I just watch some videos of stacked Metal Zones and they sound fucking glorious. The uncontrollable feedback shrieks coupled with blurry solos just sound amazing
What are some of those pedals, synths, etc. that generate the most aggressive distortion with frequency responses that go up to ultrasonic frequencies (in the range of 50khz-100khz)? Btw all Metasonix products generate those high pitch noises to 40khz, right? What are the frequency responses of Metasonix products?
Things that sound amazing to you are not displaying the character you mean in the frequency range you mention.
That said, the Noise Engineering Viol Ruina might be to your liking.
Well, I'd certainly also like such a list, if only to know which modules I should avoid using when little children and dogs are around.
Lol I can imagine these little children and dogs will howl in unison in pain just kidding no one will try to play those noises around them unless if someone is crazy.
Things that sound amazing to you are not displaying the character you mean in the frequency range you mention.
That said, the Noise Engineering Viol Ruina might be to your liking.
What is the frequency range of that thing? Just listened to a demo through their official Youtube channel and damn that thing is brutal for sure
I believe there are others other than that though. I see the frequency range of several Metasonix products and it is from less than 10khz to more than 40khz. Did the Noise Engineering Viol Ruina generated much more extreme frequencies extensions?
Sorry that image isn't a measurement from someone playing an instrument, it's just a simulation.
I think MindMachine's reaction comes from you being overly focused on the theoretical aspects of distortion ("what's their frequency range?") while apparently having very little idea of how that translates to the real world, or even what range of freqencies humans are even capable of hearing.
Most people know or even care what the frequency response of their distortion effects is, because most people don't make music based on discrete frequencies— much less those in the ultrasound range.
Most people know or even care what the frequency response of their distortion effects is, because most people don't make music based on discrete frequencies— much less those in the ultrasound range.
Most people know or even care what the frequency response of their distortion effects is, because most people don't make music based on discrete frequencies— much less those in the ultrasound range.
Those WMD Acoustic Trauma, DOD Death Metal and Intersound IVP generate intense distortion without adding the accompanying oscillating noises. What are the most brutal noise distortion pedals out there that even more so than those Dwarfcraft pedals, Zvex, Metasonix, etc.?
Those WMD Acoustic Trauma, DOD Death Metal and Intersound IVP generate intense distortion without adding the accompanying oscillating noises. What are the most brutal noise distortion pedals out there that even more so than those Dwarfcraft pedals, Zvex, Metasonix, etc.?
Are you saying you want oscillations? Check out the Industrialectric Incinerator. It's cool as hell. That said, I once chased interesting oscillations from pedals, but I found that much more interesting sounds can be found by feeding an already-interesting synth sound into high gain pedals. Another option is to add oscillations to any pedal or set of pedals by creating feedback loops with something like the saturnworks feedback looper pedals or a standard audio mixer.
Ohmicide is my go to distortion. It is so versatile and has the ability to make the most destructive sounds I've heard. I wish it had a hardware equivalent. When not using a cpu, I tend to stack a few digitech, dod, elektron, and boss distortion pedals routed through a Lyra.
Those WMD Acoustic Trauma, DOD Death Metal and Intersound IVP generate intense distortion without adding the accompanying oscillating noises. What are the most brutal noise distortion pedals out there that even more so than those Dwarfcraft pedals, Zvex, Metasonix, etc.?
Are you saying you want oscillations? Check out the Industrialectric Incinerator. It's cool as hell. That said, I once chased interesting oscillations from pedals, but I found that much more interesting sounds can be found by feeding an already-interesting synth sound into high gain pedals. Another option is to add oscillations to any pedal or set of pedals by creating feedback loops with something like the saturnworks feedback looper pedals or a standard audio mixer.
Yes, something that is noisy. Thanks for the recommendation, will check the Incinerator out. If I recalled, all of these noise pedals are easily created by just using feedback loops and modulations or by something called circuit-bending.