When.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: electro harmonix pitch transposer 1975 youtube

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Electro-Harmonix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electro-Harmonix

    Electro-Harmonix was founded by rhythm and blues keyboard player Mike Matthews in October 1968 in New York City with $1,000. [3] He took a job as a salesman for IBM in 1967, but shortly afterwards, in partnership with Bill Berko, an audio repairman who claimed to have his own custom circuit for a fuzz pedal, he jobbed construction of the new pedal to a contracting house and began distributing ...

  3. Todd Tamanend Clark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Todd_Tamanend_Clark

    In 1975, he started to record music under the alias The Stars. Two years later, he formed the Butler, Pennsylvania based rock band The Eyes. The band's album, New Gods: Aardvark Through Zymurgy was released in 1977 and has been called "the holy grail of psychedelic collectibles."

  4. Pitch shifting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitch_shifting

    Pitch shifters are included in most audio processors today. A harmonizer is a type of pitch shifter that combines the pitch-shifted signal with the original to create a two or more note harmony. The Eventide H910 Harmonizer, [2] released in 1975, was one of the first commercially available pitch-shifters and digital multi-effects units. On ...

  5. Richard Tee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Tee

    Richard Edward Tee (born Richard Edward Ten Ryk; November 24, 1943 – July 21, 1993) was an American jazz fusion pianist, studio musician, singer and arranger, [1] who had several hundred studio credits and played on such notable hits as "I'll Be Sweeter Tomorrow (Than I Was Today)" (1967), "Until You Come Back To Me" (1974), "The Hustle" (1975), "Slip Slidin' Away" (1977), "Just the Two of ...

  6. Mike Vennart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Vennart

    An overview of Vennart's pedalboard in 2015 revealed a Death By Audio Echo Dream 2 for delay (backed up with Boss DD-3 and DD-7 pedals); an Electro-Harmonix POG 2 polyphonic octave generator; a Danelectro Fab Tone (“for when I just want to kill everyone"); a Dwarfcraft Shiva Fuzz ("real volatile, horrible; it’s not nice"); an Electro ...

  7. Talk:Electro-Harmonix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Electro-Harmonix

    From the Wiki: "Electro Harmonix stopped making pedals in the mid 1990s and concentrated on vacuum tubes for guitar amplifiers, which they had also been making since the 1970s. However due to demand, and the high prices guitarists were paying for old 1970s pedals on the vintage market they reissued the more popular old pedals in 1999, the Big ...

  8. Brian Robertson (guitarist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Robertson_(guitarist)

    He used a Black Les Paul custom and mentions he experimented with "Boss Analog Chorus Delay, an MXR Pitch Transposer, Yamaha analogue delays, and MXR 32 band Graphic EQ" during his Motörhead days. [12] Record producer Tony Visconti mentioned that for "Killer Without A Cause," featured on the Bad Reputation album: ...

  9. Delay (audio effect) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delay_(audio_effect)

    Sound example of a plugin simulation of an analog delay (EHX Memory Man) with modulation and pitch shift on Amplitube 4. Steve Harris' Delayorama software. A natural development from digital delay-processing hardware was the appearance of software-based delay systems. In large part, this coincided with the popularity of audio editing software.