Rhett Shull
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Rhett Shull's Effects Pedals
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This is one of the Strymon pedals on his Strymon bridge on his pedalboard.
You can see this pedal several times through Rhett's newest pedalboard video (it's clearly held up at 7:35)
In his YouTube video titled "Should You Buy A Line 6 Helix?", Rhett Shull reviews the Line 6 Helix multi-effects pedal, discussing its features and applications in guitar setups.
Rhett Shull released a video back in 2018 showing his pedalboard and how he uses the RevivalDRIVE as an amp replacement.
In his YouTube video titled "Should You Buy The Strymon NightSky?", Rhett Shull discusses and demonstrates the Strymon NightSky reverb effects pedal.
In the YouTube video titled "This Pedalboard Does EVERYTHING | HX Stomp Rig Build," Rhett Shull demonstrates his use of the Line 6 HX Stomp Guitar Multi-Effects Floor Processor as a compact fly rig and versatile effects unit.
Rhett Shull posted to Instagram about receiving the Chase Bliss Preamp MKII and said
Now this, I’m very excited about.
you can see the canyon climber at 7:41 in this video of Rhett revamping his pedalboard
At 13:31 in this video about his favorite fuzz pedals, Rhett Shull talks about his JHS Cheese Ball saying:
Okay, so next up on the list is the Cheese Ball from JHS. Now JHS makes a lot of really great fuzzes, but I think this is probably my favorite one, which is a pretty difficult thing for me to pick. I think the 3 series fuzz is really great. I think the Legends of Fuzz series are really great. But to me, the Cheese Ball does something unique. It's a clone of a very unique fuzz called the Cheese Source from a company called Lovetone. They were an English company in the '90s, and there's not a lot of those Cheese Sources around and when you find one they're really big money but they've been used by a lot of famous players from the '90s and early 2000s. Now I think the Cheese Ball would be a pretty good option for any player out there who is thinking about getting into fuzz or maybe you want one fuzz to do everything. It needs to work with a variety of guitars, a variety of amps. It needs to be able to do saturated really smooth sustaining lead sounds and lower gain, almost over overdrive kind of sounds, I think the Cheese Ball does a really good job of that. Super versatile.
At 59:27 in this video, Rhett Shull shows his Coppersound Third Man Triplegraph.
This is a really interesting pedal. It is a digital octave up and octave down.
This is one of the Strymon pedals that he has on his Strymon bridge on his pedalboard.
Rhett designed this pedal with Mythos Pedals after the Gibson Skylark, one of his favorite amps.
Featured in this February 19, 2021 video at 12:45.
This is one of the three Strymon pedals he has on his Strymon bridge on his pedalboard.
Rhett uses this for switching all his other pedals that are not on the Strymon bridge.
At 4:44 in this video, Rhett intros his tempest that he put on a flight rig pedalboard
This video showcases Rhett's Strymon Deco
In his YouTube video "How To Stack Overdrive Pedals (You Need To Be Doing This)," Rhett Shull highlights the Paul Cochrane Timmy as one of his favorite overdrive pedals.
In this YouTube video, Rhett Shull introduces the Neural DSP Quad Cortex [:49], and at [26:20], says he will be using it in his studio to "capture/profile/share his amp's and pedal's responses"
Rhett recommends this pedal in this video.
At 13:29 in this video detailing his home studio build, Rhett Shull shows his pedal rack in his sidecar that is powered by a Strymon Zuma.
One of the main fuzz pedals Rhett's used on his touring rig. He starts demoing the Hoof Reaper in this video just before the 16-minute mark.
In this video, Rhett Shull names the Endless Summer by Recovery Effects as one of his favorite reverb pedals.
At 4:49 in this video, Rhett discusses why he names the JHS 3 Series as one of his favorite reverbs.
I'm a big fan of the 3 series pedals... the Reverb is one of the more versatile reverbs we'll look at... the real kicker is the pre-delay.
At 7:35 in this video discussing his favorite reverbs, Rhett Shull says:
Without a doubt, this is my favorite pedal that I've picked up this year... plugged it in and immediately had to have it. This is a forever, take it to the grave pedal for me. This is a stereo reverb and stereo pitch vibrato in one pedal. The reverb side here on the right is based off a 1978 Lexicon 224, which is one of the original digital studio reverbs. It's incredibly famous. You've heard it time and time again on countless records. And then we have a digital pitch vibrato with some really cool options.
At 12:14 in this video, Rhett Shull says:
But if I had to pick one Strymon reverb that my absolute favorite, it's the Flint. This pedal is incredible. They've been around for years and I really think this is one of the all-time great guitar pedals, period. I think it's earned a spot up there at the top. I love the tremolo, specifically the 61 harmonic tremolo algorithm. It's so lush. And you can slow it down and get almost into Uni-Vibe territory if you bring the speed down and the intensity up. Name another pedal that can do that. But the thing I love about this pedal is how they've set the order of the tremolo circuit, which is much like you would get in a Fender black face style amp. They've put the tremolo after the reverb, which lets you get these cool modulated reverb sounds.
In this video ("what is the VOX sound") a Delay Llama Xtreme by jam pedals can be seen in the background in 2:17.
In this video, Rhett Shull demonstrates and reviews the MKII version of the Line 6 DL4.
In this video by Rhett Shull comparing boosts and overdrives, he uses the Source Audio Zio and cites it as one of his favorite pedals. The Source Audio Zio can be seen at 6:22
In this Youtube Video by Rhett Shull, he uses the Mythos Wildwood Mjolnir to push his Signature Port City Grandville Amp into crunchy overdriven tones. The Mythos Wildwood Mjolnir is mentioned in captions and also can be seen at 8:13
This is a community-built gear list for Rhett Shull.
- Find relevant music gear like Guitars, Amplifiers, Effects Pedals, Studio Equipment, Software Plugins and VSTs, Headphones, Microphones, Cameras & Video, and other instruments and add it to Rhett Shull.
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