GUITAR TRILLER – A New Kind of Guitar Pick – Lifetime Guarantee – Create Natural Delay, Compressor & Tremolo Like Sounds – for Guitar, Bass, Ukulele & Other String Instruments
The Guitar Triller successfully splices the DNA of Tom Morello, Eddie Van Halen and Frank Zappa into the picking hand of every Guitar Player. Guitar Triller is inspired by the art of String Striking and the quest for new sounds and techniques for creating contemporary and experimental music. Similar to a dulcimer hammer, The Guitar Triller is used bounces on the strings to produce a verity of interesting sounds that can be used for playing many styles of music. Alongside their picks, guitarists now have Guitar Triller to use in their right hand for playing their instruments.
Product Features
- Dozens of new guitar sounds and playing techniques
- For guitar, bass, mandolin, ukulele, banjo, and other string instruments
- Voted top “10 coolest guitar gear innovations” by guitar player magazine
Worth replacing pencils and wooden mallets for dulcimer sounds The build quality is high, and it is very easy to get started using the device. Along with an eBow and glass slide, I have recently been using the Guitar Triller for live ambient guitar looping. Previously, I was using pencils or wooden mallets from xylophones to achieve a bounced string effect. The Guitar Triller has replaced these as it is much simpler to execute single string bounces. It is a wonderful addition to my sonic toolbox as I perform, and I highly recommend the product to…
Heretofore unthought of sonic possibilities! I stumbled upon a video of the drone/loop artist Noveller experimenting with one of these and immediately started desiring one. I’ve just received it and played around with it for a solid hour and I’m already impressed with it, although my technique still needs some work. I was able to come up with some ideas off the cuff that I quite liked. For one, I enjoyed finding a pleasing chord progression and thwacking the Triller against the strings with both stereo tremolo and stereo digital delay…
he loved it! Takes a few minutes to get used …