Quote:
Rural and the nearest store is about an hr away And it is a gc. So it's limited in acoustic stuff. I mostly do research here and buy online. It is a bit of a disease.. ha.... no cure. |
I agree, mic’d Up is the best way to get the tone - even if you have to work with the problem of feedback.
|
'All pickups stink'
I know what you're saying. I've spent so much time and money to get that satisfying tone but I'm still not happy with the results. Here are pickups and preamps I've tried so far, mainly after reading recommendations on forums or guitar websites: LR Baggs Lyric - not bad, like a weird sounding microphone. There is a forum member who uses the Lyric with the most natural sound I've ever heard. I wasn't that successful. LR Baggs Anthem - affected too much the unplugged sound, and it wasn't as natural as expected, it sounded to me like a good piezo pickup. LR Baggs M1 passive - didn't have high hopes but actually sounds pretty good through a right preamp (Red Eye), although it's still only a magnetic K&K Pure mini - sounds good until you start strumming and then I can't tell much difference between this and a good under saddle pickup. Fishman UST pickup with the Aura Spectrum Preamp - sounds very phasey, went through many images but couldn't find any natural-sounding one. TC BodyRez - improves a little but all I can hear is some smiley EQ with a touch of compression, which can be achieved by other means. iRig Acoustic Stage - definitely more natural than others, but prone to feedback (even with the feedback canceller) and seems to fragile in live setting. Behringer MIC200 - preamp on budget but surprisingly good, I like it the most with the bass voicing EQ on acoustic. I don't want any dual systems inside my guitar, I prefer passive pickups. One day I'll try the Tonedexter but it's not easily available in Europe. |
Quote:
I agree 100% with all of these characterizations. Glad to know our European friends are just as dissatisfied with pickups. ;-) |
"""I got them stinky picup blues ............from my head down to my shoes """"
Got my feets right on the ground............ but just can't get THAT sound" |
"That Sound".....
Problem is 'that sound' emanates from all over the guitar, front, back, side, neck - to disperse in the air around us...and it does that very nicely in my little music room...and a few grains of imagination could be added to make that pretty well perfect. (The room is full of a lifetime's musicalia.) Move to my front room and the same guitar sounds very different. If I go outside, it is different again. If I play in front of my computer screen, I get the sound reflections straight off the big screen I have. So, like most, I prefer the sound of my guitar through a decent mic - trouble is in a noisy joint where everything is louder than your guitar, the mic on the guitar through the monitors causes feedback. Bad fee-----eeee-----edback - like everybody screaming for help and to turn it off type feedback:mad: And one of my best sounding pickups is the Fishman Rare Earth Blend with the internal mic, where I get a fantastic sound at home with about 70% mic and 30% Rare earth pickup for bottom end...but put that guitar in front of a monitor.....BREEEEEEEEEEHHHHHHHHHHH:( Back where we were!). So one way of getting what I use without the monitors causing feedback is for me to.......lose the stage monitors! (FOR SOLO PERFORMERS - duo, trio, band way more tricky). Turn them off. Turn off the speakers facing you and use headphones or in ear monitors from your best sound source - amp...personal mixer...acoustic gadget processor! Send the sounds out to the front and no feedback - so you can use any mic or pickup you want....:D You just have to look like a DJ with headphones or a person with hearing aids with the In Ear Monitors! BluesKing777. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Well, you know, if Doug Young is unsure and flying blind - there is no hope for the rest of us! I mean, trouble....Doug has surely played every pickup combination on this planet! But as we speak, some geek may just have invented the acoustic guitar pickup to save or take over the world! BluesKing777. |
Quote:
-gives me a great idea! Next time I play in a noisy place where people aren't really listening, I'm going to use headphones. -Have a double shot of Jack with a Bud. -Wear dark shades. I'll sit sideways to the audience- and groove to the music. ( Keeping a close eye on the clock for break time). -FOH can hear my guitar sound with no stinking pickup ruining my tone! |
Unbelievable! I recently bought my wife a new Taylor Mini bass. Today I was trying to tune it with the built in tuner. Typical red led when you're sharp or flat- green when it's in tune. The green spot can't be found. It worked fine up until today. Checked the batteries. I tried all the natural harmonics, etc. It's FUBAR. The rest of the preamp works fine through an amp. Unfortunately, I had thrown the packing box away.
Here we go again [emoji12] |
Quote:
If you are really, really serious about amplifying your acoustic sound, better to lower your expectations and find your own center. |
Echoing Howard Emerson
Chiming in from Canada here. I'll echo what Howard said. My best acoustic tone is a passive Schatten SBT into either a Fishman amp acting as preamp/di or an outboard pre/di. I have mine in a 17 year old Seagull Artist Rosewood Spruce. Sounds like a dream. However when I'm playing noisy pubs etc I don't use it - feedback issues and other problems. I revert back to my Seagull Performer with Godan Q1T under saddle. Yes it's quacks but it cuts through and no feedback issues. The choice of pickup depends on the environment and what you need at the time. Cheers
|
I've tried a bunch, always go back to a Sunrise>buffer box.
I've play playing though a Shertler Jam 400 for the last 5 yrs and w/ the Sunrise it's the best plugged in, useable sound for me. |
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 11:59 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright ©2000 - 2022, The Acoustic Guitar Forum