How do you EQ your amp?

blindedbysilence

New member
I've always set my amp up using my bridge pickup, but after reading a post on the Marshall forum, I think I'm gonna try setting it up using the neck pickup. I'm gonna post the original so you guys can check it out and see if anyone else finds it interesting.

BTW...the article is actually about how to use the controls on a Les Paul.
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

I play a Tele, so I EQ bright enough that my neck pickup is clear and not muddy. Then I roll off the tone control to use my bridge pickup. Mostly my EQ is mids forward, and the other two back a bit.
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

EQ Your Amp for the Neck
Most of the time you’ve probably set up your amp for a good tone from the bridge. Try this instead and see what happens.

1. Turn all your volumes and tones up to 10.
2. Select the neck pick up.
3. Adjust your amp so you get a good soloing tone for that pickup.
4. Switch to bridge. This will be too bright. Ice-pick through ear territory.
5. Tame bridge with tone control, until you’ve got a good soloing tone.

You now have your ‘boost’ sounds. Now turn the bridge vol down (about 75-80%), until you’ve got a good crunching rhythm sound. If you have modern wiring you may need to turn up the tone a little at this stage. You could now play the rhythm on the bridge, and switch to the neck for the solo.

Solo on Bridge, cleans on Neck
Turn up your bridge tone and vol. That’s your solo sound (ice pick and all). Turn your neck vol down to about 50%. If your amp is any good, that should be nearly clean. If you’ve got 1950s wiring, it won’t be muddy either. You may now play the intro to Since I’ve Been Lovin’ You on the neck pick up. Switch to bridge for the signature lick. Back to neck, or turn down bridge to 50-60%. For a more sensible bridge pick up sound, just turn the tone down a fraction to clip some of the hairs off it.

If your amp is good, it should be sensitive enough to clean up when you turn down, and also to clean up if you back off with your right hand an pick gently. Use both these effects to control your tone.

Middle positions

Leave your bridge in its rhythm setting, then switch to middle. Now turn down the neck to nearly nothing, then slowly turn it back up (to about 50%). Somewhere across this range you’ll hear three fairly distinct tones. It’ll start out sounding like the bridge on its own. Next, it will fill out (i.e. get some extra bass), and it might do this quite suddenly. This is a really useful sound for soloing, because it basically sounds like the bridge pickup, but it’s fuller and meatier without being in any way muddy. As you keep turning up the neck vol it will start to sound more like both pick ups. This can be sort of nasal, but quite good.

Once you get both pick ups to the same vol (~ 75%) you’ve got the classic middle sound. Many people find this a bit muddy, but if you EQd the amp for your neck pick up, you should be OK.

And:

Before I forget again, there's one thing about the middle setting that I forgot to mention. It’s a lot easier to use than it sounds to describe it!

If you set your neck so it’s basically clean (~ 50%), and then set the bridge to about 75%, that will give you the sounds-like-the-bridge-pickup-but-fuller tone. As I said before, that’s a good rhythm or lead sound.

From that basic position, if you want to get a boost, all you have to do is adjust ONE volume control up to 100%. Either will work. If the bridge, you get the biting sound, if the neck you get the fuller sound. When you’ve finished, simply turn that volume back to where it was.

Simple.

In other words, once you’ve worked out your pre-sets, using the Les Paul this way is as simple as playing a Telecaster.
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

I play a Tele, so I EQ bright enough that my neck pickup is clear and not muddy. Then I roll off the tone control to use my bridge pickup. Mostly my EQ is mids forward, and the other two back a bit.

This is the main point I got from reading the posting. I've always had problems with a muddy neck pickup. I'm gonna try this out tomorrow when I go to practice.
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

This is the main point I got from reading the posting. I've always had problems with a muddy neck pickup. I'm gonna try this out tomorrow when I go to practice.

Yeah, the neck has got to be clear...then you can tone down the bridge pickup, or turn it wide open if you need the laser beam for a part.
 
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Re: How do you EQ your amp?

I wonder if that would explain why I've never been able to get a good sound from a '59n. Always too much bass.
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

Salt to taste.

Generally I have one sound in mind and generally my setting rarely change even with different guitars.

Never set it based on any pickup position considering I've got about 4-9 per guitar (coil taps and whatnot).
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

Salt to taste.

Generally I have one sound in mind and generally my setting rarely change even with different guitars.

