Powering Your Pedals

I remember when I got my first pedal. It was the same Boss TU-2 tuner that I have today. I really only played acoustic guitar then (see this post for more about that). I used a battery for it. Then I got a Line 6 DL4 (again…the same one I have today) and needed to power it so I got the power supply. When I finally started playing electric, I bought a Fulldrive 2 off eBay to go with my tuner and DL4. I suddenly needed a little more to power my pedals and wasn’t really sure what to do.

Powering your pedals is a big deal. The way you power them can determine how you sound and your tone…and if your pedals will fry or not.  You spend money on your pedals to sound good, but if you’re not powering them right, you run the risk of them not sounding good. I’m by no means a pro when it comes to electricity or powering pedals, but I’ll share what I’ve learned.

First of all, there are a few things that matter a lot when powering pedals. First of all, is AC or DC power. Most pedals will use DC, but some require an AC adaptor (Whammy and the M9 are the only ones I’ve had to use this on I believe).

The next big thing is voltage. Different pedals require different voltages to power the pedal. The most common you’ll see is 9V or 12V, but you’ll occasionally run into some other stuff. If you don’t give a pedal the right amount of voltage or too much, it will either not turn on or fry the pedal. Check the box/manual/sticker on the pedal or online to make sure you’re giving it the right voltage.

The second big thing is milliamps. Some pedals require more milliamps than others and if you don’t fulfill this it can really bite you. For example, when I first got a Micro POG pedal, I supplied it with 9V but only at 100mA when it requires 200mA. It worked fine almost always, but occasionally something to pop and it would start squealing through my amp uncontrollably (of course, right in the middle of an intense, worshipful moment too)! When I realized what the problem was, I was able to fix it but it was a big deal.

Another thing is the tip connector for the pedal. I believe most pedals require a standard polarity tip negative/barrel positive jacks, but some require a tip positive/barrel negative jack on the pedal.

Honestly, if you use the power supply that comes with each pedal, these aren’t issues you need to think about. But if you the power supply that comes with each pedal, then you’ll have a huge power strip on your board taking up a ton of space!

There are a few options for powering pedals. Here they are:

  • Standard Power Supply – You can use each pedal’s own power supply it comes with and plug them all into a power strip. This will work and sound alright, but it’s not really neat and will be hard to travel with.
  • Daisy Chain – When I first made my board, I used a daisy chain. You power your tuner or another pedal that has an input power jack and an output jack. You can plug in a daisy chain cable in the output to power other pedals off the power your first pedal is getting. This is a cheap and easy option, but can create a lot of noise in your chain and you can also run into problems powering pedals with different power requirements.
  • Multiple Pedal Power Supply – With one of these, you send power to the base unit and use multiple outputs to send to the pedals using connector power cables. This has kind of become the standard of good tone. There are multiple kinds of units you can use for this. I use Voodoo Labs power supplies, but I’ve used a PedalGear.net Juicebox. There are plenty of other kinds that are great. The tricky thing with these is making sure that you’re getting AC or DC power, the right voltage and the right milliamps.

My advice is to get one of these multiple pedal power supplies, but take certain measures to make sure you’re giving the right voltage and milliamps for each pedal. With some of these newer pedals like the Eventide and Strymon stuff, powering them is more difficult, but most power supplies are coming out with stuff that can handle these. I know this is the more expensive option for powering pedals, but it’s worth spending the money to make sure your pedals sound right.

Elevation Worship Tutorials

I found this and wanted to pass this on to you guys. The good folks up at Elevation Church have a great Worship Team Blog. They released some great full band tutorial videos for some of their songs. These are done very well and are very informative for whole band to learn a song.

Check these tutorial videos out here.

What I’ve Been Doing

The past month or so has been crazy busy.

We had Passion 2012. It was just huge. Not just the number of people there, but the presence of God was just huge. So good.

My granny passed away suddenly without any warning. I know most of the time you don’t get a warning, but I really didn’t see it coming. I was honored to honor her by speaking at her funeral and it was great to celebrate her life with my family. Overall, it was great.

We had homecoming and spirit week at NCCS. I don’t know about where you went to school, but homecoming is a big deal at our school. We don’t have a dance, but the presentation of the homecoming court is done well with a theme and a big set after the basketball games. It’s a lot of work, but our student government kills it every year! We also added a homecoming concert (featuring The Museum as our headliner) with our alumni performing at it.  Needless to say this week keeps us all busy!

Winter sports at the school also keeps us busy. There are 13 teams with different games that I’ll hit up as much as I can. I love my job. It keeps me busy, but it makes me feel complete and satisfied.

