I was looking into getting a Loop (sampler) pedal so I can record rhythm and play over the changes at my own tempo. Any recommendations on any such gear?
Also I don't have a built in pick up like a big tone, but use a schertler DYN-G - will they work with this?
thanks for any recommendations and info.
Phil
Comments
The more expensive ($240 street price) pedals like the DigiTech JamMan ( http://www.digitech.com/products/Pedals/JamMan.php ) have balanced mic-level inputs and can be used with your pickup.
You might also consider a dedicated digital recorder like the Zoom H4n. It's a bit more expensive than the second type of pedal but is also much more versatile and provides higher quality recordings.
Fender G DEC 30 Digital Entertainment Center Amp xtras
http://cgi.ebay.com/Fender-G-DEC-30-Digital-Entertainment-Center-Amp-xtras_W0QQitemZ150379025282QQcmdZViewItemQQptZLH_DefaultDomain_0?hash=item230349d382
I was thinking about it, and maybe someone has an opinion about it. More than a loop pedal, though, but the price seems decent enough.
More loops,
A usb lead to drag & drop loops from your pc to it, so you can, for instance, chop up a Wrembel backing to 32 bars exactly on your pc, , put it on your jamman and have it play all day while you practice over the top. (slow it down & retain the pitch; record your head over the top & listen,... find a harmony),
An SD card, i.e. infinite memory,
An optional footpedal to switch between loops as your playing
It does have two inputs, one jack one XLR, but the XLR doesn't do phantom power. But it does everything the Boss RC 20 does & a lot more.
If you're just looking for something at home for a backing track, the Boss pedal would work for that too, but you might as well just record your rhythm tracks (if you have recording capabilities on your computer or whatnot) and play along with those pre-recorded tracks. Recording entire rhythm tracks will hone your rhythm skills and your concentration. The little Boss loop pedals seem more geared for playing lead lines over a quick one-chorus rhythm track loop.
The Digitech JamMan, on the other hand, allow you to pre-record a bunch of stuff (1 or 2 gigabytes) and then call it up on a gig. A Zoom H-4 would pretty much do the same thing but you'd need the appropriate adapter and a cable and a second channel (or at least a second input) to plug it into you amp and play along with your guitar.
-Stefan
I have one thats not getting used.
David