Forming a tribute band - looking for input
Posted: 02 Nov 2017, 03:56
Hello, I've been forming a tribute band and working alongside a friend to make the experience be as true to the album as possible. I bought a 12 string electric guitar like That Guitarist, I've studied the other tribute bands overseas (none here in the states!), found the BPM's all the songs and have them playing exactly at the same speed, I've hired a sax player, I've learned a lot of the vocals and learned a bunch of the songs, spent nearly two years actively on all this stuff... it's come an amazing way, but it could go further. Sorry for the long rant but I'm giving this my all.
The burning questions I have is:
1.How do I get that lovely guitar tone?
--- I am not planning on switching amps or heads to make this happen. I will check out pedals and buy them. I have a krankenstein pedal which is amazing but not suitable for this gig, I have a carbon copy delay pedal which I feel works, and I use a Decimator II noisegate pedal. I feel like the noisegate and delay pedals are fine, but the distortion is too metal. Does anyone know what That Guitarist was using or what a good equivalent would be?
2. What makes his voice so unique?
--- I've been trying to figure out his voice. I can have a strong baritone voice too but I'm not a singer and kinda tone deaf and when I've sung along with the tracks I'm STILL too high pitched for certain songs. Is it possible for me to keep practicing and lower my range or am I always stuck with whatever range I have? I know practice helps but I'm curious about human vocal limitations. That said, I've watched some videos of him in his heyday singing Marian and when he sings it live he does it an octave higher than the studio recording but he still keeps that fullness in his voice. How tf is he doing and how can I do that? I bought a boss ve-20 vocal effects pedal to add reverb and it sounds great, it comes with the ability to lower me 3 semitones which has helped me be in the same range (marian is still an actual pain) but I am not a fan of the compression that it does to the voice so I'd rather hit it naturally giggity.
Here's This Corrosion - one of our backing tracks for shows. This mix was made to showcase how great the female singer we got for this is. The male vocals are quiet in there just to help us sound more full live. We won't have a female singer so we had her in the mix.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ngzZAXU ... e=youtu.be
Anyway, just wanted to share some info on myself, what I need, and why I need it. Thanks in advance, looking forward to learning how we can improve ourselves
Also, if you know anyone in the Houston area who might be interested in singing give me your info or pm me on here
The burning questions I have is:
1.How do I get that lovely guitar tone?
--- I am not planning on switching amps or heads to make this happen. I will check out pedals and buy them. I have a krankenstein pedal which is amazing but not suitable for this gig, I have a carbon copy delay pedal which I feel works, and I use a Decimator II noisegate pedal. I feel like the noisegate and delay pedals are fine, but the distortion is too metal. Does anyone know what That Guitarist was using or what a good equivalent would be?
2. What makes his voice so unique?
--- I've been trying to figure out his voice. I can have a strong baritone voice too but I'm not a singer and kinda tone deaf and when I've sung along with the tracks I'm STILL too high pitched for certain songs. Is it possible for me to keep practicing and lower my range or am I always stuck with whatever range I have? I know practice helps but I'm curious about human vocal limitations. That said, I've watched some videos of him in his heyday singing Marian and when he sings it live he does it an octave higher than the studio recording but he still keeps that fullness in his voice. How tf is he doing and how can I do that? I bought a boss ve-20 vocal effects pedal to add reverb and it sounds great, it comes with the ability to lower me 3 semitones which has helped me be in the same range (marian is still an actual pain) but I am not a fan of the compression that it does to the voice so I'd rather hit it naturally giggity.
Here's This Corrosion - one of our backing tracks for shows. This mix was made to showcase how great the female singer we got for this is. The male vocals are quiet in there just to help us sound more full live. We won't have a female singer so we had her in the mix.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ngzZAXU ... e=youtu.be
Anyway, just wanted to share some info on myself, what I need, and why I need it. Thanks in advance, looking forward to learning how we can improve ourselves
Also, if you know anyone in the Houston area who might be interested in singing give me your info or pm me on here