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DIY Stompboxes => Building your own stompbox => Topic started by: Rock_on on July 22, 2013, 12:40:00 AM

Title: How did this happen?!! (Decode of paramore)
Post by: Rock_on on July 22, 2013, 12:40:00 AM
Im soo confused, i watch the official many times trying ti figure this one out.

There are only four of them in the vid (i searched about them and they are actually 5; yah i know that the Farro brothers left but what i know is the Farro brothers were still there.. They left i think before the release of their (Paramore not the Farro bros) recent albums)

• Vocals
• Drummer
• Bassist
• Lead guitarist

If you listen to it using your earphones you can hear that the lead and rhythm is somewhat separated...

My question is where the **** did the rhythm part come from? Is it the bass with a splitter into two amps (bass amd rhythm)?

Or the rhythm part is recorded separately then insterted to the track?
Title: Re: How did this happen?!! (Decode of paramore)
Post by: Thecomedian on July 22, 2013, 01:44:37 AM
bass IS rhythm. drums are rhythm. melody is "main" guitar usually, and then theres "harmony". Do you mean there's a harmony guitar track? i think this is probably a question better asked in Off Topic, or you could ask a mod to move it.
Title: Re: How did this happen?!! (Decode of paramore)
Post by: Rock_on on July 22, 2013, 01:51:32 AM
Yah, thanks for that..
Mr. Mods pls move this thread to the appropriate section.

(i wish mod would see this)


What i mean is the guitar that uses power chord it's called rhythm guitar isnt?

I think that it's the bass splitted then to bass and rhythm amp

But if i listened to it carefully, i know that it's not a bass it really sound like an electric guitar

(during the verses, the one that sounded like palm muted)

What's the answer to this mystery?? :D
Title: Re: How did this happen?!! (Decode of paramore)
Post by: WaveshapeIllusions on July 22, 2013, 04:22:22 AM
It's probably multiple guitar tracks. Even what sounds like just one might be a few layered guitars. It's a handy recording technique for filling out the sound. When there's only one guitarist, they record a few different takes for lead, rhythm, harmony, etc. Live, there's usually another guitarist there, but they hide 'em. :D
Title: Re: How did this happen?!! (Decode of paramore)
Post by: Rock_on on July 22, 2013, 06:48:56 AM
Quote from: WaveshapeIllusions on July 22, 2013, 04:22:22 AM
It's probably multiple guitar tracks. Even what sounds like just one might be a few layered guitars. It's a handy recording technique for filling out the sound. When there's only one guitarist, they record a few different takes for lead, rhythm, harmony, etc. Live, there's usually another guitarist there, but they hide 'em. :D

Hmmm, seems right.

Thanks for the answer! :)
Title: Re: How did this happen?!! (Decode of paramore)
Post by: mistahead on July 22, 2013, 10:18:07 PM
Quote from: WaveshapeIllusions on July 22, 2013, 04:22:22 AM
It's probably multiple guitar tracks. Even what sounds like just one might be a few layered guitars. It's a handy recording technique for filling out the sound. When there's only one guitarist, they record a few different takes for lead, rhythm, harmony, etc. Live, there's usually another guitarist there, but they hide 'em. :D

Or a DAT setup providing a click track to the drummer and the parts of the sound that they've added in studio but cannot reproduce live.

Every want to annoy a "full sounding" band - ask them what their disaster plan is for when the DAT/Backing track blows up mid gig mwhahahahahahahah  :icon_twisted: