video,youtube_link,musiccaps_caption,youtube_published,youtube_channel,youtube_description,musiccaps_names,musiccaps_aspects,musiccaps_author,youtube_id,musiccaps_rowid https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Psyk_xyBl0&start=40&end=50,"{""label"":""T.C. Electronic SCF Stereo Chorus, Pitch Modulator & Flanger"",""href"":""https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Psyk_xyBl0&start=40&end=50""}",The track features an electric guitar with a chorus pedal effect. The guitar alternates between riff to melody. The sound is space-like and almost psychedelic. The atmosphere is sweet and dreamy.,2014-09-03T03:06:21Z,dadahru,"T.C. Electronic SCF Stereo Chorus, Pitch Modulator & Flanger and a little bit of Bearfoot Sparkling Yellow Overdrive 2","[""Effects unit"", ""Electric guitar"", ""Guitar"", ""Music"", ""Musical instrument"", ""Chorus effect"", ""Plucked string instrument"", ""Distortion""]","[""chorus electric guitar"", ""guitar effects pedal"", ""mid tempo"", ""psychedelic"", ""no vocals"", ""dreamy""]",5,4Psyk_xyBl0,567 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FXQxobF8FWw&start=30&end=40,"{""label"":""Oceans -- Prog Rock Instrumental -- 1976 Electra Omega X210"",""href"":""https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FXQxobF8FWw&start=30&end=40""}","This is an instrumental progressive rock piece. There is an electric guitar playing an arpeggio in the melodic background while another is playing a solo as the lead. A simple 4/4 rock beat is with electronic drum sounds. The atmosphere has a trippy, psychedelic feeling to it. This piece could be used in the trip/nightmare sequences of retro themed horror movies.",2008-07-09T02:39:57Z,wnorcott,"http://www.fillmorepedal.com This is a -- S T E R E O -- progressive rock guitar instrumental called Oceans. Played on the 1976 Electra Omega X210 guitar. This guitar piece is kind of like Pink Floyd meets Robin Trower meets Yes. I built the guitar effects myself. The 1976 Electra Omega X210 guitar is a Les Paul Custom with a jacaranda figureboard and Electra's funktastic Magnaflux 50 pickups. I recorded part 2 over on Vimeo here is the link http://www.vimeo.com/1324272 NOTE To play it in stereo type this at the end of the URL &fmt=18 or just click on this link http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FXQxobF8FWw&fmt=18 I HOPE YOU LIKE IT.","[""Electric guitar"", ""Guitar"", ""Music"", ""Independent music"", ""Rock music"", ""Progressive rock""]","[""progressive rock"", ""instrumental"", ""electric guitar"", ""guitar solo"", ""effect pedal"", ""electronic drums"", ""trippy"", ""psychedelic""]",9,FXQxobF8FWw,1645 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNv7mzbUUHc&start=50&end=60,"{""label"":""ibanez cs9 vs ibanez sc10 vs ibanez ccl vs boss ce3 vs behringer uc100 vs yamaha ch10mkII"",""href"":""https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNv7mzbUUHc&start=50&end=60""}",This is a gear comparison jam recorded with an electric guitar played with different chorus effect pedals. The electric guitar is playing simple tunes that sound dreamy with the added chorus effect. There is a psychedelic atmosphere. Certain parts of this recording can be sampled for use in beat-making or in advertisement jingles. These parts could also be played as an opening theme for rock music radio stations.,2011-01-25T20:57:50Z,ersemola,"in this video, we show the differences between the pedals. all the knobs are set at 12 o clock. all the pedals, ""except for the behringer"", are analogics, first series and early 80 I apologize for the poor quality of the video.","[""Electric guitar"", ""Guitar"", ""Music"", ""Chorus effect""]","[""jam"", ""no singer"", ""instrumental"", ""single instrument"", ""electric guitar"", ""guitar solo"", ""effect pedal"", ""chorus"", ""dreamy"", ""psychedelic"", ""simple tunes""]",9,YNv7mzbUUHc,3281 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2O2xaRfje0&start=360&end=370,"{""label"":""Electro-Harmonix Pitch Fork Polyphonic Pitch Shifter Pedal (Demo by Bill