Never set it based on any pickup position considering I've got about 4-9 per guitar (coil taps and whatnot).

I try to shoot for a particular zone, depending on the room I'm in. Some need a bit more trebles, or more bass, whatever. It changes, but my basic outlook on what I need the tone to do is the same from room to room.
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

I have 3 different guitars at practice so I'm gonna set my amp up for my Gibby, with Slash APH's, then try out my Schecter, EMG 81-60, and my Strat with custom shop Alnico 2's.
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

Right now I only have a tele and I play with both then neck and bridge together 99.999999999999% of the time. If I do switch between the pickups it is a rare occasion. So both pickups on is my starting point. I then roll the volume and tone knobs down about 1/4 turn and now I have my base line. If I find I need a little extra volume or treble I have room to adjust up or down in a song.

Next I adjust my pickup heights to fine tune the tone. I lower the neck pickup quite a bit into the guitar and doing this I get more of the bridge sound coming through, but since I am still running the neck I get an added fullness, a reduction in the icepick highs, and hum-cancelling.

Now that the guitar is squared away I start messing with my effects, but first I take my amp and I turn the tone knobs up to 10 and adjust the volume to where I want it to be.

I really only run 2 sounds with the tele: compression -> clean amp and compression -> od -> clean amp. I get the compressor where I want it and then move onto the OD.

Now I move back to the amp. I adjust the tone knobs to taste. If I am going to turn them it won't be much. Usually down a notch or two the smooth out the tone.

At that point I write my settings down and leave it. I don't like to switch pickups during songs and I find I prefer less over more. One great tone and I am good. I find if I have a lot of options I spend all of my time fiddling and not playing.
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

I usually eq my amps a bit too bright for bridge solos and then tame the sound with slight boost for rhythm parts. Usually extra boost gets rid of the piercing sound. My main guitar has an upper mid range on-board boost and this way I get the extra clarity or crunch when needed.

The amp is usually equed so that there is quite little bass and lots of mids and a slightly depleted highs. This is accomplished with the combination of onboard midsboost, low bass control and precense with mids and highs almost dimed. I match pickups so that neck gives me nice fluid tone and bridge is something that will sound icepicky if I it needs to be. I love jb and old jackson pickups.
 
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Re: How do you EQ your amp?

I've always done the "one-hum-wonder" amp EQ setting, where the bridge pickup gets all the love, and the neck gets whatver it gets.

Going back to old CCR stuff, I'm listening to the tones a bit more and wondering how he's getting such a piercing tone on the bridge without a lot of gain, but the rhythms are chunky without being muddy, and also trying to figure out why LP switch washers always had "Rhythm" and "Treble" on them (and not "Bass" and "Treble").

It finally dawned on me that back then, they would set the amp's rhythm tone for the neck pickup, not the bridge, and the bridge was the "bright switch" for the solos.


But I still set everything for the "one-hum-wonder" :lol:

Luckily with rack units, I can have a great neck pickup tone AND a great bridge pickup tone and choose between them :p
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

Depends on the venue. I have a general setting I start with and adjust as needed. Then I leave it alone the rest of the night.
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

I'm not going to give away my prized tone secrets to you.

Well, here is mine :

Each pick up gets their own amp - it is that simple.
You EQ each amp for their spesific pick up.

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Re: How do you EQ your amp?

my strat an lp are calibrated and EQ to the bridge.

Amp settings always the same, i control a lot of stuff from the guitar controls.

Bass 3 1/2
Mids10
trebs 10

gain.... 8

mad?
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

I have a clean channel and a dirty channel, so I set each up to sound the best with it's appropriate pickup.
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

i want a clean bottom and enough high end on the neck pup. i use my tone and volume controls alot. im not playing metal, if i was i would look for different things and my bridge pups rhythm sound might be the most important.

i play blues/rock so i want a fat tone that doesnt need to be all that tight. nor do i need a percussive low end. on my deluxe reverb its volume 4-6, treble 5-6, bass 3-4, reverb 2.5-3.5 different guitars get slightly different settings hence the range
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

I eq you my amps with my guitars' switches in the middle position. Same thing for tuning.
 
Re: How do you EQ your amp?

I play single tone control amps most of the time so I turn the tone knob until I get the gain level I want w/o the top end taking your head off then peel it back if need be at the guitar.
 
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