In my opinion the red special is the most versatile guitar out there. It’s almost like the guy who came up with it is an astrophysicist or something...
A wide-range pickup with coil tap option will give more USEABLE tones, some of the tones in this axe are shrill or muddy, and totally useless. I like how it plays, so I’m trying to put four-wire mini-humbuckers in mine.
The BEST 'tone' video I have ever seen!!! You not only show how many sounds that are actually DIFFERENT you also play a huge range of amazing and classic riffs too, nice work James!!! ....(What impresses me about your demonstration here, is that it stands head and shoulders above the usual 'comparison' videos we get here)
Up until I watched this I never thought about this guitar as I associated it with Queen and the Brian May sound but after watching this I realise how versatile it is, thank you for making this video.
Have never played a guitar in my 62 years but pre ordered this guitar recently, was originally just to go with my Queen collection but have decided to learn how to play. No idea what i'm doing but have just ordered a Boss Katana - 100 Mkii Combo Guitar Amplifier so i'm hoping it's a good choice of Amp. The guitar looks good and sounds great, hopefully one day i'll be a competent player. Thanks for a great review.
but if you are watching a review on the guitar from the band queen, you would expect a demo of the classic sounds that it can produce. This video is not very good in that regard.
@@StefanGBucher exactly I wonder what some flatwounds would sound like on a red special too and hear some Luther Perkins boom chicka boom style on a Red special guitar that's what I would love to hear
First time I've seen you take a fan question, and answer' it in a video...I LOVE IT! Great educational forum, for EVERYONE!! Thanks so much-@James Rundle!!
“How do you tune a Brian May Guitar?” He’s joking, right? He has to be joking. “Can you rewrite the guitar tab for a Stratocaster?” Holy mother of God, he’s serious. People have asked him this. I bought my BMG without realizing a 24 in. scale length is considered uncommon/short. It’s my first guitar but I can’t imagine playing anything else because 24 inches is plenty long enough coming from a 12.8 inch scale on a violin. The idea of fretting the One Vision chords on a 25.5 inch scale Fender terrifies me. I’m not a tone chaser. I just love the aesthetic of the Red Special. I fell in love with the color and the wood grain first, to be completely honest. Once I started playing guitar and learning about guitar specs, that’s when I really fell in love with it. It’s so warm and full sounding compared to a strat or a tele. But you can get ridiculous twang too if you really want! The only thing I would like to try would be a narrower nut width. 45 mm feels like a lot, but maybe I’m overestimating how different a 42 mm or 43 mm nut width would feel.
Depends on hand size. Brian can easily fret power chords from one vision on a strat. I can as well because my fingers are long. Now of course Brian's scale is a 24 inch but you also gotta factor in that the neck is wider unlike on a gibson for example. I honestly think that the 24 inch scale with a wider neck is the perfect combination for both large hands and smaller hands. If you have smaller hands the scale length is there to help you and if you have larger hands the wider neck allows for more vertical movement and a bit more precision. I have a problem of bending a half step note on my strat copy because I have to move it like ~8-10 mm because of my hand size and it feels like I'm not moving the string at all.
Does the guitar come with a Brian May costume and will it play Crazy little thing called love by itself if asked politely etc. Can Bon Jovi songs be played on it or do we need Brian Mays permission for that as it's his guitar. Any guitar discount if been to many of their concerts etc (ok just kidding lol!)
Right?! I was terribly disappointed when I tuned the guitar, played my first chords, but my sad droopy hair didn’t turn into a majestic mane of perfect curls. 😂😂
You showed us what is possible with the Red Special AND what you are capable off with a guitar and i must say, YOU are quite special too. Thanks James. Btw, ordered two BM baby RS today. Delivery mid-May. Excited.....🙋♂️
Interesting i should watch this video today as i was playing my red special and doing nothing but Queen when suddenly i thought the same thing like why do people, myself included, only ever play Queen stuff on this guitar when i use a les Paul or SG or Strat i play a lot of stuff including Queen. So i began playing Day Tripper (i see you played it too, awesome) Paperback Writer as well as Revolution by the Beatles. Played Running With The Devil by Van Halen, Immigrant Song, since I’ve Been Loving You and Whole Lotta Love by Led Zeppelin and they sounded awesome. I had to get out of the Brian May mode tho by using a boss me-80 to dial up different amps and effects, played with the pickup switches and tone knob to make the guitar sound like a les Paul or an es 335 or a Stratocaster. The great thing about the red special is that with the various pickup combinations that it has, you can pretty much dial up any sound/guitar you like, no limitations. Excellent video my man, this will let people know that the Brian May guitar is no one trick pony, you can do anything on it.
