Query failed: connection to localhost:9312 failed (errno=111, msg=Connection refused). Why do acoustic guitars sound so bad live? - Acoustics Discussions on The Fretboard
UNPLANNED DOWNTIME: 12th Oct 23:45

Why do acoustic guitars sound so bad live?

What's Hot
So I've just been to see some live music. A typical acoustic covers thing but it got me thinking. I've never heard a decent acoustic guitar tone through a PA system. They sound awful. Is it compression? They always sound really weirdly percussive. What's going on?
0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
«1

Comments

  • Winny_PoohWinny_Pooh Frets: 7202
    Undersaddle piezo pickups direct sound rubbish.

    Magnetics sounds better as do soundboard or bridgeplate transducers.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 4reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • LewyLewy Frets: 3795
    edited May 2022
    There’s no need for them to sound rubbish these days from a technological perspective, especially with the new generation of IR-based preamps. It’s more that a lot of people out there plugging in don’t really know what a good acoustic sound is  -they think what they’ve dialled in is fine. 
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 2reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • artiebearartiebear Frets: 810
    Lewy said:
    There’s no need for them to sound rubbish these days from a technological perspective, especially with the new generation of IR-based preamps. It’s more that a lot of people out there plugging in don’t really know what a good acoustic sound is  -they think what they’ve dialled in is fine. 
    Even a proper under saddle / mic system can sound great. It depends upon a) the system and, very importantly b) the sound man.  
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 3reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • RolandRoland Frets: 8108
    Where to start on this? The first thing to say is that there are many different acoustic guitar sounds, from the tinkly EQd-to-death sound on many records, to the booming large bodied guitars which were built for their un-amplified volume. Then there’s the player’s technique. 

    The playing style which many people learn works well in a domestic room or recording studio. If you’re busking in the street then you’re playing for a different projection. Hitting the guitar harder for street volume will lose some of the dynamics, which is effectively compression.

    The impact of piezos, microphones, and other pickups has been mentioned. The expensive ones can sound very realistic. On the other hand I wouldn’t take my expensive acoustic to a gig, I’d use the cheaper one, and I guess quite a few players would do the same.

    Then we get to the soundman. He’s got quite a lot to deal with. EQing the sound to fit in a mix with voices and other instruments. The guitar was built to give a balanced frequency response at room volume. The Fletcher Munson effect means that the balance isn’t there at 500w, and has to be EQd back in. Selected frequencies and their harmonics may need cutting to avoid feedback. Many simple desks cut out wider frequency bands than you’d like. The soundman may well use compression to try to keep the guitar volume consistent. Maybe keeping the bite of the attack, but reducing the sustain to contain bass boom.
    Tree recycler, and guitarist with  https://www.undercoversband.com/.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 3reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • thecolourboxthecolourbox Frets: 9128
    edited May 2022
    I know what you mean, I always think the acoustic guitar has the biggest difference between sound at home and sound on stage of pretty much anything. I quite like the sound of acoustic guitars in the room but have only heard a nice live time once or twice in person ( Laura Marling springs to mind). Obviously it's different with a studio style live recording.

    I think it's something inherent with acoustic guitars which others will be able to explain better I'm sure. But I also think it's how they are played. In person in a quiet environment it's much more likely that you'll pay with bigger dynamics and more deftness of touch. In a loud room is much harder to hear yourself doing that so people tend to bash it out with more strumming on the beat and then bashing it even louder between singing lines.

    Also I findi don't like the kinds of acoustic performers that largely play in pubs and clubs or in beer garden type events. Mostly they are people who use the guitar as tuned percussion and therefore put very little musical interest into their playing, and largely don't know how to make the instrument itself sound any better. 
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • BillDLBillDL Frets: 5615

    Also I find i don't like the kinds of acoustic performers that largely play in pubs and clubs or in beer garden type events. Mostly they are people who use the guitar as tuned percussion and therefore put very little musical interest into their playing, and largely don't know how to make the instrument itself sound any better. 
    I immediately visualised a "Crossroads" type of guitar duel comprising Ed Sheeran vs John Denver.
    3reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • TheBigDipperTheBigDipper Frets: 4501
    I think Laura Marling is a very fine guitarist as well as a singer/songwriter. She always gets a good sound solo (and plays a few differently voiced guitars), but her acoustic sound with a band is just as good. 

    I'm with @thecolourboxMost singer/guitarists in pubs don't seem to understand or care. 

    Every guitar has a sweet volume spot for tone. My Brook Taw is best when struck lightly and the top sings. Play it harder to get more volume and it just sounds ordinary. My L'Arrivee can take being thumped but sounds poor when played lightly. So… 
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • TanninTannin Frets: 4394
    Acoustic guitars sound bad live because most of the people playing them are electric players thinking that they can play acoustic.

    It's a different instrument.

    Same thing with bass: just because you can play an electric guitar, you are not god and don't think you can play a bass, a cello, or an acoustic guitar without actually studying it and spending the time it takes to get a good sound.

    Acoustic guitars can and do sound fantastic live. But it takes work. And a good sound engineer who actually understands the instrument.