I’ve been playing a lot in Passion Kids at church. I’ve been playing some guitar and some bass actually. It’s great. I love being a part there. I love God’s Church…the universal Church. And I really love our expression of His Church and the little part we have in the universal Church.

Chris Orr has a few dates over the next few months. It’s been over a year since I’ve been on the road and I’m been having some major withdrawals. I miss fast food and long trips sleeping in a van. I miss the people I travel with and the speakers we get to work with. We’re doing some events with Ed Newton again and I can’t wait for that. Mostly, I miss meeting people and seeing God do incredible things over such a short time.

I got a PS3 over Christmas break. I’ve never been a big gamer, but I figured it was something to do over the break that was different. It was nice to upgrade to the Blu-Ray player and have connectivity to Netflix on the TV…I guess that’s how I was able to get Hannah to let me get it. I’ve been playing just a few games, but it’s a lot of fun. We’ve also been watching a lot of Parks and Recreation on Netflix.

Lastly, I’ve been spending a lot of time with my wife. I’ve been trying to make a more intentional effort to not work while I’m at home. It’s been nice…really nice. She is amazing.

Swells and Ambient Noises

I love making ambient noises and swells in a worship set where it’s needed. Where it’s needed is probably the key phrase in that last sentence. I think it’s important to know when to stop playing. Dynamics are big and you don’t always have to play! Sometimes it should just be acoustic or keys. Or acoustic and keys. Or just drums. Or drums and bass and so on. However, sometimes it adds a little something to play some ambient stuff. Or maybe you don’t have a keys player and need to pad a little.

I made this video a few years ago about a neat and easy way for a guitar player to run some good sounding pads while playing, but I’m going to talk about swells and ambient stuff on the guitar more now. You could go buy all the same gear I have or run the pedals the same way, but that’s not being true to yourself and it’s not the only way (and definitely not the best way) to do it. So this post is not going to be about settings and certain pedals, but how to get swells and ambient stuff in general.

When doing swells, the biggest parts are being able to swell the volume smoothly and having the note or notes carry over while you swell in the next note. Volume pedals are obviously the easiest way to swell, but you can definitely use a volume knob with a lot of practice. Be sensitive to the volume so that you don’t overpower who is speaking or praying over it. I typically turn off drives, but will sometimes have a little boost on if needed.

From an effects standpoint, it’s important that you get a long tail on that note or notes that you play. Most of the time, you may want a few delays on for this. I find that an analog delay with a long repeat and some modulation gets a great swell sound. I use my Memory Man for this, but I really like the Echo Park sounds as well. I also have a great analog setting on the DD-20 that has a long repeat I’ll use with the Memory Man. If you put the feedback or repeat up right before it gets crazy and doesn’t stop repeating, that typically sounds pretty good. There’s also this cool reverse setting on the DD-5 you can use where you put the effect in just a little, repeats pretty long and the time can fluctuate.

I typically will also have some reverb on there. I stick to the modulation setting on the RV-5. You don’t want it repeating forever so that all your notes get muddy, but you want it to transition smoothly between the notes, without any dead space. I also occasionally like to add some octaves (not too crazy but helps with a fuller and sometimes organ sound), or a slow tremolo with not too much depth. If you use a wah pedal, you can also sweep the frequency and it sounds pretty cool, but that’s obviously very hard to do while use the volume pedal too. Which brings me to my next point…

I really hope someday, some company makes a swell pedal. All it needs to do is swell…and be small…and cheap. The Line 6 DL4 has an awesome auto-volume delay patch that makes an amazing pad sound when you dial it in right and combine it with some other effects. What this does is eliminate the need for swelling the volume pedal or knob and it swells automatically. The thing you have to watch out for with this is how it can be sort of choppy and the transitions between chords and notes aren’t smooth. When I had my POG2, I had a preset that did a swell setting really well too, but it didn’t have any tail at all. I honestly liked the POG2 more for ambient stuff and swells than for octaves. There was another setting on that pedal that would keep my dry signal coming through but add a shimmery octave and verbed out sound behind it. All this to say, if you have something swelling for you, it makes it easier to use the wah pedal like I mentioned earlier…and it’s not as much for you to have to do. I’m sure there are lots of great patches in many other units as well. Feel free to share those in a comment on this post.

But you don’t have to have these pedals to play ambient stuff. One trick for doing some ambient stuff is to turn on a few delays and/or a reverb and turn the tone knob back all the way until it’s really dark sounding. You can pick through some partial chords and let the feedback carry it to make some ambient stuff. The DD-5 reverse setting does well with this for me. Try switching the pickups some too…that always seems to give a different, but nice sound.

I’m not pro at this and my ways and tips aren’t the best or the only way to do it, but I hope this helps spring you to discover some new things and share them back here.

