GuitarStv
Sock Market Trader
No neighbors, no problems.
Sharp knives, duct tape, and several rolls of dark plastic should fix the issue. And reduce food costs for a few months.
No neighbors, no problems.
Where have you been?
If I’m reading the OP correct, are you saying that you are happy with what you are hearing from the amp at both soft and loud volumes, but the recorded playback from the loud isn’t good?
sounds like a different mic placement could solve the problem. And I apologize if I’m talking down like you haven’t tried that already.
You know that this is all related to how humans perceive sound. Are you certain that 15' in front of the cabinet at high volume, that it doesn't sound significantly different from 3' at a low volume? Especially taking room size and environment into consideration.Not quite that. I can use the same mic setup at high volumes and get great sounds - but it requires very different EQing for both channels of my amp.
I do most of my writing and practice at home in my basement at low volumes - and am regularly playing around with the amp settings to find different tones. But the tone at low volume doesn't translate into the same tone at higher volume. I'd love a way to be able to keep the sound consistent so that the low volume while practice tones could be replicated exactly at higher volume while playing out without needing to spend the five or ten minutes figuring out where to set the dials to approximate it.
You know that this is all related to how humans perceive sound. Are you certain that 15' in front of the cabinet at high volume, that it doesn't sound significantly different from 3' at a low volume? Especially taking room size and environment into consideration.
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Ok, I just wanted to make sure. But one more question, if you don't mind: when you record at different volumes, do you back off the mic several feet when you record loud?No, like I mentioned in the first post this doesn't have to do with the Fletcher-Munson curve. If I record the same way with the same settings at high and low volumes and then play them back with volume equalized they sound very different. The amp sounds different at high volume.
Ok, I just wanted to make sure. But one more question, if you don't mind: when you record at different volumes, do you back off the mic several feet when you record loud?
The most consistent sound really comes from a modeler. That is really the only 'amp' that can sound and feel the same either at arena levels or over headphones.
Light natural compression (not from a compressor pedal) is the key here.
Think about it.
I don't have any experience using modelers live. They sound the same at low and at high volumes? Is this when running them through a cab, or a DI thing?
If it is, it's compressing the high frequencies more than the low ones. Basically that's what I hear when I turn it up . . . the higher frequencies get brighter. I've got to drop highs and presence to get back to a similar setting to what I originally had.
What amp is this?
And compression evens out the sound/levels, it doesn't make say, the treble brighter.
It's a Traynor YCV40 - Has a Fender style tone stack on the clean channel and a Marshall style tone stack on the gain channel . . . but both get noticeably brighter as it's turned up.
I wonder if dialing in sounds with the bright switch on at low volume, then turning it off at high volume would keep things more consistent - usually I leave it off.
Is there a bright cap on the volume, and if so, do you know what value?