Jet City JCA22H and JCA12S cab, Carvin X-60 combo, Acoustic B20
Effecten: "Thesis 96" Overdrive/Boost (aka DVM OD2), Hardwire DL-8 Digital Delay/Looper, DigiTech Polara Reverb, DigiTech EX-7 Expression Factory and CF-7 Chorus Factory, Danelectro CF-1 Cool Cat Fuzz
"I wish Imagine Dragons would be stuck in an Arcade Fire for an entire Vampire Weekend."--Brian Posehn
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January 23rd, 2015, 03:30 AM
#4
Cool!
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The Law of Gravity is nonsense. No such law exists. If I think I float, and you think I float, then it happens.
Master Guitar Academy - I also teach via
SKYPE.
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January 30th, 2015, 07:25 AM
#5
Certainly a cool device to play along and test ideas, as for a live thing I think it's probably too rigid but great for creating songs
Guitars:
1978 Fender Telecaster Thinline Custom USA, New Nash TL-72 Thinline Telecaster, 1965 Harmony Meteor, H71, 1986 Fender Telecaster Esquire MIJ, New Martin J-41 Special, 1933 National Duolian, 1941, New Eastwood Mandocaster 12 strings
Amps:
Tweed Vibrolux Custom Denis Manlay, 1976 Fender Deluxe Reverb Silverface
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January 30th, 2015, 11:02 AM
#6
I checked it out at NAMM and it was one of the most interesting products of the show in my opinion.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
The Law of Gravity is nonsense. No such law exists. If I think I float, and you think I float, then it happens.
Master Guitar Academy - I also teach via
SKYPE.