I’m fortunate enough to have found two bandmates—guitar and bass—and a great practice place, and a monthly gig at a coffeehouse. The fly in the ointment? We practice acoustically, but amp up for the gig and my fellow guitarist turns up too loud for solos.
He uses a Peche a la Mouche and thinks he can control volume on the fly, turning up to solo and down to accompany. I’ve suggested setting levels before we start by setting the highest solo volume and then backing off a little for rhythm. He prefers to dial it in while playing. This invariably leads to too much volume. I also think that it’s starting to become a crutch in that the pickup sound can be forgiving with some sloppy technique.
I don’t like the idea getting louder myself; that’s a classic dead end. I lead the trio and can usually control things by “bringing it down” a bit, but it’s starting to bug me. Just to keep things in perspective, I’m getting supporting feedback from the audience as well.
Among the reasoned arguments I’m going to to try to make is that I think the Peche works and sounds better full on—no distortion, but full range. I’ve also suggested he use a foot switch with the amp that could toggle between two channels set a different volumes. That would eliminate fiddling with the volume knob on the Peche entirely.
We’ve had lots of good gigs at this venue, but his volume issue is a regular thorn in my ear. As anyone playing is already probably aware, it’s hard enough juggling the other random problems playing live without having a regular irritant pop up. My next to final solution will be to suggest with play acoustically. The coffeehouse is quiet enough to support this, though there’s a house PA with the standard SM57’s and 58’s on hand.
Haven’t seen too much in the forum about bandmate issues, or I’m not looking in the right places. I’m lucky to have the players and gigs I’ve got, but I just want to get the best from what I’ve got.
I’d appreciate any feedback or comments on your experiences.
Comments
If he was previously sitting behind his amp, or had it off to the side, it could be a simple case of not realizing how loud it actually was for bandmates and/or front of house.
Has your guy got any hearing issues? If so, that the the first thing to address.
If that’s not the problem, I’d start recording my group at every gig and sharing the results with the other guys... chances are everybody wants a good blend and will cooperate to make it happen...
Edgar Degas: "Only when he no longer knows what he is doing does the painter do good things.... To draw, you must close your eyes and sing."
Georges Braque: "In art there is only one thing that counts: the bit that can’t be explained."
Mostly I see people get a gain pedal and boost the level for solos. Better solution I think is to get a simple passive volume control box with a switchable preset that really acts as attenuator. So you set the levels that you think you need for solos and then use the attenuator box to cut the signal a little quieter for rhythm. They're pretty easy to put together yourself. Here's instructions:
https://www.premierguitar.com/articles/19549-state-of-the-stomp-build-a-preset-volume-box
For your band buddy, if he is much louder in the room, besides positioning his amp so he can monitor himself better, have a friend come up to the stage and tell you something like "it sounds good guys, only so and so is a little loud". Hopefully you can be open with him and tell him that the band sound comes first. But there are ways to satisfy both requirements as long as everyone is willing to work on it.
Yeah, for a coffeehouse going acoustic into the PA is probably your best bet.
If you can’t directly communicate these concerns to a bandmate and resolve the issue immediately, just move on without them.
If other band mates and the audience are telling you the guitarist is making the band sound bad, that reflects on you as a band leader. Deal with it, positively and professionally, and move on.
It may also be a lack of experience and "maturity" in a bandmate who won't listen to reason. If a bandmate suggests that I'm too loud or I suggest that he or she is, we just turn it down. To not do so means to me that the person is a jackass.
If he's not willing to budge then it's like @dm7b5 said, be completely open with him and if he's still not willing to work with you, move on. Playing duo with bass is a great exercise.
1) The beauty of the Peche is that you can turn it down without having to get up and go to your amp. If he's so touchy when asked, proceed to my #4.
2) If you're running everything to a house mix, turn him down at the mixer.
3) Make him get a cheap in-ear monitor and blast his guitar into it.
4) Like @Buco and @dm7b5 said, get rid of him.
@Buco also had good advice by having planted audience member tell him that his guitar is too loud, but it sucks to have to be underhanded and that he won't attempt to comply when asked by you. May signal future issues ahead with the guy.
My thought is to set levels before the set starts so all that would be required is to back off the volume a little if necessary. The Peche has a control right on the pickup. Personally, I use a volume pedal for my Schertler amp.
I’m hoping the diplomatic approach will work. I’ve cultivated his skills for several years and I’d hate to star over. Not that many musicians for me to choose from otherwise.