https://www.seymourduncan.com/pedal/palladium?__uuid_ref=5a789554bafff
This is a left-over no frills take from the sessions I recorded for the very capable Seymour Duncan Palladium. The pedal is a piece of distortion mastery in my opinion. Watch the knob tweakage to see what it can do. A more explanatory video can be viewed on my channel at https://youtu.be/JLFOLusTwPw
The Seymour Duncan Palladium Gain Stage has been around a year or so now and plenty has been written and said about it. So I've decided to just play the pedal, in context, over a backing track that's not too intrusive, so you can hear what it's capable of with the particular guitar I've chosen.
"The Palladium Gain Stage effects pedal is the first stompbox that actually captures the feel and responsiveness of a high gain tube amp. ...By focusing beyond just the tonal characteristics of Palladium, we designed an innovative architecture that captures the full-bodied depth and character previously unattainable in an effects pedal."
Today's tools:
Guitar: 2017 Ernie Ball Music Man JP15-7 (stock).
Amp models: Bogner Shiva (Clean) and 4x12 Greenback cab - Axe-FX II XL+ running FWQ9.04
Backing Track: "Eighty Something in G#m" courtesy Total Guitar 1998.
Extra effects: Stereo reverb and delay - Axe-FX II (post amp/cab)
Cables: Goodwood Audio and Providence
Power Supply: Strymon Zuma
Mic: N/A
Camera: Canon 60D (me) and Nikon D5100 (pedal)
Soundcard: Fractal Audio Systems Axe-FX II XL+ (recording, mixing and bouncing).
Computer: Apple iMac 27" i7 3.4 GHz 16 GB RAM
Software: Logic Pro X, Eventide/Newfangled Audio ‘Elevate’ Mastering Limiter, Apple Final Cut Pro X (video editing and Youtube compression).