BBE Sonic Stomp

Damn, I'll give you a pass because I know the mic element on a cell phone (especially 8 years ago) accentuates harsh parts of the guitar spectrum that are needed for voice intelligibility in a phone call

.... because ouch -that cellphone is making that guitars intonations jump off the page (That D chord....yikes) and bright top end very harsh.

I'm sure, if listening in the room it sounds good and what you are saying makes plenty of sense though.

Agree - hahaha. I have a had a few acoustic guys and others at shows go "Damn, that acoustic sounded awesome!"

No doubt there is some eq changes going on though! And that Ovation isn't a great sounding guitar period. It sounds like, an Ovation piezo! Hell, I might have only marginally tuned.
 
I used to have an Alpine car stereo that had a BBE processor in it. There were no controls other than "On" and "Off". For me, I thought it was incredible and I left it on all the time.

Used in this capacity where it affects the entire mix, it made a world of difference. It is supposed to correct phase issues and resolve standing wave interference in a fixed environment and it seemed to do that remarkably well. In fact, my friends always insisted that we take my car places because the stereo sounded so good.

However, I agree with Mincer that if you need anything like this to make a single instrument sound good, you would be further ahead by fixing the issues rather than covering it up with another piece of gear.

I can't imagine using a Sonic Maximizer in a guitar or bass rig but in a PA rack? Sure.
 
Agree - hahaha. I have a had a few acoustic guys and others at shows go "Damn, that acoustic sounded awesome!"

No doubt there is some eq changes going on though! And that Ovation isn't a great sounding guitar period. It sounds like, an Ovation piezo! Hell, I might have only marginally tuned.

I hate it when someone shoots a cell video of a stage performance and it's super pitchy -but the board mix recording is great and a real mic recording sounds good too

-it's the same thing -Cell mic element are designed for a 1-4khz boost for vocal intelligibility which is ALSO the frequencies that bring guitars out in you face to the front of a mix -no matter if you are tonally mitigating some with your guitar settings, pedals and amp.

Can't win!
 
Yeah. I'll maybe do a vid straight in like the Accfept one now that I remember how to do this.
 
My Aphex was used on an Adamas- an older high end Ovation. The guitar sounded amazing in a room, but those late 80s/early 90s preamps weren't the best. I used it on the low end, which sounded massive through the Aphex. But once I got newer instruments that had preamps designed to sound really great through a PA, I don't need it anymore. I don't use it with my current acoustics at all.
 
I used to have an Alpine car stereo that had a BBE processor in it. There were no controls other than "On" and "Off". For me, I thought it was incredible and I left it on all the time.

Used in this capacity where it affects the entire mix, it made a world of difference. It is supposed to correct phase issues and resolve standing wave interference in a fixed environment and it seemed to do that remarkably well. In fact, my friends always insisted that we take my car places because the stereo sounded so good.

However, I agree with Mincer that if you need anything like this to make a single instrument sound good, you would be further ahead by fixing the issues rather than covering it up with another piece of gear.

I can't imagine using a Sonic Maximizer in a guitar or bass rig but in a PA rack? Sure.

Funny, I never considered that BBE was the same as the BBE in a stereo. In that context it is defined as:

"BBE High Definition Sound compensates for phase and amplitude distortion, restoring the brilliance and clarity of the original content material. The BBE High Definition Sound process begins by applying a linear phase shift across the full frequency range of the signal, which allows the speaker system to reproduce the transients and harmonics in the correct order. The BBE process then compensates for speaker amplitude distortion by progressively boosting lower and higher frequencies, and doing so within the context of the phase correction process. This efficiently creates a fuller, richer sound without excess equalization."
 
See - and that makes sense to me the way the Aphex works. You start moving what they call the "frequency" control, which puts things in phase. And if you go too far - it's going out of phase the other way.
 
Back
Top