you might have seen my thread in the non JC section regarding the the haunted gig and gear report. well, for those who haven't, when i saw the haunted (for those who don't know them...swedish thrash metal with a nice modern edge) they used 5150 II head with the gain on 6 using the lead channel. well, i don't know exactly how much 6 is on a 5150 II, but on my 5150 I 6 is WAY too much. on the same day, there played another band that used a 5150 I with the gain around 3. both bands sounded great, actually the haunted had a better sound, but i bet that was because of the soundguy
anyways, this kinda got me thinking. i've never been a real gain freak when it comes to live metal rhythm playing. it's kinda difficult to know how things are sounding down there in the audience, but in the rehearsal space i quite often came up with a seemingly killer sound, and once the band came in i often lowered the gain and bass while turning up some mids. the very same sound that i dialed in with the whole band playing tends to sound like pure crap when solo'ed.
well, to finally come to core of my post....what do you guys think, how much is too much? of course, this depends on a lot of things (pick attack, string size, pickups, amp, etc), but in general, where do you think is the line between articulation, and a thin sound?
it's quite interesting to see e.g. some death metal bands like cannibal corpse playing a triple recto with the gain cranked AND boosted with an mt-2, using emg pickups. on the paper this seems like it cannot sound anywhere decent. the opposite is the case: last time i saw them, this exact same setup sounded STELLAR, with amazing clarity.
same goes for the haunted last night. even with this (imho) rather high gain setting all the complex chords and open string stuff stood out clearly.
so, bottom line is, is clarity really (mainly) a matter of gain?
now, this is for live. when it comes to recording, i totally see the point. double tracking a lower gain track sounds much better than using one (or also two) higher gain tracks. but live you cannot double track anything, so where does all the thickness come from?
i think the most challengeing (sp?) aspect really is that you don't know how things are sounding down there in front of the stage....well, i think it is.
just some stuf i've been thinking about....
anyways, this kinda got me thinking. i've never been a real gain freak when it comes to live metal rhythm playing. it's kinda difficult to know how things are sounding down there in the audience, but in the rehearsal space i quite often came up with a seemingly killer sound, and once the band came in i often lowered the gain and bass while turning up some mids. the very same sound that i dialed in with the whole band playing tends to sound like pure crap when solo'ed.
well, to finally come to core of my post....what do you guys think, how much is too much? of course, this depends on a lot of things (pick attack, string size, pickups, amp, etc), but in general, where do you think is the line between articulation, and a thin sound?
it's quite interesting to see e.g. some death metal bands like cannibal corpse playing a triple recto with the gain cranked AND boosted with an mt-2, using emg pickups. on the paper this seems like it cannot sound anywhere decent. the opposite is the case: last time i saw them, this exact same setup sounded STELLAR, with amazing clarity.
same goes for the haunted last night. even with this (imho) rather high gain setting all the complex chords and open string stuff stood out clearly.
so, bottom line is, is clarity really (mainly) a matter of gain?
now, this is for live. when it comes to recording, i totally see the point. double tracking a lower gain track sounds much better than using one (or also two) higher gain tracks. but live you cannot double track anything, so where does all the thickness come from?
i think the most challengeing (sp?) aspect really is that you don't know how things are sounding down there in front of the stage....well, i think it is.
just some stuf i've been thinking about....
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