This only pertains to live players who mic their guitar amps through a PA where the sound engineer DEMANDS a moderate to low volume coming from your guitar speaker cab and you are getting the majority of your live volume through the monitors and the main PA speakers.
I have several cabs. 1 x 12, 2 x 12 and 4 x 12. Open back, semi open and closed. The speakers I run in ALL of my cabs are Celestion T75's.
I play in a live loud 80's metal band and a live and loud 80's rock band.
What I have found that when mic'ing any of my cabs with a standard Shure SM57 (I only use 1 mic) the 1 x 12 semi open almost always sounds the best through the monitors and the mains.
I have a constant struggle with my bandmates who always want me to bring the 1/2 stack.
The only noticeable difference I hear onstage is I can hear the 4 x 12 cab onstage and I can barely hear the 1 x 12.
What I notice is if the cab ISN'T mic'd obviously the 4 x 12 sounds best followed by the 2 x 12 followed by the 1 x 12.
The 1 x 12 sounds a little boxy but when you mic it, it sounds better than the 2 x 12 or the 4 x 12.
I went to see a national touring Van Halen tribute band about 8 months ago. They looked like Van Halen, they sounded exactly like Van Halen. Anyway.... my buddy knows the guitar player who is also in Rock of Ages on Broadway. He introduced me to him and we talked about gear of course. He was running a 1/2 stack 5150 for years until he decided to downsize for the ease of touring. He was using a 5150-III LBX lunchbox amp. Its a 15 watt amp head. He was running it through a Friedman 1 x 12 cab. He had some basic EVH pedals out front and in the loop and that was it. Obviously the cab was mic'd up with a standard SM57. He had one of the best live guitar tones I have heard.
Even the bass player had a tiny Mark Bass rig that was very small.
What he said is using a 1 x 12 cab with a 15 watt head allows him to turn the amp up and get almost full tube saturation. It also drives the single speaker really hard and when mic'd up it sounds the best.
What do you live players think?
I have several cabs. 1 x 12, 2 x 12 and 4 x 12. Open back, semi open and closed. The speakers I run in ALL of my cabs are Celestion T75's.
I play in a live loud 80's metal band and a live and loud 80's rock band.
What I have found that when mic'ing any of my cabs with a standard Shure SM57 (I only use 1 mic) the 1 x 12 semi open almost always sounds the best through the monitors and the mains.
I have a constant struggle with my bandmates who always want me to bring the 1/2 stack.
The only noticeable difference I hear onstage is I can hear the 4 x 12 cab onstage and I can barely hear the 1 x 12.
What I notice is if the cab ISN'T mic'd obviously the 4 x 12 sounds best followed by the 2 x 12 followed by the 1 x 12.
The 1 x 12 sounds a little boxy but when you mic it, it sounds better than the 2 x 12 or the 4 x 12.
I went to see a national touring Van Halen tribute band about 8 months ago. They looked like Van Halen, they sounded exactly like Van Halen. Anyway.... my buddy knows the guitar player who is also in Rock of Ages on Broadway. He introduced me to him and we talked about gear of course. He was running a 1/2 stack 5150 for years until he decided to downsize for the ease of touring. He was using a 5150-III LBX lunchbox amp. Its a 15 watt amp head. He was running it through a Friedman 1 x 12 cab. He had some basic EVH pedals out front and in the loop and that was it. Obviously the cab was mic'd up with a standard SM57. He had one of the best live guitar tones I have heard.
Even the bass player had a tiny Mark Bass rig that was very small.
What he said is using a 1 x 12 cab with a 15 watt head allows him to turn the amp up and get almost full tube saturation. It also drives the single speaker really hard and when mic'd up it sounds the best.
What do you live players think?
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