Thank you for this video, James. Up until this moment I couldn't name a single time when someone holding a Red Special replica played anything other than Queen's material. Which always amused me, because no other signature guitar model sparks such player behaviour. I even had a theory that it's deemed some kind of sacrilege by the Red Special fanboys. Now that I've heard "Smoke on the water" and "Money for nothing" played on Red Special, my search is complete.
I have had the Burns version of the Red Special for 20 years...obviously a big Brian fan .....I love the way it will do almost anything you could ever want from a guitar
I recall in the early 2000s going to one of my local retailers and picking up one of the Specials manufactured then by Guild. It was definitely surreal holding a guitar associated with Brian and pointedly resisting the temptation to unpack his riffs. Per chance (since I hadn’t learned the pickup selectors from the phase switches), I switched on the middle and neck pickups and improvised a bosa nova groove. Because it was both present like a Strat and warm like an ES, I was tempted to purchase it. However, I stood in my own way. (I already had just purchased a guitar from a local manufacturer called Brian Moore Guitars.)
THANK YOU. Daily Guild Brian May user since I got one in 1994, love Bri and Queen but I do not play anywhere near what either of them sound like. Bridge/neck, bridge/middle out of phase and bridge-only are my favorite settings.
What seems to get missed on many reviews of this guitar, is that the pickups are wired in series and not parallel (the usual way), which makes a massive difference to the pickup combination sounds. Great video, by the way. I think you managed to mention every Geordie guitarist except Andy Taylor ;)
Funnily enough I heard years ago a guy on my estate had guitar lessons with Andy Taylor. My chemistry teacher was at actually at University with Dave Stewart of the Eurythkics and I used to clean the windows of Annie Lennox’s cousin. My sisters best friend was niece to Robert Palmer. Oh I used to live next door to Perry from girl band Little Mix How’s that for name dropping 😂😂
I have an old Burns Red Special and I (almost) never play Brian's stuff on it because, one, everyone else plays that on that guitar, and two, because I can't do it justice, and three, it sounds strange without Queen's rhythm section backing me up, which hardly ever happens. :D I set the pickups flush to the body and don't set the action as low as it can go. I also keep some relief in the neck. All of this is a universal setup for me when I am setting up a guitar with single coils. It also works great for Strats, Teles, P-90 Gibsons, DeArmond Gretschs, and such. I like low output single coils best, although P-90s, bless 'em, can be quite raucous. Oh yeah, I use Optima Brian May gold strings exclusively on all of my electrics. Why? They sound and feel great, do not rust or corrode, and and last for a dog's age. They look nice, too.
I love for the day when I have the opportunity to -lay that guitar. It’s iconic, unique and with a myriad of tonal possibilities. I live for the day when I get to play that guitar with enough skill and treble behind me to enjoy myself as well. It’s a special guitar and one the queen fangirl in me longs to be able to play.
Besides the fact that May is an insanely great guitarist… the way he was able to sound like a clarinet, etc… that sonic flexibility is largely due to the incredible electronics design of the pickup phase switches. I have no idea why nobody else has put out any designs to do that. The closest thing i can think of is the newer Revstar standard and pro, which has a few modes with funky phasing between the pickups, but the way they achieve that is through slightly delaying the signal of one pickup against the other. The May design is just genius. Maybe he patented it? Haha
Hi James, I'm from around the Gateshead area, I've just bought a Red Special, the one I bought is a 2004 model, I'm after the half moon scratch plate that goes at the bottom of the bridge like yours has but I was wondering if the scratch plate would fit because the bridge on mine is the Burns London bridge, dunno if that makes any sense, but I'd be greatful if you would help me with that, answering that question I mean. Love your vids, and I'm subbed. Keep up the magnificent work my friend.
Hi Mike, yeah the Burns models came without the half moon plate. The plate on the BMG models are purely cosmetic. I know you can buy them from accessories section of the shop.brianmayguitars.co.uk/bmg-scratchplates-hardware.html I’m assuming they’d be an easy fit to your guitar. RS Conversion are good to ask and also do upgraded scratchplates. They’re friendly and very helpful. Plus are now officially approved of by BMG guitars Hope that helps 😊
I was going to add it’s great for money for nothing and other dire straits sounds. For M4N you can get great distortion without the feedback on the harmonics. The original sound was on an out of phase Les Paul I believe. Very versatile. Sits pretty uncomfortably though - the cut away for the leg is too small and it neck dives a bit. Fine standing.
does it feel closer like a les paul or a strat to play because i feel like the fat neck and red colour would trick my brain and make it feel like a gibson
I think you can play anything on a red special. But if you own one and don't learn one vision at least the main riff then you need to get a different guitar. In. My opinion.
