I've noticed that removing some freq's around 500hz seems to help remove some of the unnatural punchiness of acoustic guitar pickups - but i was hoping some of you have more experience in Eq'ing them to get them sounding more natural. I know that every guitar is going to be different - but there sohuld be some sweet spots for Eq'ing some of you have encountered by removing or boosting frequencies.
Any ideas? As always - thanks for reading.
-Scott
Comments
Thanks falkon - I used two condensers with the recording but the
Thanks falkon - I used two condensers with the recording but they picked up too much of the vocals and it washes out the vocals when i include them in the mix. I was thinking about EQing the condensors to have them output only the pick and strumming sounds - and using the actual pickup track to fill in the rest. any experience in EQing to bring out only the pick or strumming sounds? i'm guessing they'd be pretty high freqs.
Scott
Originally posted by Scott Fouts: ...- I used two condensers w
Originally posted by Scott Fouts:
...- I used two condensers with the recording but they picked up too much of the vocals ...
Scott
Scott,
One method that I have yet to try but have read about is to record the guitar and vocal with figure 8 mics, putting the nulls in the appropriate places.
Bill
The main beef I have with piezo recording rather than condensers
The main beef I have with piezo recording rather than condensers is the fact that the pick sound and the string sounds aren't very well defined from each other.
Via a condenser, you can really hear the picking and the actual guitar sound as two distinct entities - the picking as a high-frequencied tick that can help fill out the treble ranges.
Never found any EQ settings that helped produce that effect from a piezo.