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OK, hab in einem Forum was dazu gefunden:
I read it in an interview somewhere. Live, he has a programmable signal switcher that splits into three, one signal goes to a whammy set at an octave down, one signal goes to another whammy set at an octave up, and the third signal is normal. The signal switcher is programmed to pick the right signals at the right times to make the MOTP riff sequence. And since they play to a click track, the pattern can be set to change at the right time too (in MOTP the pattern is not the same all the way through). Although this signal switcher may be the Nord Modular G2...
In the studio, they had to reverse-engineer the sound with synths (whatever that means). Ah, found it:
""Map of the Problematique," we ended up putting down the guitars first because Dom was out of town. That song was originally all done on keyboards and I really wanted to hear it on guitar, but it was impossible - there was no way to play the keyboard part on the guitar. We spent about two days back-engineering what the keyboard part was on guitar. So it is actually a guitar that is going through three different modular synths that are opening up at different times. Two of the synths are routed into different pitch shifters - one is an octave up, the other is an octave down. Then we chose what octave we wanted to hear based on which synth we wanted to open up at which time. We had like an ARP 2600, some other things and a little spring reverb that was sort of playing the high octave. It was all done with hardware and the guitar was split into three: One went into the ARP 2600, Korg MS-20 and and EMS Synthi AKS."
Quelle: http://www.muselive.com/forums.php?m=posts&q=14094
I read it in an interview somewhere. Live, he has a programmable signal switcher that splits into three, one signal goes to a whammy set at an octave down, one signal goes to another whammy set at an octave up, and the third signal is normal. The signal switcher is programmed to pick the right signals at the right times to make the MOTP riff sequence. And since they play to a click track, the pattern can be set to change at the right time too (in MOTP the pattern is not the same all the way through). Although this signal switcher may be the Nord Modular G2...
In the studio, they had to reverse-engineer the sound with synths (whatever that means). Ah, found it:
""Map of the Problematique," we ended up putting down the guitars first because Dom was out of town. That song was originally all done on keyboards and I really wanted to hear it on guitar, but it was impossible - there was no way to play the keyboard part on the guitar. We spent about two days back-engineering what the keyboard part was on guitar. So it is actually a guitar that is going through three different modular synths that are opening up at different times. Two of the synths are routed into different pitch shifters - one is an octave up, the other is an octave down. Then we chose what octave we wanted to hear based on which synth we wanted to open up at which time. We had like an ARP 2600, some other things and a little spring reverb that was sort of playing the high octave. It was all done with hardware and the guitar was split into three: One went into the ARP 2600, Korg MS-20 and and EMS Synthi AKS."
Quelle: http://www.muselive.com/forums.php?m=posts&q=14094