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Ukrainian Divine Liturgy - Hieromartyr Anthimus & Venerable Theoctistus, celebrated by Rt Revd Mitred Archpriest Mykola Matwijiwskyj
© Mazur/cbcew.org.uk
Mass for the Octave Day of Christmas, also known as the Feast of the Circumcision, and of Mary, Mother of God.
This is a clone of the old Fender Blender fuzz/octave pedal. It's kind of like an Ampeg Scrambler...sort of. You can fade in the clean signal.
Now, a word of warning. If you fade completely to the clean signal, the level is lower than your direct signal bypassing the pedal. This is an issue with the circuit, but of course nobody's going to buy this pedal to fade completely to the clean tone. With some of the effected signal, "Blended" in your effected signal will have a significant volume boost over your direct signal, if that's what you want. It doesn't take much blending to get to unity gain.
At the highest distortion settings, you're going to hear some octave effects on the high notes. This is natural. Well, not, "natural," but it's what this circuit does. It's kind of an insane fuzz. Which is good for people who like that kind of thing, but can be a strange surprise if you were expecting a Fuzz Face.
The Yellow LED is beside the effect on/bypass footswitch. The Red LED is by the, "Boost" footswitch. That should be explained, as well. This circuit gets a boost through bypassing the Tone control. Tone controls that aren't active suffer from something called, "Insertion Loss." Meaning that by existing, they're robbing the circuit of some signal. Which is why some amps with 20 knobs don't sound as good as simpler amps. In any case, this circuit gets a big gain boost that you can kick in my bypassing the Tone control. Depending on the sound of your guitar through this pedal, that can be a cool thing or a less than cool thing. Best to engage the boost, see which of your instruments sounds best through the pedal and then remember that if you want to kick it on and off during a song.
So there's my big explanation of the Blender circuit.
Ukrainian Divine Liturgy - Hieromartyr Anthimus & Venerable Theoctistus, celebrated by Rt Revd Mitred Archpriest Mykola Matwijiwskyj
© Mazur/cbcew.org.uk
Ukrainian Divine Liturgy - Hieromartyr Anthimus & Venerable Theoctistus, celebrated by Rt Revd Mitred Archpriest Mykola Matwijiwskyj
© Mazur/cbcew.org.uk
edgar oliver & the octave doktors have made an album together. to celebrate the creation of this album we are performing material from the album at axis theatre.
a newly revealed track is here:
soundcloud.com/octave-doktors/summer-snow-edgar-oliver
the performance is five suggested dollars & copies of the album will be available.
the fundraiser for the album is here: [the video is supremely strange.]
www.indiegogo.com/projects/desire-the-sea/
we will play at 8pm sharp.
refreshments will come from your own pocket.
the facebook invite to the november 7 performance:
www.facebook.com/events/720118178041829/
more demo tracks can be heard here:
Ukrainian Divine Liturgy - Hieromartyr Anthimus & Venerable Theoctistus, celebrated by Rt Revd Mitred Archpriest Mykola Matwijiwskyj
© Mazur/cbcew.org.uk
Ukrainian Divine Liturgy - Hieromartyr Anthimus & Venerable Theoctistus, celebrated by Rt Revd Mitred Archpriest Mykola Matwijiwskyj
© Mazur/cbcew.org.uk
Mass for the Octave Day of Christmas, also known as the Feast of the Circumcision, and of Mary, Mother of God.
A cultural Spectrum of North-Eastern States of India. 18 - 22 March 2015
Kala Academy Darya Sangam, Campal Panaji Goa.
Day 1
Stage Setup
More pics and videos here
joegoauk-pointofview.blogspot.in/2015/03/octavegoa-2015.html
Full octave ocarina constructed using a pinch pot construction. This set is an experiment with mid-fire clays. The plan is to do more surface decoration with commercial underglazes and then a single oxidation firing.
Constructed on the beach during a recent Florida vacation.
This series of photos was taken at the Octave Chanute Aerospace Museum in Rantoul, Illinois. I chose to take pictures of fragments of the planes because trying to fit an entire plane into the frame of a camera is pretty hard, especially within the confines of a crowded hangar.
The museum was wonderful! It is housed in what used to be the Chanute Air Force base, which was operational from 1917 to 1993. There are over 40 planes there, as well as numerous flight simulators (nonfunctional, but still cool to see), an exhibit highlighting the 99th Pursuit Squadron (the first active unit of the Tuskegee Airmen), and four Minuteman ICBM maintenance training silos. In fact, until its decommission in 1993, the Air Force used Chanute for all of its Minuteman missile maintenance training. There was a lot of other stuff that I'm forgetting, but if you get a chance, go visit, it's absolutely worth your time.