Bar Chords
Depends what kind of chords and whether or not you are using distortion. If you have no distortion, then playing chords on the bridge pickup can lead to an overly twangy, very thin sort of tone. However if you want to play distorted power chords, the bridge pickup sounds great. If you aren't using distortion, I would recommend the neck pickup, adjusted to take a little bit of the bass out of it using the tone knob, that gives a nice, fat, balanced sound to chords
you can't play chords on a recorder....
It really depends on what sound you are looking for. EMG Active pickups are great for metal but lack tone. On the other hand try perhaps Di Marzio Super Distortion. It's got great sound for Classic rock & metal with plenty of tone floating around. Or Seymore Duncan Distortion is a good pickup in a Basswood body like your ibanez. Good luck...
they use the 1 & two chords at the top of the yukalaylee, this ensures the pure sound of the song
You can play chords on a bass instrument, however, they sound better in the higher register, or if the spacing between the chords is bigger.
Depends what kind of chords and whether or not you are using distortion. If you have no distortion, then playing chords on the bridge pickup can lead to an overly twangy, very thin sort of tone. However if you want to play distorted power chords, the bridge pickup sounds great. If you aren't using distortion, I would recommend the neck pickup, adjusted to take a little bit of the bass out of it using the tone knob, that gives a nice, fat, balanced sound to chords
A Minor and a Major chords.
That all depends on if you are playing an acoustic or electric. If tuned properly an acoustic should play most all chords and sound correct considering that not all chords will use all the strings to be played. Remember to be a true chord it must include 3 different notes. If playing electric guitar with any distortion most all of the open chords will sound horrible unless some strings are muted. But all the power chords sound great considering that most power chords are made of only 2 notes not 3 so they aren't true chords. That's where the bass comes in and adds the third note to make a true chord and a sound that is pleasing to the ear. Hope this helps
you can't play chords on a recorder....
Consonant chords are chords that are made up of notes that sound harmonious and pleasing when played together. These chords typically consist of intervals that create a stable and resolved sound. Common examples of consonant chords include major and minor triads.
Harmonic distortion/resonance
vocal chords
The problem is not in the distortion pedal but rather in the fact that you want to sound like Panic at the Disco.
This can be done with an Equalizer. ANSWER: Not an equalizer for sure not unless the distortion is frequency related.
That's a question that has numerous answers to. but just remember this, what you put into music should only sound good to you. nothing else. YOU and only YOU can decide what is best of a good distorted sound, no one else can. Once you understand that, you have found your answer!
A digital distortion pedal will sound better with analog delay than an analog distortion one because of too much warms added to the sound making it mushy and not crunchy enough. A sustain pedal adds a long lasting sound by squeezing down the sound and adding further crunch to your notes/cords. Distortion pedals: digitech, boss and danelectro make good metal type pedals. stay away from fuzz or "big muff" type pedals. any analog delay pedal: boss or cheap pedal will work. compresssor/sustain pedal: boss, frantone, alesis, sqeezer, miranda. you want more of a hard-knee type that is more extreme, not like electro harmonix or bbe. spend money on this!!
if you are disoriented