Have you ever thought about upgrading to a more recent bmg , I’m not sure how different they are but I’m pretty sure they have been changed over the years
My only real concern is that I have slightly smaller hands than avrage and Ive heard that the neck is wider down the neck than normal, guess ill have to "test drive" one to see unless anyone else has smaller hands and found it to be no problem?
A few people have voiced concerns over the wider neck. I find the guitar comfortable and I havnt got the biggest hands. Unless you have a 3 year olds size hands I can’t see a problem. But it would be better if you could play one first
I started out on a Fender acoustic guitar with a nut width of 42 mm and was also concerned that the neck would be to wide for me with my woman's hands. However, I was pleasantly surprised when my BMG Special arrived recently! Despite being a bit wider (45 mm) It feels about the same close to the nut (haven't played on other parts of the fretboard much yet to be honest). But what surprised me the most is that the scale length is considerably smaller (62 cm on the BMG vs 65 cm on the Fender), despite the fact that it has 24 frets vs only 20 on the Fender! Considering that I always found it difficult to play chords which require spreading your hand over several frets, I think this will suit me quite well! I'm happy BMG decided to make a more "general public friendly" guitar as the real Red Special has a massively thick neck, so I'm not sure whether the dimensions of a BMG Super would work for me.
I prefer playing my telecaster because it is more straightforward. I just plug it in, tune it and play. If I had money I could get an amp that offers a lot of features. However I only understand the volume knob on my basic amp, so why spend money on a more complicated rig? Personally, I don't want to emulate someone else. I'm just happy playing. Maybe if I was planning to play in a band I'd care more about sounding like somebody. My main concern is whether or not it looks like I'm flipping someone off on purpose.
About the ''Innuendo'' digital Pedal, Is there a way to download that Bridgetone Guitar sound into a Physical pedal so I can take it to a gig without having to drag my computer along ???
In my opinion the red special is the most versatile guitar out there. It’s almost like the guy who came up with it is an astrophysicist or something...
Isaac Newton figured out time travel and dyed his hair brown until he got older. Brian May is just Isaac Newton confirmed real 2029
@@YamatoTorisu i respek
He was a kid when he made it though
A wide-range pickup with coil tap option will give more USEABLE tones, some of the tones in this axe are shrill or muddy, and totally useless. I like how it plays, so I’m trying to put four-wire mini-humbuckers in mine.
@@west9534 that sounds pretty dope tbh
The BEST 'tone' video I have ever seen!!! You not only show how many sounds that are actually DIFFERENT you also play a huge range of amazing and classic riffs too, nice work James!!! ....(What impresses me about your demonstration here, is that it stands head and shoulders above the usual 'comparison' videos we get here)
Thanks Dave 😊
Aaaaaaa, Dave saying thanks for James in which world are we?
@@Rocklicks72 I would love to hear what this guitar sounds like with some flatwounds strings
I’m a simple man, with a simple name, in this guitar my sound came, in this guitar remains. Oh oh yeah! Thanks James!
Guitar Man
Up until I watched this I never thought about this guitar as I associated it with Queen and the Brian May sound but after watching this I realise how versatile it is, thank you for making this video.
Have never played a guitar in my 62 years but pre ordered this guitar recently, was originally just to go with my Queen collection but have decided to learn how to play. No idea what i'm doing but have just ordered a Boss Katana - 100 Mkii Combo Guitar Amplifier so i'm hoping it's a good choice of Amp. The guitar looks good and sounds great, hopefully one day i'll be a competent player. Thanks for a great review.
Ooh it's so cool
I always want to see different songs on this guitar, not always Queen songs.
but if you are watching a review on the guitar from the band queen, you would expect a demo of the classic sounds that it can produce. This video is not very good in that regard.
@@Hello_there_obiThere are dozens of those videos that will give you exactly that.
@@StefanGBucher exactly I wonder what some flatwounds would sound like on a red special too and hear some Luther Perkins boom chicka boom style on a Red special guitar that's what I would love to hear
First time I've seen you take a fan question, and answer' it in a video...I LOVE IT! Great educational forum, for EVERYONE!! Thanks so much-@James Rundle!!
