gordon_39422
New member
Okay, now that I have your attention, hear me out......Everyone is in search of this mysterious tone that each has playing in their head.... I shared the same quest, but have finally had a revelation.....
The bass guitar can really freakin carry the low end.... In fact, it can overpower the low end that so many people seek in there tone. The end result is that the guitar has a bright sound and the bass has the low tones.... Where are the mids? I have found the perfect tone in my house playing alone, and then taken my system to the stage with the band..... The end result was not that great. We had to tweak my amp so that my mids punched through when micing the speakers..... Yeah when I was jamming, I could hear the same tone, but when we all played together, the tone was lost in the mix..... I can assure you it was not the configuration of the soundboard, we spent hours on this dillema. The end result was that I raised the mids higher that I like them at home. I went to the front of house to hear the result with occupants in the club while I played through wireless and TAh-DAh!!!!! The band had a full range sound that was sonically even. I even like the way my guitar blended in the mix without getting lost. It was a very good mix!! When I got home around 0500hrs Sunday morning, I just set my gear in the front door since my wife was not home.... and went to bed... I finally reconnected all my gear after work today and the tone was horrible, but I could recognize that it was the same tone I had Saturday night.......
I have been using the same principle (as have all recording engineers) for years..... after i set my amp to the correct tone and make a recording, the playback sounds xxxxxxx (insert terms like weak, thin, bright, muddy, etc)..... during the mastering I tweak the eq to get the sonic results I seek, and voilla!!! The tone I want is now present! The same theory applied onstage...
The point is.... buyer beware...... the tone you get in your bedroom is not the same settings you will need to use onsatge if you want the same tones from the bedroom.
I know that this all may seem like common sense, but apparently it isnt, because I keep seeing the same threads about searching for a specific tone. The problem is when you add another medium such as a soundboard or recording system, the game changes...... So, keep this in mind as you search for THAT tone!
The bass guitar can really freakin carry the low end.... In fact, it can overpower the low end that so many people seek in there tone. The end result is that the guitar has a bright sound and the bass has the low tones.... Where are the mids? I have found the perfect tone in my house playing alone, and then taken my system to the stage with the band..... The end result was not that great. We had to tweak my amp so that my mids punched through when micing the speakers..... Yeah when I was jamming, I could hear the same tone, but when we all played together, the tone was lost in the mix..... I can assure you it was not the configuration of the soundboard, we spent hours on this dillema. The end result was that I raised the mids higher that I like them at home. I went to the front of house to hear the result with occupants in the club while I played through wireless and TAh-DAh!!!!! The band had a full range sound that was sonically even. I even like the way my guitar blended in the mix without getting lost. It was a very good mix!! When I got home around 0500hrs Sunday morning, I just set my gear in the front door since my wife was not home.... and went to bed... I finally reconnected all my gear after work today and the tone was horrible, but I could recognize that it was the same tone I had Saturday night.......
I have been using the same principle (as have all recording engineers) for years..... after i set my amp to the correct tone and make a recording, the playback sounds xxxxxxx (insert terms like weak, thin, bright, muddy, etc)..... during the mastering I tweak the eq to get the sonic results I seek, and voilla!!! The tone I want is now present! The same theory applied onstage...
The point is.... buyer beware...... the tone you get in your bedroom is not the same settings you will need to use onsatge if you want the same tones from the bedroom.
I know that this all may seem like common sense, but apparently it isnt, because I keep seeing the same threads about searching for a specific tone. The problem is when you add another medium such as a soundboard or recording system, the game changes...... So, keep this in mind as you search for THAT tone!