GR Basses
GR BASS PURE DRIVE Preamp/DI/Tuner Per Basso Elettrico SPEDITO GRATIS€239.00
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Italy
As soon as you start using pedals, two questions appear:
With huge pedalboards, countless videos and pro rigs everywhere, it’s easy to get lost. In reality, for most rock/pop situations you just need a simple, logical and easy‑to‑manage chain that you can expand over time.
In this guide we’ll look at:
A very common starting point looks like this:
Guitar → Tuner → Overdrive/Distortion → Modulation (Chorus/Phaser) → Delay → Reverb → Amp
From here you can add or remove elements depending on your style.
If you’re just starting out, tuner + overdrive + delay will already cover about 70% of rock/pop situations.
If in doubt, the first pedal to buy is a pedal tuner.
Why it matters so much:
Place it right after the guitar, before anything else.
For rock and modern pop you’ll want at least one overdrive (to push your amp) or a distortion if you play into a clean platform and rely on pedals for gain.
Useful for:
Typical sounds: classic rock, pop rock, blues‑rock.
Useful for:
You can:
GR Basses
GR BASS PURE DRIVE Preamp/DI/Tuner Per Basso Elettrico SPEDITO GRATIS€239.00
Sold in:
Italy
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In the chain they go after the tuner and before modulation, delay and reverb.
Modulation effects make your sound move:
In a simple chain, place them after gain pedals (overdrive/distortion) and before delay and reverb:
Guitar → Tuner → Overdrive/Dist → Modulation → Delay → Reverb → Amp
This way, the distorted tone is already "finished" and the effects shape it.
To begin with:
Delay is almost mandatory for:
It usually sits after gain and modulation, close to the end of the chain:
… → Overdrive/Dist → Modulation → Delay → Reverb → Amp
This way the repeats don’t get re‑distorted and stay clearer.
A go‑to setting that works in most situations:
You’ll get a nice tail that fills space without swallowing your playing.
Your amp may already have a good‑sounding reverb.
Simple rule:
In the chain, reverb belongs at the very end, after everything else.
Guitar → Tuner → Overdrive/Distortion → Modulation → Delay → Reverb → Amp
This layout is more than enough for 80% of rock/pop guitarists.
General rule of thumb:
Example of a fuller chain:
Guitar → Tuner → Wah → Compressor → Overdrive/Dist → Modulation → Delay → Reverb → Amp
For most rock/pop guitarists:
Everything else is optional.
It depends:
If your goal is to learn how an effects chain works, starting with a few individual pedals is often more educational.
Most of the time:
Delay → Reverb
This lets the reverb wrap around both your dry signal and the delay repeats, resulting in a more natural, cohesive sound.
Possible reasons:
Try to:
No, but it’s a great starting point. Once you understand why a pedal is placed somewhere, you can experiment (e.g. delay before overdrive for more "lo‑fi" tones, modulation before gain, etc.).
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