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![]() ZVex Hand Painted Seek Wah II Guitar Effects Pedal $329.00 Buy It Now --> Ends In 7h 8m <-- |
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[phpostock]Seek Wah, 15[/phpostock]
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[phpzon]Seek Wah, 10[/phpzon]
Kirk Hammett - Wah = Vivian Campbell?
Question:
Don't you think that (minus the wah) Vivan Campbell's style with Dio was quite similar to that of Kirk Hammett's?
Listen to these two solos:
"Seek and Destroy" - Metallica [Hammett]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JYKh85Leq_g
"Stand Up and Shout" - Dio [Campbell]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z49DsGuPu48
BQ: Favorite Campbell solo?
BQ2: Favorite Hammett solo?
BQ3: Vivan Campbell vs Kirk Hammett?
I know "Seek and Destroy" doesn't have wah. That was the point.
But I was listening to "Stand Up and Shout" and immediately thought, Kirk Hammett!
Maybe it's just me...
As for me:
BQ: "Holy Diver"
BQ2: "Master of Puppets" [clean solo]
BQ3: Vivian Campbell. I don't like Hammett's wah, and at the time Campbell was at the LEAST up to par with Hammett in 83
Answer:
I think the guitar tone is similar but to be perfectly honest Campbell was a FAR BETTER lead player with regard to technique, style and taste. I know die hard KH and Metallica fans because of favoritism are probably going to disagree with me but I say that without bias because this is old Metallica and I love old Metallica
Similar styles? Possibly in review of the times and how old both these albums are. But at the same time I don't think so I can hear plain as day that Campbell had way better style and Vibrato way more tasteful than KH.
Zvex Seek Wah Guitar Pedal
Additional Seek Wah related items.
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ZVex Hand-Painted Seek Wah II Guitar Effects Pedal $263.2 ZVex Hand-Painted Seek Wah II Guitar Effects Pedal |
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ZVex Hand-Painted Seek Wah II Guitar Effects Pedal 886830202162 $263.2 The Seek-Wah II from ZVex is sort of a combination of a tremolo and a wah-wah pedal. If you're familiar with seventies synths, it's exactly like an analog sequencer controlling a mellow bandpass filter. It gives you a choice between 4, 6, or 8 steps for your wah. The 6-step positions work well with 6/8 or 3/4 time songs. The Seek-Wah steps through one wah setting to another and starts over after it gets to the end of the sequence. It features a total of 9 knobs, the leftmost being a speed control, and the other being wah settings, which get brighter when you turn them to the left. You can set up patterns, which accentuate notes in arpeggiated chords at particular spots.Note: Due to the nature of each hand-painted Seek Wah II pedal, there may be a slight difference in design from the posted image.Hand-painted artwork Controls:Speed (tempo)8 wah settings for sequencer8 LED'sSwitch for 4, 6, or 8 total stepsTrue Bypass stomp switch |
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Zvex Hand-Painted Seek Wah Ii Guitar Effects Pedal $329 The Seek-Wah II from ZVex is sort of a combination of a tremolo and a wah-wah pedal. If you're familiar with seventies synths, it's exactly like an analog sequencer controlling a mellow bandpass filter. It gives you a choice between 4, 6, or 8 steps for your wah. The 6-step positions work well with 6/8 or 3/4 time songs. The Seek-Wah steps through one wah setting to another and starts over after it gets to the end of the sequence. It features a total of 9 knobs, the leftmost being a speed control, and the other being wah settings, which get brighter when you turn them to the left. You can set up patterns, which accentuate notes in arpeggiated chords at particular spots.Note: Due to the nature of each hand-painted Seek Wah II pedal, there may be a slight difference in design from the posted image.Hand-painted artwork Controls:Speed (tempo)8 wah settings for sequencer8 LED'sSwitch for 4, 6, or 8 total stepsTrue Bypass stomp switch |
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Used Zvex Hand-Painted Seek Wah Ii Guitar Effects Pedal 886830202162 $263.2 The Seek-Wah II from ZVex is sort of a combination of a tremolo and a wah-wah pedal. If you're familiar with seventies synths, it's exactly like an analog sequencer controlling a mellow bandpass filter. It gives you a choice between 4, 6, or 8 steps for your wah. The 6-step positions work well with 6/8 or 3/4 time songs. The Seek-Wah steps through one wah setting to another and starts over after it gets to the end of the sequence. It features a total of 9 knobs, the leftmost being a speed control, and the other being wah settings, which get brighter when you turn them to the left. You can set up patterns, which accentuate notes in arpeggiated chords at particular spots.Note: Due to the nature of each hand-painted Seek Wah II pedal, there may be a slight difference in design from the posted image.Hand-painted artwork Controls:Speed (tempo)8 wah settings for sequencer8 LED'sSwitch for 4, 6, or 8 total stepsTrue Bypass stomp switch |
