How to sound like synthwave on guitar

Synthwave has been making a strong comeback over the past few years. And for guitarists, that means classic drive pedals and over-the-top modulation are cool again...

Disclaimer: This content was sponsored by BOSS. They provided me with the two BOSS pedals I use in the video/post, and I was monetarily compensated for my work. However, the company had no say in the things I mention in the video, and they donโ€™t get to see the content before it is released.

Choosing Guitar

When choosing the guitar to use for this song, I had two criteria: I wanted to have jangly mid-scooped cleans and a humbucker for heavily distorted and modulated leads. Thatโ€™s where the Vola OZ stepped in with its HSS pickup configuration. The in-between pickup positions gave me exactly the kind of clean(ish) tone I was looking for.

For a vintage-inspired instrument, Vola OZโ€™s bridge humbucker actually packs a lot of punch and has a nice bump in the midrange, which made dialing in those leads a lot of fun.

I should also mention that as long as your guitar doesnโ€™t hum or feedback too much, the choice of your guitar doesnโ€™t matter too much. The amount of modulation and distortion weโ€™re going to apply to our tone makes nuances of our guitars less relevant.

Signal chain

From the guitar, I went through my studio pedalboard and used various drive pedals (BOSS SD-1, Caline Pure Sky, NUX Steel Singer, KMA Logan, REVV G3) for the different parts of the song. All of these tones ran through the BOSS DC-2w, from which I split the signal:

  • Output A went to REVV D20
  • Output B went to Two Notes CAB M where I was using both amp and cabinet simulation.

With this setup, I had a proper stereo rig to take full advantage of the modulation BOSS DC-2w provides.

Clean tones

For the clean(ish) tones, I used the in-between pickup positions on the Vola OZ and used the BOSS SD-1 to give a bit of โ€˜hairโ€™ to my clean tones. The sound might feel a bit too distorted when soloed out, but in a dense mix, that distorted sound makes the arpeggios cut through while still sounding clean.

Running the DC-2w on the second mode made the clean passages wide and gave an illusion of double-tracked arpeggio lines that sit perfectly in the mix.

Rhythm Guitar

For rhythm guitar, I used the humbucker on the Vola and cranked the gain on the SD-1. I havenโ€™t used SD-1 before, but I can immediately tell why itโ€™s such a classic. Adding the DC-2w on the third mode gives me a wide double-tracked sounding rhythm tone that I absolutely love.

Lead Guitar

For the lead sound, I wanted to have more gain, and besides using SD-1, I also added the Caline Pure Sky OD with the gain pretty much cranked. The icing on the cake was throwing in the DC-2w for extra width and modulation.

Things started to get a bit noisy but also so, so good. The lead tone is pure 80โ€™s magic and so much fun to play.

So, What Did I learn?

Overall, I was slightly shocked how easy it was to dial in these tones. SD-1 gives you exactly the kind of drive tone you want to have for this type of music. And adding the BOSS DC-2w transports you to the past with its awesome modulated tones. Using DC-2w might have also ruined mono guitar for me, but thatโ€™s a different story for some other timeโ€ฆ

If youโ€™re interested in acquiring any of the gear mentioned here and support what I do, you can use the affiliate links here:

โ–บโ–บGet The Gear at Thomann: https://www.thomann.de/fi/thlpg_to75kzs7bv.html

โ–บโ–บDownload My Jam Tracks, Lessons and more here: https://www.catpickstudios.com

โ–บโ–บGet The Boss SD-1 at Sweetwater: https://www.sweetwater.sjv.io/m5RAQO

โ–บโ–บGet The Boss DC-2w at Sweetwater: https://www.sweetwater.sjv.io/DK0P4b


Posted by

,

Search By Tags

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *