Good pickup for acoustic...?

guitarkid

New member
Hey everyone,
I just got my first Taylor and I love it! But It doesn't have a pickup in it and I need a guitar with a pickup. Anyone know of a good piezo pickup for around $70 or under?
 
Re: Good pickup for acoustic...?

BTW, I got my Fishman Rare Earth 'bucker for $50 on ebay a while back.
 
Re: Good pickup for acoustic...?

Ok thanks for the suggestion. I really am not sure what I want though. I would like a pickup with a preamp also so I can adjust the tone and volume and every thing too, but I really don't want to cut a hole in my Taylor. I know that you get one that the preamp sits in the inside edge of the sound hole where you can just adjust the vol and tone but I'm having trouble finding them anywhere...
 
Re: Good pickup for acoustic...?

I found one, Its the Fishman Matrix Infinity, but I don't really wanna spend $139. lol
 
Re: Good pickup for acoustic...?

Anyone know of a good piezo pickup
they dont exist IMO, i always prefer the sound of mic'd up acoustics. although i wouldn't mind trying out this. its a piezo pickup but with a built in mic! never heard it or heard off anyone whos tried it though
 
Re: Good pickup for acoustic...?

Save your money and go with a Fishman. IMHO the best sounding acoustic pickup you can buy.
 
Re: Good pickup for acoustic...?

they dont exist IMO, i always prefer the sound of mic'd up acoustics. although i wouldn't mind trying out this. its a piezo pickup but with a built in mic! never heard it or heard off anyone whos tried it though

i prefer to mic too. but i do have a Pro Mag in my acoustic. i had the output jack cut off and had it wired to an end pin jack.
 
Re: Good pickup for acoustic...?

If you really want to make it sound good:

#1 It will not be cheap
#2 You want a Piezo PLUS an internal mike

If you want all of that delicious Taylor tone to come through there is no simple cheap solution. However - to get it amplified I'll go with get the best sound hole pup you can.

Honestly...I'm a little worried here. Are you going to chop this thing up?
 
Re: Good pickup for acoustic...?

As I said, I really don't want to cut a hole in the guitar (but if I have to it won't bother me that much since its just a Taylor 110) but I don't want a pickup that doesn't have a preamp. Thats why I'm really considering the Fishman Matrix Infinity since the preamp sits in the inside edge of the sound hole. And most of the soundhole pickups I find don't have any volume or tone controls, its just plug in and play.
 
Re: Good pickup for acoustic...?

I installed a Fishman Eclipse Matrix Blend in my Martin D-28 and it works very well. I have a 2002 Taylor 710 CE with the Fishman Stereo Matrix Blend, and it works well, though the Martin is a better sounding guitar. The Eclipse Blend is about $250, and the Eclipse Aura, runs about $300.

Still, I would get some kind of a small gig bag, and get yourself a Shure SM-57 and mic clip, a good guitar cable, a good MIC cable, and a direct box like the Radial Pro DI Passive Direct Box to take to gigs with you. Sometimes, you just can't beat the sound of a good microphone; and the Shure SM-57 is a good, seviceable, professional microphone. It is a good match for the Taylor. The Direct Box will come in handy on bigger stages and will make the sound of your guitar's pickup compatible with a pro mixer, giving you less noise, etc. Taylor makes a very nice gig bag that you can use to haul these items to the gig, with plenty of extra room for capos, picks, strings, string winder, side cutters, nail clippers, etc. STRONGLY Recommended.

There are a lot of good pickups on the market. K & K and L.R. Baggs also come to mind. In any case, I prefer the dual-source (mic or magnet pickup plus under saddle transducer) systems. I am very happy with my Fishman pickups.

Good luck!

Bill
 
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