This is played with a Gibson Les Paul Studio "Raw Power" and a Kustom Defender amp set nearly clean. The Worm is first in the chain, followed by a Rothwell Switchblade for distortion and a Danelectro Transparent Overdrive for some mid-boost.
I really like the Vibrato. In slow settings the swells sound like the repeats of an echo-pedal. In a faster mode the vibrato adds a warm atmosphere and invites to ring out some chords.
The Tremolo is very deep and warm - just relax. I think it accentuates the low mids to make this round and spacefilling sound. It is present in a more subtile way - like the other settings, too - except the wah.
The Phaser is soft - no harsh frequencies, very nice, needs an bit of mid-boost to cut through.
The Wah is the thing I like best on this pedal. It has a unique sound and I used it in many settings - especially with distortion. Very useful in slow an fast settings.
The Phaser and the Wah can be used either in auto or manual mode. This makes it versatile in some way. Nice to tweek Your sound and play a bit.
I really like the design and the solid construction of this pedal, but the "Worm" is too big for my board. So I just used it at home.
For SALE on ebay, No. 150511030721!
See also: http://www.ehx.com/products/worm
Can I recreate Gilmour's "seagull effect" with this? You know... If you reverse the connections on your wah wah pedal plugging the guitar into the output and the cable that goes into the next effect or the amp into the input, you'll obtain that effect. What I'm asking you is: if U select the analog wah mode and then U do the same thing that I said before, will U get that effect?
I don't know how to explain it in a better way. I hope you'll undertand and I hope you'll answer me. Thank U.
MrEmBerna 3 months ago