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Yeah, the Ebow is a lot more responsive with your distortion pedal turned off, but the nature of its sustain is similar to clipping. Experimentation with different gain settings will get different tones out of it, but the 'typical' harmonic-laden ebow sound is much like the tone Robert Fripp got on his first albums with Eno by using a lot of amp gain right on the verge of feedback (NOT an ebow, but it sounds like it). Try rolling your guitar's volume knob way back; with less pickup gain, the subtleties of the ebow's tones are more pronounced, although the characteristic sustain is always going to be pretty much associated with square-wavish distortion. They're fun on acoustic, too; if you follow the link in my sig file to my 'Mesh' CD, you can hear a clip of my tune 'Gauss' which is ebowed/looped acoustic... -t- --- Andreas Willers <a.willers@arcor.de> wrote: > Speaking of which, I've been thinking about getting > one, too. I > mostly play clean, though, and I've only seen and > heard people use it > with distorted sounds. Does it work equally well > with non-distorted, > that is clean sounds? > > > > Nico, > that sound IS the clean sound, it doesn't get any > less distorted due > to the nature of Ebow tone production. > > Andreas > > > <http://www.myspace.com/nimbletunes> 'Rantai' CD: <http://cdbaby.com/cd/timnelson1> 'Mesh' CD: <http://cdbaby.com/cd/timnelson2> Chain Tape Collective: <http://www.ct-collective.com/> __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com