5
58Mike
Guest
I would like to be able to record a guitar and make my pickup selections during the mix phase, *after* the guitar has been recorded. In other words, I would record the guitar with separate sends from all four coils (two coils from each pickup) running out of the guitar to four channels of ProTools. So then during the mix, I'd have the option or whether I'd want the neck or bridge pickup, or even if I'd want single coil or humbucker for each.
My thinking is that I'd put in two humbuckers. I assume there are two leads plus a ground for each. I'd join the two grounds and connect those to the shield of a four-conductor cable (two conductors for each pickup) that I'd route out of my guitar and into my mixer. I'd record four channels for guitar, one for each coil. Then I'd have the option afterwards where I could combine coils for a humbucker sound, or run one or two single coils or flip phase or whatever.
I know this sounds crazy that anyone would want this possibility and I'm sure the idea of not getting your tone set during the recording process is sacrilege, but I record music for TV that has to be done really fast. (Sadly, "fast" is more important than "good.") With software like Guitar Rig, where I no longer have to commit to amp settings until the mix, it would also speed things up a bit to not have to commit to a Strat or Les Paul either. Just one guitar, play the part and move on. The "tone" all comes later.
Does this sound like a workable idea? Would combining coils after the fact still sound like a humbucker? Or is there some magic that has to happen within the pickup itself?
My thinking is that I'd put in two humbuckers. I assume there are two leads plus a ground for each. I'd join the two grounds and connect those to the shield of a four-conductor cable (two conductors for each pickup) that I'd route out of my guitar and into my mixer. I'd record four channels for guitar, one for each coil. Then I'd have the option afterwards where I could combine coils for a humbucker sound, or run one or two single coils or flip phase or whatever.
I know this sounds crazy that anyone would want this possibility and I'm sure the idea of not getting your tone set during the recording process is sacrilege, but I record music for TV that has to be done really fast. (Sadly, "fast" is more important than "good.") With software like Guitar Rig, where I no longer have to commit to amp settings until the mix, it would also speed things up a bit to not have to commit to a Strat or Les Paul either. Just one guitar, play the part and move on. The "tone" all comes later.
Does this sound like a workable idea? Would combining coils after the fact still sound like a humbucker? Or is there some magic that has to happen within the pickup itself?