Many thanks. So, it adds two notes above or below the note that you play. If you set both notes to the key of G. One to a 3rd up and a 5th up. Then play a G, it will add a B and a D to give you a G major chord. If you then play an A, it will add a C and an E give you an Am chord. It's good to start with both notes in the same key while you get used to it. Then you can try setting them to different keys to see what chord combinations you get out. I hope that helps.
Hi. Thanks for the comment. Unfortunately I haven't worked out how to do that yet. I kept everything as the default when you create the pedal. Then I changed the notes to where I want them. I chose to do closed triads - G, Bb, D in order - to allow the reverb to work on top. By default it gives an open C chord - C, G, E. I'm fairly certain that I didn't change the plateaux reverb from its default settings either. Hope this helps.
@@mikedivittorio3744 I've just added a page to download patches to my website. There's only this one currently. But if you head over to www.davidholmesguitar.co.uk/patches, you'll find it there. I've tested and loaded it back to my own HX Effects. Let me know how you get on. The notes are: Oct 3 - G, Oct 3 A sharp, Oct 4 D. This give a G minor chord. The next chord is Oct 3 D sharp, Oct 3 G, Oct 4 A sharp. This gives an E flat / D sharp chord.
Excellent demo - I probably never would have thought to combine things this way...very cool
Many thanks 👍
Damn this intro was amazing. When you put the reverb.... oh my god
This was amazing! Thank you for making this video
Thanks JP. And thanks for the suggestion!
super demo, I was looking for this kind of sounds, great ! thanks
This is a big help! Thx
Thanks. Glad I could help.
Hi. Great video, some amazing sounds there! Could you explain a little about how the Twin Harmony works, what combination works best? Many thanks .
Many thanks. So, it adds two notes above or below the note that you play. If you set both notes to the key of G. One to a 3rd up and a 5th up. Then play a G, it will add a B and a D to give you a G major chord. If you then play an A, it will add a C and an E give you an Am chord.
It's good to start with both notes in the same key while you get used to it. Then you can try setting them to different keys to see what chord combinations you get out.
I hope that helps.
How are you generating the sine waves at the start? Is that coming from the hx or elsewhere? Thanks!
Yeah, everything you hear is coming from the HX. The 3 note generator patch gives you up to 3 waves of different shapes.
Please tell me you have downloadable patch for the 3 note gen
Hi. Thanks for the comment. Unfortunately I haven't worked out how to do that yet.
I kept everything as the default when you create the pedal. Then I changed the notes to where I want them. I chose to do closed triads - G, Bb, D in order - to allow the reverb to work on top. By default it gives an open C chord - C, G, E.
I'm fairly certain that I didn't change the plateaux reverb from its default settings either.
Hope this helps.
@@davidholmesguitar6692 so the first 3 note is what notes and the second patch you pressed was what notes
@@mikedivittorio3744 I've just added a page to download patches to my website. There's only this one currently. But if you head over to www.davidholmesguitar.co.uk/patches, you'll find it there. I've tested and loaded it back to my own HX Effects. Let me know how you get on.
The notes are: Oct 3 - G, Oct 3 A sharp, Oct 4 D. This give a G minor chord. The next chord is Oct 3 D sharp, Oct 3 G, Oct 4 A sharp. This gives an E flat / D sharp chord.
This sounds like me trying to get any type of basic modulation dialed in. Spaceships and robots. Get off my lawn!
🤣 You should have heard me setting this up 🛸