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The pedal has four knobs - one of which is a rotary switch - plus a three-way switch, and features selectable effects variations.

In designing the pedal, TC wanted something that was fast, easy and intuitive to use, with the ability to change sounds on the fly with a few knob tweaks.

However, it was also aware that most stompboxes have a core sound - a basic tonality that's purely their own. Something that's fine if you like it, but that you're also unable to change if you grow tired of it. With this in mind, it set about building in a feature to allow access to a number of alternative sounds.

This feature is called TonePrint: the pedal has a USB connection that allows you to import a new sound, a custom 'tuning' of the pedal, from a computer and store it in a special onboard memory slot called up by the TonePrint position of the pedal's three-way switch (or the rotary switch in the case of the delay).

TC has made a number of these alternative 'tunings' available for each pedal, all easily accessed and downloaded into it from a special TonePrint website.

And these aren't just voicings created by some Scandinavian boffin in a white lab coat. Instead, TC has asked a bunch of the world's best guitar players to make TonePrints for the pedals.

The company has given them a specially developed tuning software that allows them to tweak every single aspect of the pedals - parameter settings, what range the pots should have, what the min-mid-max values should be, and so on, to make their own perfect pedal.

The Flashback recalls TC's Nova Delay in the number of distinct effects it offers. Its fourth knob is a rotary switch that can call up nine different delay effects plus the TonePrint setting as well as setting it up as a looper.

The smaller three-way switch sets the timing division for the tap tempo function and offers quarter note, eighth note or both for a multi-tap repeat pattern - tap tempo being implemented by pressing the footswitch and rhythmically hitting the strings (the pedal mutes when you do this).

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Digitech's original JamMan set the standard for full-featured digital looper/phrase sampler pedals and garnered the praise of numerous legendary musicians. The double-sized pedal lets players record phrases, overdub tracks and play along with their backing rhythms and riffs in live settings. But the JamMan is also a great way to practice, learn and compose. You can connect an external music source, sample a phrase from a song and even loop the playback at slower or faster speeds.

Now comes the JamMan Solo, which offers almost all the features of the JamMan in a standard-sized stomp box.



For a compact pedal, the JamMan Solo is laden with features, and it’s hard to detail everything it can do in the space of a review. At its heart, the JamMan Solo is a mono phrase looper that can record your guitar’s output and/or record the output from an external audio device, and then play the recorded phrases back continuously. Any number of overdubs can be added to a looping sample, provided that the total loop time doesn’t exceed the 10-minute record and playback limit. Time signatures are selectable, and the samples can be set to play only once if you don’t want to hear them on a constant loop. You can also change a loop’s tempo up or down (Time Stretch) without altering the pitch. The JamMan’s built-in rhythm tracks provide nine metronome sounds that you can build your loops around. The rhythm guide track is not recorded with the audio, and it can be changed or turned off in any loop.

Though the internal memory’s 35 minutes of record time and 99 patches will be sufficient for most users, the SD/SDHC card expansion slot lets you expand this to 16 hours of record time and add another 99 patches. For maximum flexibility, the optional DigiTech FS3X footswitch facilitates live switching of loops and lets you play different loops back to back.

Loops and their settings can be backed up to a Mac or PC via the pedal’s mini-B USB port and organized using DigiTech’s JamManager Loop Librarian software (a free download at digitech.com). Headphones can be connected to the unit’s single 1/4-inch output, and power is provided through the included 9.6-volt adapter. Battery power is not an option.



PERFORMANCE

Although the JamMan Solo’s numerous control options can be somewhat daunting at first, the unit is very intuitive to use. In a matter of minutes, I was recording, looping and layering phrases that played back with impressive digital sound quality. Bear in mind that when playing along with the JamMan through an amp set for crunch or distortion, you’ll need to connect the pedal to a parallel effect loop to keep the backing tracks from distorting as well.


