UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45
Fishman Ellipse Matrix or LR Baggs Anthem?
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Hi All
Probably a question discussed many times...
I'm looking to install a blended mic system in my latest dreadnought build to try to at least capture the essence of the acoustic tone through an amp
My previous three acoustic builds have used the Shadow Doubleplay - which is fine if you want just an amplified sound...but it's more electric than acoustic.
My present contenders are both mic blend systems, the Fishman Ellipse Matrix and the LR Baggs Anthem. With the mic type and fixing position being so different, any views to which gives the most 'natural' sound?
Also, there seems to be a trend towards dropping the piezo bit altogether and blending with transducers, etc.. Again, any views, folks?
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Will be be very interested to see what you go with and how you feel about it when installed as I’ve toyed with the same dilemma for my Eastman.
I fitted a K&K Pure Mini (transducer style) to my BSG A-Pro, and that is very good if you want a simple fixed, battery free solution.
I have an LR Baggs Anthem on My K.Yairi Parlour - and I do not find the acoustic tone as natural as either of the above
If you specifically want a mic blend, I’d go with the K&K one because at least with that system, the thing that’s getting blended with the mic also sounds good (I.e. bridgeplate transducers, not nasty sounding under saddle piezos).
Never thought about it before, but presumably in the same way that it can be incorporated with a mic through, say, the Trinity preamp system, do you reckon it could be used instead of the undersaddle piezo in the L R Baggs Anthem system?
Clearly I would need to make sure they are not both fighting for the same real-estate on the bridge-plate...but I suppose that is the advantage of building your own I could even build in the L R Baggs piezo in anyway and fit a mini jack to the Pure Mini so I can plug in either and compare the piezo with the Pure Mini then use whichever sounds best.
Probably a certain kind of madness but I'm thinking maybe no harm in trying? What do you reckon?
The other (pricey) option, might be to actually go for the K&K Trinity system - that is, the Pure Mini mixable with a K&K matched mic. But once I'm at that kind of price level, would and alternative of a side mounted 3 ch EQ preamp system from Fishman or L R Baggs (also generally pricey) be able to tame the overall sound? Dunno
I'm probably barking up the wrong tree, but it's just that - on all the acoustics, hybrids and electrics with piezo bridges I've owned - it has always been the piezo that has been limited and yet unduly influenced the overall sound. Might just be me, of course...
Personally I’d just go with the Pure Mini and not worry about a blended system. It’ll sound 90% as good for much less expense and gubbins inside the guitar...
A sort of similar wireless (but significantly more expensive) alternative to the Stage Pro is the CloudVocal iSolo. I know someone who has got one of these recently and has been raving (positively) about it
Plugging into a preamp helps improve the sound of the K&K from decent to very decent (IMHO). Nothing seems to sound like a guitar in the room except for a guitar in the room, properly mic'd. A non-starter for the gigs I do! I've recently bought a TC Helicon Play Acoustic pedal (for voice effects and guitar effects) and that's looking quite promising. It has a BodyRez feature that augments the sound of the pickup, which is quite pleasing to use.
Finding the very tempting K&K Trinity Onboard system pretty unobtainable and/or very, very expensive, and then going through dozens of reviews and YouTube clips, of the offerings of L R Baggs and Fishman and a number of others, and then adding to those the learned responses from you fine folk above, I'm going to go 'off-piste'
The guitar is destined for a pro-player, but one who is also not afraid to experiment. He does a lot of studio work and live work - which, in any event, probably will each need a different solution.
So what I've been looking for is a decent internal mic system AND the widely loved K&K Pure Mini - both going through a blendable onboard pre-amp (and hence the Trinity idea had it been a bit more in reach)
So I've then looked at mixing up systems and suppliers. But - either for conceptual or electronics reasons - there may be issues. For example, the Pure Mini may not like going through someone else's pre-amp as a pseudo piezo. So I may need an actual piezo option anyway. Additionally the studio vs live differences might call for the option of both of these different approaches.
So my off-piste gamble is:
The L R Baggs Anthem mic/piezo system and a K&K Pure Mini transducer-pickup
I'll try to get some info from the makers on the relative outputs and impedances of the Pure mini and the Anthem piezo but I plan to either make these two switchable, or - if physics allows - even blendable.
The holy grail stuff probably won't work, but I can always revert to either Pure Mini + Anthem mic, or just the stock Anthem piezo/mic system and all the experiment will have cost me is the cost of the Pure Mini.
By the way, the build diary is here, if anyone is interested in such stuff.
I will feed back to you all the sonic results, - be they good or be they bad
https://www.jp-guitars.co.uk/sales/pickups_and_amplification/kandk/pickup_and_mic_systems/trinity_pro_mini.htm
https://images.app.goo.gl/sjfhdEiNmTU4eS36A
Because the back is still off, I have the luxury of being able to position everything pretty accurately.
I've abandoned the idea of a blend between the piezo and Pure Mini - I'll probably just put a 'one or the other' switch in.
The bit most likely for me to have got wrong conceptually, is that I am making an assumption that the Pure Mini transducers will be closer electronically to the Anthem piezo element rather than the Anthem mic. And I may be completely wrong about that.
The Anthem has arrived, by the way. It looks a neat package...
I have a K+K trinity, but you can only raise the mic level up a bit
The simpler option (and probably most likely to give acceptable results) is, of course, to go for simply fitting both systems and having two jacks which would leave the option open running one or other or (for, say, studio work) for running a double cable out into two interface or amp channels, following @ToneControl 's comment above.
It's ages before I have to commit - and I can use either system in other projects if I conclude the whole thing is just a really bad idea.