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Meinl Wah Wah Tube $34.99 Meinl Wah Wah Tube |
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ZVex Hand-Painted Ooh Wah II Guitar Effects Pedal $379 Part sequencer, part wah-wah, part tremolo. Put it together and you have the Ooh Wah II guitar effects pedal, a mind-bending Zvex pedal. The Wah pedal has a random/seek stomp switch that lets you jump between the seek-wah sound, which gives the wah sound in sequence, and a random mode, which sounds a little like random sample-and-hold driving a bandpass filter. The lights of the wah pedal are all going in a row signifies the seek mode...step on the random switch to put it in random mode. The notch in each knob helps with referencing the position, and an LED by each wah control shows which sequencer stage is active and by it's brightness, the wah setting. The ZVex Ooh-Wah II is sort of a combination of a tremolo and a wah wah pedal. If you're familiar with seventies synths, it's exactly like an analog sequencer/random sample-and-hold, controlling a mellow bandpass filter. You have a choice between 4, 6, or 8 steps/channels for your wah. The ZVex guitar pedal's six step positions work well with 6/8 or 3/4 time songs when in seek-mode, and you can control the total number of possible "channels" of wah with the switch in random mode. In seek-mode, the ZVex Ooh Wah II effect pedal steps through from one wah setting to another and starts over after it gets to the end of the sequence. There's a total of nine knobs, the leftmost being a speed control, and the other being wah settings, which get brighter when you turn them to the left. The ZVex wah pedal lets you set up patterns to accentuate notes in arpeggiated chords at particular spots.Each ZVex pedal is hand-painted and each circuit is hand-assembled, with no two boxes quite alike.Power Source: 9V DC batteryControls: Speed (tempo), eight wah settings for sequencer, eight LED's to indicate which wah setting is in use and it's level, Switch for 4, 6, or 8 total steps, and True Bypass Stomp SwitchHand-painted housingHand-assembled circuitry |
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Zvex Hand-Painted Ooh Wah Ii Guitar Effects Pedal $379 Part sequencer, part wah-wah, part tremolo. Put it together and you have the Ooh Wah II guitar effects pedal, a mind-bending Zvex pedal. The Wah pedal has a random/seek stomp switch that lets you jump between the seek-wah sound, which gives the wah sound in sequence, and a random mode, which sounds a little like random sample-and-hold driving a bandpass filter. The lights of the wah pedal are all going in a row signifies the seek mode...step on the random switch to put it in random mode. The notch in each knob helps with referencing the position, and an LED by each wah control shows which sequencer stage is active and by it's brightness, the wah setting. The ZVex Ooh-Wah II is sort of a combination of a tremolo and a wah wah pedal. If you're familiar with seventies synths, it's exactly like an analog sequencer/random sample-and-hold, controlling a mellow bandpass filter. You have a choice between 4, 6, or 8 steps/channels for your wah. The ZVex guitar pedal's six step positions work well with 6/8 or 3/4 time songs when in seek-mode, and you can control the total number of possible "channels" of wah with the switch in random mode. In seek-mode, the ZVex Ooh Wah II effect pedal steps through from one wah setting to another and starts over after it gets to the end of the sequence. There's a total of nine knobs, the leftmost being a speed control, and the other being wah settings, which get brighter when you turn them to the left. The ZVex wah pedal lets you set up patterns to accentuate notes in arpeggiated chords at particular spots.Each ZVex pedal is hand-painted and each circuit is hand-assembled, with no two boxes quite alike.Power Source: 9V DC batteryControls: Speed (tempo), eight wah settings for sequencer, eight LED's to indicate which wah setting is in use and it's level, Switch for 4, 6, or 8 total steps, and True Bypass Stomp SwitchHand-painted housingHand-assembled circuitry |




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