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Can someone tell me what this synth is ?

roseshady

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Dear all, I am new here, so I don't know if this post is suitable.

Can someone tell me what the artist in this video is doing technically ? Where is the guitar plugged in and how does he create these sounds? All the best.

 

Prana Ferox

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The guitar is plugged in through the 1/4" jack on the right side by the volume/tone knobs on the pickguard.

The artist appears to be creating the sound by pressing on the strings and then tweaking various knobs. Most musicians would refer to what the atist is technically doing as 'noodling around'.

The synth looks like a Korg MS-20 but how that's relevant to the sound, I couldn't tell you
 

Pe8er

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Very cool video. It reminded me of Robert Fripp (of King Crimson), who does somewhat similar stuff. Here's a chat with his guitar technician. He explains the synthesizer stuff starting at 4:00:


And here is what Robert Fripp is capable of:

 

Curvature

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Dear all, I am new here, so I don't know if this post is suitable.

Can someone tell me what the artist in this video is doing technically ? Where is the guitar plugged in and how does he create these sounds? All the best.

Welcome.

The talk below is barely related, musically, to what you posted, but the explanation of the sound processing and signal chain will let you in on sound design generally. Really it's what @Prana Ferox already posted: plugging stuff in and messing around. The more you do it the more you learn to recognize the processing techniques, and there aren't too many of those, like bitcrushing, overdrive, reverb, layering, delays, compression, etc., etc.

 
OP
roseshady

roseshady

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The guitar is plugged in through the 1/4" jack on the right side by the volume/tone knobs on the pickguard.

The artist appears to be creating the sound by pressing on the strings and then tweaking various knobs. Most musicians would refer to what the atist is technically doing as 'noodling around'.

The synth looks like a Korg MS-20 but how that's relevant to the sound, I couldn't tell you
these knobs on the left side are still not clear to me tho...Thanks a lot for your reply!
 

thecheapseats

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Dear all, I am new here, so I don't know if this post is suitable.

Can someone tell me what the artist in this video is doing technically ? Where is the guitar plugged in and how does he create these sounds? All the best.

the 'lit' device over the strings is called an 'ebow'... (EDIT: misspelled strings)...
 
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Philbo King

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wow. that's amazing, thanks a lot. Didn't know this guy before.
Robert Fripp is the driving muse behind King Crimson. Here is a song from around '67 from their first album, that for me, was the first example of heavy metal jazz rock. They've done dozens of albums since...
 

kemmler3D

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Looks like he is taking the guitar, playing it through the ebow and pickup simultaneously, with lots of delay and reverb on the guitar output, while the ebow is following that, fed into the synth probably via OSC control. Sounds cool because of the guitar being used as a controller. Just a guess from a few seconds watching. Or, is the ebow actually adding vibrations to the strings? Dunno how those work actually. :D
 

thecheapseats

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Looks like he is taking the guitar, playing it through the ebow and pickup simultaneously, with lots of delay and reverb on the guitar output, while the ebow is following that, fed into the synth probably via OSC control. Sounds cool because of the guitar being used as a controller. Just a guess from a few seconds watching. Or, is the ebow actually adding vibrations to the strings? Dunno how those work actually. :D
it's a continuous string exciter that will run until the battery dies... no pluck or touch necessary... per the wiki on the device , "an inductor feedback circuit with a sensor coil and a driver coil"... first mfg'd in L.A. in the 1970s...

it's been used on several film underscoring cues for both the harp and for 'prepared-piano' pieces, as well...
 
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