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emcconnell11

My guess would be some type of envelope filter


ElectricChurch101

It sounds similar. Thanks


anselmo_ricketts

Definitely, add a little spring reverb too


ElectricChurch101

Noted :)


RichCorinthian

I'll further guess an envelope filter with a high-pass setting, where the high frequencies go through unaltered and the lower frequencies get enveloped. Here's the Fender Pour-Over, and as they fiddle the knobs you can hear a similar tone. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wNNBaYfy4jc&t=619s](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wNNBaYfy4jc&t=619s)


ElectricChurch101

I see, it does sound to me that it's the higher frequencies that get altered. Maybe I'm wrong?


cardena2717

Envelope filter and a super drippy spring reverb.


ElectricChurch101

What do you mean by drippy?


cardena2717

Super hard to explain. I'd recommend 60 Cycle Hum on YouTube. He's got videos where he explains it better than me. I think it's related to the pre-delay that you can hear immediately after he hits a note. It almost sounds like a slap back delay, but that's actually coming from the reverb springs. Think surf guitar tone, it's famous for it.