So I have some gigs lined up, enough so that I started investing on gear. I got an AT pro 70, cables, and a behringer ADI21 (poor man's LR Baggs Para DI... It's impossible to find one here, so I got the cheap alternative). My question is, do I need a more capable equalizer? How about a compressor? I was thinking of getting one so my arps and runs would sound "equal" (is that the right term?) since my technique isn't all that yet. I use gypsy picking, but when semi-fast runs are involved, I don't have the power and technique to strike them all equally loud yet.
I ask because the last gig we had, I used the AT pro 70 direct to the board, and a lot of people commented how I wasn't heard enough, how my lead lines were too faint, etc. My other guitarist plugged in to an amp (his guitar has transducers in it) so he sounded much louder. I tried to pick harder, but that led to lots of mistakes.
More questions - using a condenser mic, how do I improve its sound further? Or should I invest on a nice acoustic amp instead?
Are my concerns legitimate? Or will it be considered cheating to use additional pedals?
Thanks all!
Comments
I do have both a mic and a pickup and use one or the other depending on the room and my mood. We can't all play the stages Gonzalo plays after all.
Thanks for heads up on ToneDexter @rgrice
Clever solution. Probably will be pricey. But you can ask around the forum and borrow all the mics and pickups and learn them into this guy and that will surely beat the price of all that gear. If it sounds good...will see when it's out.
Hi @buco, yeah I know Gonzalo used one for years, which was why I got one about the compressor, yeah, I changed my mind about it earlier while we were jamming, because I love to strike open strings with authority. Wouldn't sound the same with a compressor I'll be trying out a different mic position this Tuesday, will make a diy velcro holder to position it between the tailpiece and bridge (saw an old post on it here). Volume is always a problem, so I'm looking to get a pickup soon for larger venues. As it is, im still just playing in small venues so no urgent need yet. Still have time to research.
How do you guys control feedback with a mic?
I tried the AT in various locations and even used a small gooseneck attached to strings, but honestly liked it better clipped at soundhole. A friend has a lunchbox and they are pretty loud, but I don't think they're 200 watts loud.
I'm putting hope in Tone Dexter!
If I cant use that I use an EDB which can properly deal with a microphone
It's not a best sounding amp but I am able to get the good sound with both microphone and magnetic pickup out of it.
200W is too optimistic especially considering it's 6 1/2" speaker, I'm not sure how they get to that rating. I actually once researched and understood but forgot it since. It was in any case a little bit of a play with numbers.
For the price, it's hard to better it when you take in account: $ vs size/portability, tone quality and volume/loudness. Plus there are two dedicated channels, external speaker output, 1/8" mini aux input and a DI output, they packed a lot of stuff in there.
The word is if you use a larger external speaker cabinet you'll be able to get much, much more coverage with it volume wise but that defeats the portability point and then I can just take my 20W tube amp with a 12" speaker that will eat the lunchbox for lunch, breakfast and dinner. And I did a few times but 90% of the time I use a ZT because nothing beats a single trip to the venue/back to the car with all of your gear in hand.
I wrote a review here, under same user Buco:
http://www.djangobooks.com/Item/zt-amplifiers-lunchbox-acoustic
In every situation I've been in playing GJ I had plenty of head room with it. Again, that said there were a few situations I needed to use a magnetic pickup because I couldn't keep the feedback in check with a higher amp volume. But that's very few times. If you're playing a bigger venue with their own PA, you'll want to send a very low gain signal to the board and let them boost it, when you're playing with a mic.
With either lower or medium volume situations I been able to keep the feedback in check with tweaking the LR Baggs, usually a combination of cutting off the bass, changing the phase and seeing which one gives me less feedback and looking for the sweet spot with a mid control notch filter. But you have to have something with these or similar controls in order to fight the feedback, phase reverse being the most important maybe.
I'm liking the Fishman loudbox 120. 8" speaker pushes a little more air. 2 channels so you can blend a pickup and the AT. If a venue sucks acoustically, like a cafe we play once a month, you can back off the mic when it feeds back. Amp has a feedback eliminator that I haven't figured out yet.
The woes of acoustic music! Much easier when I played all electric rockabilly!
That EDB looks interesting, I was actually looking for something designed for mics. But since I needed a preamp/equalizer asap, settled for the behringer since all other options required me to order overseas. That tonedexter though looks promising.
I'll do what buco says, send a low signal to the PA then boost from there. For amps, I'll just sit way back and away from it.
So do you guys think I invest on a zt lunchbox? That's the upper limit of my budget, so anything better but more expensive would be out of the question haha. How does it react to the mic? Can it get plenty loud, or is direct to PA still preferred?