Ruppert)"",""href"":""https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2O2xaRfje0&start=360&end=370""}",This is an instrumental progressive rock music piece. There is an electric guitar playing complex tunes and chords with a pitch shifting effect. There is a psychedelic feel to this track. Parts of this recording could be used in an advertisement jingle.,2014-10-07T18:11:27Z,EHX,"The Electro-Harmonix Pitch Fork polyphonic pitch shifter pedal transposes an instrument’s pitch over a +/- three octave range and features three modes which allow the pitch to be transposed up, down or both, simultaneously. The pitch shift amount can be set to a fixed interval or continuously varied by an expression pedal or control voltage. The controls are straightforward and intuitive. An 11-position Shift switch selects the maximum transposition interval ranging from D (Detune), a shift of 17 cents, through Minor 2nd, Major 2nd, Major 3rd, Perfect 4th, Perfect 5th, Major 6th, Minor 7th, 1 Octave, 2 Octaves and 3 Octaves. A three position toggle switch controls whether the pitch is transposed up, down or both. In Dual mode, two pitch-shifted signals are output. One follows the shift knob as if in the Up position while the other creates a harmony. Dual Mode settings include M3 up + P5 up, P5 up + 1 Oct down, 1 Oct up + 1 Oct down and many others. A Blend knob controls the mix of the dry signal and the effected signal, and an EXP jack enables the player to control pitch and glissando with an expression pedal. The Latch button selects Latch or Momentary mode which affects how the footswitch and EXP input behave. In Latch mode, the footswitch toggles between effect on and buffered bypass each time it’s pressed and the EXP input continuously varies pitch. In Momentary mode the effect is only on while the footswitch is depressed and when it is released the Pitch Fork goes into bypass. In Latch mode the EXP input controls pitch shift amount, ranging from unity to the interval set by the Shift knob, and pitch varies continuously throughout the expression pedal’s range. In Momentary mode the EXP input controls glissando rate for the Pitch Fork’s footswitch. When the bypass footswitch is pressed, the Pitch Fork jumps from bypass to the interval set by the Shift knob. The amount of time it takes to reach that new note is the glissando rate. When the footswitch is released the pitch will return to unity at the same rate. That glissando time can vary between 4 milliseconds to two seconds depending on the heel/toe position of the expression pedal. The default glissando rate is 60 milliseconds when nothing is plugged into the EXP input. The Pitch Fork comes equipped with an EHX 9.6DC-200mA power supply and also runs on a 9Volt battery. Quick specs: - Transposes over a +/- three octave range - Three shift modes: up, down or dual - 11-position Shift knob selects the transposition interval - EXP input lets you control pitch shift or glissando via optional expression pedal - Latch and Momentary modes affect how the footswitch and EXP input behave - Power adapter included EHX pedal demo by Bill Ruppert To learn more about the EHX Pitch Fork polyphonic pitch shifter pedal, visit: http://www.ehx.com/products/pitch-fork 00:00 - Meet the Electro-Harmonix Pitch Fork Polyphonic Pitch Shifter pedal 01:17 - 18-String Guitar setting 01:42 - Synth-like effect with EHX Big Muff Pi fuzz 02:13 - Octave above and octave below 02:53 - Baritone Guitar setting - Pitch dropped down a P4 03:59 - Drop tuned metal guitar tone 04:50 - Bass guitar setting 05:22 - Impossible chords with P5 Dual mode 06:21 - Detune microtonal pitch shift 06:49 - Expression control Like/Follow Electro-Harmonix: https://www.facebook.com/electroharmonix https://www.twitter.com/ehx https://www.instagram.com/ehx https://www.youtube.com/ehx #ehx #electroharmonix #ehxpitchfork","[""Reverberation"", ""Effects unit"", ""Electric guitar"", ""Guitar"", ""Music"", ""Musical instrument"", ""Plucked string instrument""]","[""jam"", ""no singer"", ""instrumental"", ""single instrument"", ""electric guitar"", ""guitar solo"", ""pitch shift"", ""complex"", ""psychedelic""]",9,s2O2xaRfje0,4918