Stumbling Block.

I was reading in 1 Corinthians 8 this morning about food sacrificed to idols. Yeah…it was one of those kind of readings. But I’ve learned that there’s always some sort of application in texts like this, even if it’s something that provides more insight to biblical culture rather than my personal life.

I got down to verse 9 and found the familiar term in Christian circles of “stumbling block”. Here’s the passage:

9 Be careful, however, that the exercise of your freedom does not become a stumbling block to the weak. 10 For if anyone with a weak conscience sees you who have this knowledge eating in an idol’s temple, won’t he be emboldened to eat what has been sacrificed to idols? 11 So this weak brother, for whom Christ died, is destroyed by your knowledge. 12When you sin against your brothers in this way and wound their weak conscience, you sin against Christ. 13 Therefore, if what I eat causes my brother to fall into sin, I will never eat meat again, so that I will not cause him to fall.

I love this passage. He talks about how a guy can go and eat food sacrificed to idols. This would’ve been a bad thing to do because it was “defiled”. However, Paul says earlier in this passage that food doesn’t necessarily bring us closer to God or further from him. So this guy can technically eat food sacrificed to idols and in the new covenant, it’s not really that big of a deal. UNLESS, someone sees you eating that food and has a weaker conscience (which isn’t a problem). This weaker conscience guy is now led to believe it’s ok to do, but his conscience betrays him and consequently, he has stumbled. Paul says that when we cause them to stumble and sin against other believers in this way, we’ve sinned against Christ. If what we eat causes a brother (or sister) to stumble, don’t eat it so he won’t fall!

I think this applies to so much more too. We can put a couple of blanks in that last sentence and apply it to just about anything in the Christian walk.

If what I _____________ causes a believer to stumble, don’t ____________ it so he won’t fall!

This has been a big passage for me and I hope you can find some practical application for it as well!

My Top Albums of 2011

Here are some of my favorite albums of 2011. I’m sure I’ve forgotten some, so feel free to contribute:

MUSIC

  • Mylo Xyloto – Coldplay
  • Augustana – Augustana
  • Bon Iver – Bon Iver
  • Ashes & Fire – Ryan Adams
  • Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds - Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds
  • Barton Hollow – The Civil Wars
  • Economy – John Mark McMillan
  • Helplessness Blues – Fleet Foxes

Here’s To 2011…And 2012

2011. Just here…already gone. It seems to me that every year goes by faster and faster. I remember 2000 flying by and then 2001 went by even faster. Ten years later, the same is still true. Next thing you know, I’ll be blogging about 2012 being over.

I haven’t been able to blog much between Christmas events and then getting ready for Passion 2012, while still trying to enjoy my two week vacation. However, I wanted to throw this last one in…just because.

It’s easy for us to get caught up in how quick things go by. Or even sometimes how slowly things go by. One thing I’m trying to do more is living in the moment and enjoying where I’m at. It’s easy for me to forget seasons of life, looking forward to the next season. We’re all at different points and seasons, and I hope we’re able to slow down and enjoy that. Maybe you’re at a transitional stage or at a time where you’re really struggling, but I’d encourage you to just enjoy where you’re at. I love being married and my new job, but I’m very glad I enjoyed being single and getting to play guitar and travel whenever I wanted to during that season of my life as well.

So no matter where you’re at now and what 2011 brought you, let’s slow down and enjoy the little moments that make 2012 and the season we’re personally in so special! Much love to you guys! Happy 2012!

Invest.

I just want to simply say thank you to the following men:

  • Stephen Kendrick
  • Will Goodwin
  • Todd Graham

These are three guys who majorly invested in my life throughout middle school and high school on a consistent basis. I could name many others who really poured into me over the years as well, but these three stood out and stuck with me, even when situations didn’t always keep us around or in the same town.

My guess is none of those guys will read this, and it’s not even really about them. Without those guys, I could’ve made it fine in life, but I’m better because of them and what I learned through them. Because of them, I want to invest in the lives of students today. What a great opportunity we have in life to do this!

Who are you investing in? It doesn’t always take a lot of time and will change a life. So who’s life are you changing my stepping in and pushing them to grow? Make a difference.

2011 Top 5 Christmas Albums

It’s finally here! The Christmas season always means I’m rocking some Christmas music. Here are my favorite albums this year:
  • Songs for Christmas – Sufjan Stevens
  • A Very She & Him Christmas – She & Him
  • A Charlie Brown Christmas – Vince Guaraldi Trio
  • Songs for Christmas – Phil Wickham
  • A Very Merry Christmas – Dave Barnes

What would you add to this list?