THE BOTTOM LINE

Whether you want to play complex, layered guitar lines, loop polyrhythmic phrases, compose or just play along with your favorite tracks, the DigiTech JamMan Solo is a must-have tool.

Guard House Pictures is proud to announce the trailer release of Cry Baby: The Pedal That Rocks the World, a definitive documentary that tells the story of the #1-selling effects pedal of all time, from its invention in 1966 through its evolution into the present day. The effect was an essential ingredient in the creation of classics like Jimi Hendrix's "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)," Metallica's "Enter Sandman," and Guns 'n' Roses' "Sweet Child o' Mine."

This film looks at how engineer Brad Plunkett discovered and developed the legendary wah sound and how artists have used it to express themselves throughout its evolution. Guitar icons such as Eddie Van Halen, Kirk Hammett, Slash, Dweezil Zappa and Jerry Cantrell talk about how the wah has become a part of their signature sounds, while rock journalists such as Rolling Stone's Ben Fong-Torres and Guitar Player's Art Thompson explore the pedal's cultural significance.

Learn how a simple effect became one of the most important tools of expression for guitarists everywhere.
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A new ToneLab is on the horizon for the early part of 2011. The ToneLab EX is the latest VOX multi-effect pedal to inherit the sound of the Valvetronix series and is also enhanced for live performance.
Featuring the Valve Reactor circuitry, it uses a real 12AX7 vacuum tube to create that true-tube tone.  With new performance elements added especially for live use and expanding on the standard powerful Valvetronix amp and cabinet models, the ToneLab EX now provides 11 stand-alone distortion pedals. These distortion pedals can be used in place of one of the amp head models, providing a truly diverse range of tones to cover many musical styles. Following the cabinet models, the ToneLab EX features a full complement of spatial-type effects such as modulation, reverb, and delay allowing you to complete your guitar sound without requiring any other equipment. A full-sized VOX expression pedal ensures stability while performing. The intuitive Stomp Box mode places six effects on a virtual pedal-board at your feet, with real stomp-box control! The ToneLab EX is the perfect live-performance solution for any guitarist’s multi-effect needs.
Waltham MA, USA. - gig-fx inc. is pleased to announce the release of the Peter Frampton Signature Megawah. Peter Frampton, the Grammy Award winning guitar legend and rock icon, has endorsed a gig-fx Megawah specially tailored to his specifications. Peter has long been a fan of gig-fx pedals and has the Megawah and Prochop pedals as permanent fixtures on his pedal board. The new Signature pedal features the established Megawah sound with a slightly warmer high end and more defined lower end response. Peter: “My Signature Megawah is a very special pedal. It has a unique sound with a warmth I can't get with anything else. It out-performs any wah out there with it's exceptional tone and different modes. I love it - it's on my pedal board already!"
The all-analog Signature pedal features four settings actuated by a selector switch: a classic wah sound called ‘Cry’, the famous Megawah sound featuring a deep bass response for funkier quacking and more expressive wailing, a funky envelope wah with adjustable trigger sensitivity, and an auto-wah with adjustable rate. Four great effects in one pedal with superb analog tones.

The Signature Peter Frampton Megawah uses optical control and is by-passed when the pedal is all the way back and switches on noiselessly when the pedal is pressed forward. The pedal also features a user-adjustable off-delay so that the effect does not turn off inadvertently when rocking the pedal. Another difference is that Peter’s signature model is a mono pedal whereas the original Megawah is stereo in and out with two complete wah circuits. Being mono, Peter’s pedal offers cost savings over its stereo sister product.

The pedal features ‘Better than true bypass’ TM circuitry which preserves guitar signals through cables better than a true bypass will (see published test results on www.gig-fx.com).

The Signature pedal adds to the popular Megawah legend, a pedal which is finding more and more favor with professional players such as Nick McCabe (The Verve), Brett Tuggle (Fleetwood Mac), Robin Finck (NIN), Johnny Hiland and more. 
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