“How do you tune a Brian May Guitar?”
He’s joking, right? He has to be joking.
“Can you rewrite the guitar tab for a Stratocaster?”
Holy mother of God, he’s serious. People have asked him this.
I bought my BMG without realizing a 24 in. scale length is considered uncommon/short. It’s my first guitar but I can’t imagine playing anything else because 24 inches is plenty long enough coming from a 12.8 inch scale on a violin. The idea of fretting the One Vision chords on a 25.5 inch scale Fender terrifies me.
I’m not a tone chaser. I just love the aesthetic of the Red Special. I fell in love with the color and the wood grain first, to be completely honest. Once I started playing guitar and learning about guitar specs, that’s when I really fell in love with it.
It’s so warm and full sounding compared to a strat or a tele. But you can get ridiculous twang too if you really want!
The only thing I would like to try would be a narrower nut width. 45 mm feels like a lot, but maybe I’m overestimating how different a 42 mm or 43 mm nut width would feel.
Depends on hand size. Brian can easily fret power chords from one vision on a strat. I can as well because my fingers are long.
Now of course Brian's scale is a 24 inch but you also gotta factor in that the neck is wider unlike on a gibson for example. I honestly think that the 24 inch scale with a wider neck is the perfect combination for both large hands and smaller hands. If you have smaller hands the scale length is there to help you and if you have larger hands the wider neck allows for more vertical movement and a bit more precision. I have a problem of bending a half step note on my strat copy because I have to move it like ~8-10 mm because of my hand size and it feels like I'm not moving the string at all.
Well Queen has tackled:
Rock
Rockabilly
Blues/Smooth Jazz
Speed metal
Synth type rock
Ballads and etc so yeah you can use it for almost everything's
Does the guitar come with a Brian May costume and will it play Crazy little thing called love by itself if asked politely etc. Can Bon Jovi songs be played on it or do we need Brian Mays permission for that as it's his guitar. Any guitar discount if been to many of their concerts etc
(ok just kidding lol!)
Right?! I was terribly disappointed when I tuned the guitar, played my first chords, but my sad droopy hair didn’t turn into a majestic mane of perfect curls. 😂😂
You showed us what is possible with the Red Special AND what you are capable off with a guitar and i must say, YOU are quite special too. Thanks James. Btw, ordered two BM baby RS today. Delivery mid-May. Excited.....🙋♂️
Hope you enjoy them Ricky 😊
Thank you very much for this video, I just got the guitar myself and its very helpful to know how to get all the different sounds.
Interesting i should watch this video today as i was playing my red special and doing nothing but Queen when suddenly i thought the same thing like why do people, myself included, only ever play Queen stuff on this guitar when i use a les Paul or SG or Strat i play a lot of stuff including Queen. So i began playing Day Tripper (i see you played it too, awesome) Paperback Writer as well as Revolution by the Beatles. Played Running With The Devil by Van Halen, Immigrant Song, since I’ve Been Loving You and Whole Lotta Love by Led Zeppelin and they sounded awesome. I had to get out of the Brian May mode tho by using a boss me-80 to dial up different amps and effects, played with the pickup switches and tone knob to make the guitar sound like a les Paul or an es 335 or a Stratocaster. The great thing about the red special is that with the various pickup combinations that it has, you can pretty much dial up any sound/guitar you like, no limitations. Excellent video my man, this will let people know that the Brian May guitar is no one trick pony, you can do anything on it.
but it wont sound like a Strat- very unlikely anyway
Thank you for this video, James. Up until this moment I couldn't name a single time when someone holding a Red Special replica played anything other than Queen's material. Which always amused me, because no other signature guitar model sparks such player behaviour. I even had a theory that it's deemed some kind of sacrilege by the Red Special fanboys. Now that I've heard "Smoke on the water" and "Money for nothing" played on Red Special, my search is complete.
I have had the Burns version of the Red Special for 20 years...obviously a big Brian fan .....I love the way it will do almost anything you could ever want from a guitar
Thank you so much for demo that amazing guitar outside the very common Queen examples. ✌
I recall in the early 2000s going to one of my local retailers and picking up one of the Specials manufactured then by Guild. It was definitely surreal holding a guitar associated with Brian and pointedly resisting the temptation to unpack his riffs. Per chance (since I hadn’t learned the pickup selectors from the phase switches), I switched on the middle and neck pickups and improvised a bosa nova groove. Because it was both present like a Strat and warm like an ES, I was tempted to purchase it. However, I stood in my own way. (I already had just purchased a guitar from a local manufacturer called Brian Moore Guitars.)
