Does anybody know what kind of pickups Gonzalo Bergara and his rhythm guitarist uses? I see that they are connectet to amps, but would they sound as good if they were connectet straight to a PA system?
I like the idea of not having to drill holes in the guitar and to be able to use a pickup for more then one guitar.
Best regards
Comments
I've used an AT831B clip-on mic for about 18 months now. The sound quality is good, but I'm always just on the edge of having enough volume. If there is a PA in the house, then no problem. But, just the mic into my Unico amp is marginal, feedback being the controlling issue. This seems to be a common complaint, but I'm slowly getting better at using mic, guitar & amp placement, preamp and EQ to control feedback. I add in a piezo pickup as a backup when I need higher volume.
CB
Thank you for your instant reply.
I really enjoy Gonzalos playing; his version of Honeysuckle Rose is very cool.
On Gonzalos homepage http://www.gonzalobergara.com you can see from the images that the rhythm guitarist uses some kind of a piezo attached on the soundboard. Do you perhaps know what sort he uses?
Best regards
Murillo
It looks more like a small condenser microphone, such as the AT831b, stuck on with tape or something.
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
http://www.jillmartinisoiree.com
I don't recommend these pickups for bar/restaurant gigs unless you a soundman... too much feedback.... having a really good preamp like the Tonebone PreZ makes an enormous difference though, if the crowd isn't too noisy, it just might work well enough...
the schertler basik works great for bars/restaurants... decent tone, much less feedback... and works great with the tonebone prez as well ... check em out www.tonebone.com
www.denischang.com
www.dc-musicschool.com
I agree with Denis, the Schertler Basik is a great little pickup. I like to mix it with the AT831b through a D-Tar Solstice into the PA, about 2/3 pickup, 1/3 mike. The AT831b gives you a bit more depth to the sound, the Basik gives a nice bite. For small venues, you can mix the mike and pickup through most acoustic amps.
One really good setup would be to use just the mike for rhythm and then kick the pickup in for lead with a stompbox such as the Boss GE-7.
Schatten now has a two-channel preamp (built by Ultrasound) that looks pretty good, too (Preamp/DI Max):
http://schattendesign.com/preamp-di.htm
"It's a great feeling to be dealing with material which is better than yourself, that you know you can never live up to."
-- Orson Welles
I think I am going to check out the schertler basik because it will probably suit my needs best.
Best regards.