Welcome to The Tone Lounge, my name is Jonathan. Today we're having a look at
the Fulltone OCD with a Vox AC 15. The
purpose of this video is to help you
determine whether the Fulltone OCD is
the sound you're after. I'm gonna be
using single coils, p90s
and humbuckers in this demonstration,
so that way I cover more ground. If you like this kind of content,
consider subscribing to the channel and also hit that notification bell, that way you
don't miss any of the new content. So, now let's go talk about the signal chain.
And my signal chain today is super simple. It's just the guitars going out to the pedal,
the pedal's plugged into my AC 15,
and out of the AC 15 I'm going to a
Two Notes Captor that goes to my audio
interface, and in my recording program
I'm using the Two Notes Wall of Sound with a feline cab simulator.
My amp settings are rather simple. All I did was crank up the master volume all the way,
I'm plugging into the normal channel with
the normal channel volume at 9 o'clock.
That is it! Nothing more to it. For the
rhythm part in this demonstration I used
a Telecaster and the Epiphone Les Paul
for the Les Paul and the Telecaster all
the settings were at noon. The only
difference is that I use the high peak
for the Telecaster and the low peak for
the Epiphone. Now for the chorus leads
where I have the double lead guitars,
all I did was use the low peak with the
Epiphone but I cranked up the distortion
to around 3 o'clock and that is the
exact same setting I use for the main
lead part with the Les Paul jr.
So, nothing fancy it was just cranked up to taste just to get a bit more grit out of
the pedals I could get more sustain for
the lead parts. All right, so enough
talking let's go have a listen to the
isolated track from that song from the
intro we're gonna listen to the rhythm
and the lead parts.
I hope the video was helpful. If you have
any questions, I'm gonna be hanging
around in the comments section. Thank you so much for watching and I'm gonna see
you in the next video.
Cheers!!
