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Encyclopedia > Wah pedal

Wah-wah is an imitative word for the sound of bending or altering musical notes to improve expressiveness, sounding much like a human voice saying the syllable wah for each note.

Contents

Wah-wah in trumpet and trombone playing

Although perhaps best known from the electric guitar's wah-wah pedal, the sound is much older, having been significantly developed by trumpet and trombone players using mutes in the early days of jazz.


Joe "King" Oliver recorded "Wawawa" in the 20s. Bubber Miley, Cootie Williams, trumpeters, and Tricky Sam Nanton, trombonist, of the Duke Ellington Orchestra pioneered in using plunger mutes ("plumber's helper") to create wah-wah sounds. The effect was used in the 30s on "Sugar Blues" by commercial Dixieland trumpter Clyde McCoy, who built a long career around the sound. "The Fat Man", the first hit by Fats Domino features vocal wah-wah. Another New Orleans singer, Chuck Carbo frequently performs vocal wah-wah.


Wah-wah in guitar playing

The electronic version, which sweeps the peak response of a filter up and down in frequency to create the sound, was first heard in 1945 on a pedal steel guitar created by Leo Fender and in the early 60s on Vox amplifiers (under the name Wah-Wah) and Thomas electronic organs (as the Crybaby). None of these innovators patented the effect. The variation in the peak response frequency of the filter resembles the change in formant frequency in the human vocal tract when saying the word "wah", making the wah-wah pedal a crude form of speech synthesizer.


Jimi Hendrix did much to popularize the wah-wah in the late 60s using his own modified effects pedal, as heard on his "Machine Gun" and the Electric Ladyland album (the track "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)" in particular). There is still a commercial wah-wah pedal named after him.


Eric Clapton first played wah-wah with Cream on "Tales of Brave Ulysses" on the Disraeli Gears album and used it for both background riffs and an extended solo on "White Room". (Clapton sometimes used a wah-wah named for Clyde McCoy, of all people).


George Harrison recorded his own song "Wah-Wah" on his solo album, All Things Must Pass, on which Clapton also appeared.


Frank Zappa was another master in using wah-wah, notably in his solos on Roxy & Elsewhere and studio albums such as Overnite Sensation.


Melvin "Wah-Wah Watson" Ragin played wah-wah on some notable singles by The Temptations in the early 70s, as well as with Martha Reeves and the Pointer Sisters. Hendrix proclaimed blues guitarist Earl Hooker the "master of the wah-wah".


Other notable guitarists using wah-wah include Steve Hillage, Larry Coryell, Anson Funderburgh, and Carlos Santana. A great many guitarists use it from time to time.


Wah-wah in electronic music

In electronic music, wah-wah effects are easy to produce by applying a modulation envelope to the voltage-controlled filter in an analog synthesizer. Digital synthesizers can also simulate this effect.


Wah-wah effects can also be achieved by using a vocoder to modulate an instrument sound, and speaking "wah-wah" into the modulation control input of the vocoder. The vocoder then impresses the formants of the spoken sound into the musical sound.


See also: vibrato, fuzz


Quotation

Wah-wah
You made me such a big star
Being there at the right time
Cheaper than a dime
Wah-wah, you've given me your wah-wah, wah-wah
--George Harrison, "Wah-Wah"

External links

  • Discussion, with sound samples, of guitar wah-wah technique (http://www.betterguitar.com/Equipment/Effects/WahTechniques/WahTechniques.html)
  • Wah Wah World (http://members.chello.nl/~t.heertjes/Wah%20wah.html)
  • The Technology of Wah Pedals (http://www.geofex.com/Article_Folders/wahpedl/wahped.htm)
  • Human Voices and the Wah Pedal (http://www.geofex.com/Article_Folders/wahpedl/voicewah.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Wah Wah Pedal article (5024 words)
Wah pedals are enjoying a new resurgence, so I decided to write an article on them.
I want to mention that the tone of your individual wah may be adjusted to your personal taste by simply pulling back the rubber retaining loop which applies pressure to the shaft and rotating the pot to change where the shaft engages the pot.
The final pedal I wish to discuss is the CryBaby with the reddish brown circular inductor.
Budda Bud-Wah Pedal, a Great Wah-Wah Pedal (226 words)
For example, take the loading and muddiness of the signal when the wah has been by-passed, the narrow frequency range and the use of sub standard parts for assembly.
Analyzing the original "Fasel" inductor was the first measure taken to obtain the tonal sweep that made the original Vox wah the tool that it was.
The next step was to conquer the tonal loss and muddiness that occurs when you by-passed the wah.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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