How do you get the Duff McKagan bass tone?
Once you fire up that bass chorus, that’s when “Duff tone” really starts to happen. As far as how you set your MXR chorus effect, the general rule of thumb to get that Duff tone is to use a slower rate, medium intensity and medium-to-wide width.
Is Duff a good bass player?
He is a great bassist for the style of music he plays. I’ve recently discovered him and like him alot. Sometimes a bass player needs to glue things together instead of being a lead player. Duff was a great glue.
What instrument does Duff McKagan play?
Bass guitar
| Duff McKagan | |
|---|---|
| Born | February 5, 1964 Seattle, Washington, U.S. |
| Genres | Hard rock, punk rock |
| Occupation(s) | Musician songwriter record producer author |
| Instruments | Bass guitar vocals guitar drums |
What bass amp does Duff McKagan use?
What are you using for amps, live, these days? I use the Fender Super Bassman, and I still use my Gallien-Krueger. I blend the two sounds, so I have the grind, which I used with the Walking Papers.
What kind of strings does Duff McKagan use?
Duff used Rotosound Swing Bass strings to achieve the distinctive, punchy sound heard on the album and has relied on our strings ever since! It was announced in December 2015 that the original Guns N’ Roses lineup featuring Duff will be reunited for the first time in 20 years to go on tour in 2016.
When did Duff McKagan learn bass?
He left the house, and I bought a Gibson EBO bass when I was 13 with paper-route money from the Seattle Times. $125 bucks. I’m sure it was stolen. I got a guitar sometime after that.
What kind of pick does Duff McKagan use?
Dunlop Tortex Standard 0.73mm Guitar Picks “My Dunlop Tortex (Yellow NOT Black) . 73 guitar picks.
What is Duff McKagan’s real name?
Michael Andrew McKagan
Duff McKagan/Full name
What size pick does Duff McKagan use?
Dunlop Tortex Standard 0.73mm Guitar Picks.
What kind of pedals does slash use?
Aside from the classic wah pedals, Slash also uses some of those that imitate the fixed wah, or the so-called “cocked wah,” effect. The particular models that he uses are the Dunlop QZ-1 Q-Zone and the MXR KFK Q Zone. Interestingly enough, the second one is a signature model of Slayer’s Kerry King.