Thank you James for the interesting video, and your valuables explanations.💞 You are a guitar genius!!. 🎸
THANK YOU. Daily Guild Brian May user since I got one in 1994, love Bri and Queen but I do not play anywhere near what either of them sound like. Bridge/neck, bridge/middle out of phase and bridge-only are my favorite settings.
Actually really enjoyed seeing you play other things than Queen ! 👍
What seems to get missed on many reviews of this guitar, is that the pickups are wired in series and not parallel (the usual way), which makes a massive difference to the pickup combination sounds.
Great video, by the way. I think you managed to mention every Geordie guitarist except Andy Taylor ;)
Funnily enough I heard years ago a guy on my estate had guitar lessons with Andy Taylor.
My chemistry teacher was at actually at University with Dave Stewart of the Eurythkics and I used to clean the windows of Annie Lennox’s cousin.
My sisters best friend was niece to Robert Palmer.
Oh I used to live next door to Perry from girl band Little Mix
How’s that for name dropping 😂😂
a brian may guitar through a marshall is something else, it's a great great tone. i don't know where i saw videos of it but it was great sounding
I have an old Burns Red Special and I (almost) never play Brian's stuff on it because, one, everyone else plays that on that guitar, and two, because I can't do it justice, and three, it sounds strange without Queen's rhythm section backing me up, which hardly ever happens. :D
I set the pickups flush to the body and don't set the action as low as it can go. I also keep some relief in the neck. All of this is a universal setup for me when I am setting up a guitar with single coils. It also works great for Strats, Teles, P-90 Gibsons, DeArmond Gretschs, and such. I like low output single coils best, although P-90s, bless 'em, can be quite raucous.
Oh yeah, I use Optima Brian May gold strings exclusively on all of my electrics. Why? They sound and feel great, do not rust or corrode, and and last for a dog's age. They look nice, too.
I love for the day when I have the opportunity to -lay that guitar. It’s iconic, unique and with a myriad of tonal possibilities. I live for the day when I get to play that guitar with enough skill and treble behind me to enjoy myself as well. It’s a special guitar and one the queen fangirl in me longs to be able to play.
Besides the fact that May is an insanely great guitarist… the way he was able to sound like a clarinet, etc… that sonic flexibility is largely due to the incredible electronics design of the pickup phase switches. I have no idea why nobody else has put out any designs to do that. The closest thing i can think of is the newer Revstar standard and pro, which has a few modes with funky phasing between the pickups, but the way they achieve that is through slightly delaying the signal of one pickup against the other. The May design is just genius. Maybe he patented it? Haha
A precise explanation as usual James.
Nice one👌
This video is very interesting...great James!!!!!
This isn’t related to anything but I feel like a humbucker in the neck position would fit this guitar really well
Hi James, I'm from around the Gateshead area, I've just bought a Red Special, the one I bought is a 2004 model, I'm after the half moon scratch plate that goes at the bottom of the bridge like yours has but I was wondering if the scratch plate would fit because the bridge on mine is the Burns London bridge, dunno if that makes any sense, but I'd be greatful if you would help me with that, answering that question I mean. Love your vids, and I'm subbed. Keep up the magnificent work my friend.
Hi Mike, yeah the Burns models came without the half moon plate. The plate on the BMG models are purely cosmetic. I know you can buy them from accessories section of the shop.brianmayguitars.co.uk/bmg-scratchplates-hardware.html
I’m assuming they’d be an easy fit to your guitar.
RS Conversion are good to ask and also do upgraded scratchplates. They’re friendly and very helpful. Plus are now officially approved of by BMG guitars
Hope that helps 😊
Alright James brilliant video rs playing different songs great to hear .keep well 🎸👍🎛
red specials are amazing guitars. Very versatile and if you have just a few peddles, even more so. The tones you can get are endless
I read the thread title as "Can you play Queen on other guitars than a Red Special" ... yes, my brain is weird :D
You should check out my vid of using an old Burns to play Van Halen
It's a beautiful sounding instrument whatever style you play 🤗. 🌸
I was going to add it’s great for money for nothing and other dire straits sounds. For M4N you can get great distortion without the feedback on the harmonics. The original sound was on an out of phase Les Paul I believe. Very versatile. Sits pretty uncomfortably though - the cut away for the leg is too small and it neck dives a bit. Fine standing.
