If I described something as the “Cory Wong sound,” guitarists would know exactly what I’m talking about, which is just an amazing accomplishment. ![]() But that would all change after a chance meeting with the members of Vulfpeck at a Minneapolis jam session. As he made a name for himself, he started booking tours as a sideman. Word started to spread and he took his self-taught recording, mixing, and producing skills to Nashville. ![]() Eventually that grew into helping local artists produce their recordings. To get by, Cory taught guitar, and played in function bands and occasionally on other people’s albums. “The gig lasted for seven years and I didn’t make any money doing it, but my friends and I just wanted an outlet to explore and learn each other’s original music,” remembers Cory. ![]() All the guitar sounds are via his signature plugin from Neural DSP. On his new album, The Lucky One, Cory flexed his production muscles by using unorthodox recording techniques that are more in line with modern pop than old-school funk.
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