https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yIE2GnZVO9cThink i shall buy one of these sounds good.not in shops yet in UK though i dont think.
Digitech Mosaic 12 string pedal
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Very interesting.
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Try the Kemper before you spend money
Even though all six strings are octaves when you use a Kemper pitch effect, it can still evoke those sounds very well.
(no one in the audience is going to say - hey, that WOULD have sounded like a 12-string if only the E and B strings were unison......) LOL!
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(no one in the audience is going to say - hey, that WOULD have sounded like a 12-string if only the E and B strings were unison......) LOL!Ha, the musician police would.
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Ha, the musician police would.
Exactly,and they are already on my case for past offences so anyway will probably buy one,made some enquiries and they will be in UK next week sometime. -
Let us know what you think of it
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I'm interested, too. How much are they?
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£109 in UK, PMT music(UK) will have some next week, probably out in Europe very soon as well.
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Thanks!
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Just watched a few videos on this pedal - please correct me if I'm wrong, but it sounds like this pedal actually generates a unison note and an octave up note for every single note. In other words, not octave up for 4 strings and unison for 2. If that's the case, don't we already have this effect possible (or a close semblance) within the Kemper?
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Just watched a few videos on this pedal - please correct me if I'm wrong, but it sounds like this pedal actually generates a unison note and an octave up note for every single note. In other words, not octave up for 4 strings and unison for 2. If that's the case, don't we already have this effect possible (or a close semblance) within the Kemper?
Yes, the Kemper can do Unison + Octave.
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Whoops, looks like I've made a mistake, though, about the Mosaic - a video I watched mentioned that (and it sounded like) all strings were doubled and had the octave up effect, but in looking further at Digitech's web site, they (as do vendors) also say it produces "octave low strings and doubled high strings." My apologies. I'm curious how they do it if not by some kind of "above this note, switch from octave to double"...