Not really a Queen or Brian May fan, but the guitars are well priced.
B May did say that he designed this guitar for all genres of music…:)
Already know the answer, but I'm going to watch anyway. :-)
Some day one day I'll buy one of these hopefully.
Can it chug?
boring
Thank you.
Given your setup, can you get some BM tones with, let's say, a Strat?
In short yes 😊
@@Rocklicks72 thank you!
Hello
Did you get the guitar directly from the website Brian May has for it?
Bought it about 10 year ago from a guitar shop but they got it direct from Brian May guitars
does it feel closer like a les paul or a strat to play because i feel like the fat neck and red colour would trick my brain and make it feel like a gibson
Hey do you know anywhere where I could get a cheap bmg anywhere? I’m subbed and love your vids
Take a look on Facebook Marketplace for bargains. Also brianmayguitars.co.uk sometimes sell B Stock where you can pick a bargain up😊
I think you can play anything on a red special. But if you own one and don't learn one vision at least the main riff then you need to get a different guitar. In. My opinion.
Imagine playing shortest straw on this with an insanely distorted tone
Does the amiplifier sound mods alterate the red special sound?
Have you ever thought about upgrading to a more recent bmg , I’m not sure how different they are but I’m pretty sure they have been changed over the years
Not really. As far as I know they’re pretty much the same. I’m considering upgrading the scratch plate and maybe the pickups
@@Rocklicks72 a new scratch plate sounds good
Can the whammy bar make the sound higher pitch?
Yes
The man talks sense.
Sometimes i play pink Floyd and sound very nice
Is the best a amazing guitar ❤❤❤❤❤
Can the tremolo system on the BMG Super be able to pull up ???
In short.... yes
What's the price of this beauty?
Check the price out on www.brianmayguitars.co.uk
My only real concern is that I have slightly smaller hands than avrage and Ive heard that the neck is wider down the neck than normal, guess ill have to "test drive" one to see unless anyone else has smaller hands and found it to be no problem?
A few people have voiced concerns over the wider neck. I find the guitar comfortable and I havnt got the biggest hands. Unless you have a 3 year olds size hands I can’t see a problem. But it would be better if you could play one first
I know a Hungarian musician, who has a small hand but finally this guitar is perfect for him.
I started out on a Fender acoustic guitar with a nut width of 42 mm and was also concerned that the neck would be to wide for me with my woman's hands. However, I was pleasantly surprised when my BMG Special arrived recently! Despite being a bit wider (45 mm) It feels about the same close to the nut (haven't played on other parts of the fretboard much yet to be honest). But what surprised me the most is that the scale length is considerably smaller (62 cm on the BMG vs 65 cm on the Fender), despite the fact that it has 24 frets vs only 20 on the Fender! Considering that I always found it difficult to play chords which require spreading your hand over several frets, I think this will suit me quite well!
I'm happy BMG decided to make a more "general public friendly" guitar as the real Red Special has a massively thick neck, so I'm not sure whether the dimensions of a BMG Super would work for me.
is it neck heavy?
Not in my opinion but it is broad. But I find that comfortable
I prefer playing my telecaster because it is more straightforward. I just plug it in, tune it and play. If I had money I could get an amp that offers a lot of features. However I only understand the volume knob on my basic amp, so why spend money on a more complicated rig? Personally, I don't want to emulate someone else. I'm just happy playing. Maybe if I was planning to play in a band I'd care more about sounding like somebody. My main concern is whether or not it looks like I'm flipping someone off on purpose.
About the ''Innuendo'' digital Pedal, Is there a way to download that Bridgetone Guitar sound into a Physical pedal so I can take it to a gig without having to drag my computer along ???
Are you talking about Tonebridge guitar app?
@@Rocklicks72 Yep, The one that was flashed on the screen when You were doing the ''Innuendo'' tutorial.
Doubt there’s a way of downloading it to an actual pedal. You could look at the settings and try and replicate it using your setup
I think you'd have to be very focused to not stray into brian may style
And it won't stay in tune, and you can't keep the trem arm in the hole, the Chong sounds are the queen thing I prefer Chang
There’s a hidden grub screw under the bridge you can tighten the trem arm to stop it flopping about
no
A man of few words. I like it. Straight to the point 😂
Waleed Aly a political commentator plays in his band with a white BMG....it’s not a strat sound that’s for sure!
Yes, the bridge and middle pickup out of fase is a very Stratocaster sound.