    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 5reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • CirrusCirrus Frets: 8281
    Tannin said:
    Acoustic guitars sound bad live because most of the people playing them are electric players thinking that they can play acoustic.

    It's a different instrument.

    Yeah, I used to get quite frustrated when my band did "acoustic slots" - what that meant in practice was that the other guys did exactly what they always do, and I had to totally re-invent myself with new parts that'd work on an acoustic.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • ICBMICBM Frets: 69426
    I think a big problem is that now, a lot of sound engineers think that the 'classic' Takamine-type electro-acoustic sound is what an acoustic guitar is *meant* to sound like, so even when presented with something which inherently sounds better, they try to EQ it so it has that same thin, hollow tone with way too much string attack, top-end and body boom.

    "Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski

    "Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson

    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 8reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • bertiebertie Frets: 12145
    ICBM said:
    I think a big problem is that now, a lot of sound engineers think that the 'classic' Takamine-type electro-acoustic sound is what an acoustic guitar is *meant* to sound like, 
    KILL THEM WITH FIRE
    just because you don't, doesn't mean you can't
     just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
    1reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 2reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • There's really no reason why an acoustic guitar should sound bad on stage, it just requires a little work.
    I spent 4 months in Lanzarote this winter, playing and singing in several hotel complexes and got many compliments on my guitar sound. I was using an L R Baggs sound hole pickup plugged directly into the house PA on every occasion. A sound engineer set things up once for each venue, I took a photo of the desk settings and replicated them each time.
    I'm old enough to remember when all we had to work with was an SM57 for the guitar and an SM58 for the vocal, things are so much easier now.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • ICBMICBM Frets: 69426

    I'm old enough to remember when all we had to work with was an SM57 for the guitar and an SM58 for the vocal, things are so much easier now.
    But not better :).

    An SM57 - or even a 58 - in front of the guitar still sounds better than almost any pickup system. The problem is needing to keep very still when playing.

    "Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski

    "Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson

    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 7reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • bertiebertie Frets: 12145
    57 and 58 are the same capsule anyway arent they ?  

    as mrs bert would say "SM58,  the landrover of mics "
    just because you don't, doesn't mean you can't
     just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • MellishMellish Frets: 945
    I remember in the early 60s. Most acoustic guitarists didn't have Gibson or Martin.

    If you had the money, you could go down to London and buy such guitars but most couldn't afford it. 

    Eko made a perfectly good acoustic IIRC. But today there's so much choice.

    Sorry, just wandering down Memory Lane :) 
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • Danny1969Danny1969 Frets: 9752
    One of the problems with acoustics is the sound you want isn't on the guitar, it's produced about 20 to 30cm away so putting any kind of transducer on the actual wood won't do the trick. It's the same issue with drums, mic them too mic and you just get a bok kind of sound. Course with drums you have a lot of good stuff in the overheads so it's not as bad. 

    If you look at some old Eagles videos they often had mics on the vocal mic stand set much lower to pick up the acoustic guitar and banjo. As they were tied to the mic for vocals this worked ok. Certainly worth trying with on quieter stages. 
    www.2020studios.co.uk 
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • ICBMICBM Frets: 69426
    bertie said:
    57 and 58 are the same capsule anyway arent they ?
    Yes, same capsule. The 58’s pop shield takes a little top-end off, but not that much.

    "Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski

    "Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson

    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • crunchmancrunchman Frets: 10961
    The latest digital trickery does make a difference.  Even something like the TC BodyRez, which you can get for £50 or £60 second hand, does improve things quite a lot.  A dedicated IR pedal is likely to be better, but is more complex.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • ICBM said:

    I'm old enough to remember when all we had to work with was an SM57 for the guitar and an SM58 for the vocal, things are so much easier now.
    But not better :).

    An SM57 - or even a 58 - in front of the guitar still sounds better than almost any pickup system. The problem is needing to keep very still when playing.
    Mmm, that's probably a matter of opinion. The most natural sound would be obtained with a good condenser mic about 18" from the guitar, but then you run into feedback issues and honestly, the audience doesn't really care about hi fidelity if the sound is fairly good and they like your music. This has always been my experience. 
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • ICBMICBM Frets: 69426
    malcolmkindness said:

    Mmm, that's probably a matter of opinion. The most natural sound would be obtained with a good condenser mic about 18" from the guitar, but then you run into feedback issues and honestly, the audience doesn't really care about hi fidelity if the sound is fairly good and they like your music. This has always been my experience. 
    Certainly a studio-quality condenser at the proper distance is even better - but my point is simply that any ordinary dynamic mic in front of the guitar is better-sounding than almost any pickup system inside it, no matter how sophisticated. The problems are not so much to do with how good the mic is, but the other stuff that goes with having a mic in a position where you can't move without the sound changing, and where it can easily pick up things you don't want (including feedback).

    I do agree that the audience doesn't really care though - although a badly EQ'd piezo pickup can actually make a good number of them wince :).

    I know both these things from practical experience ;).

    "Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski

    "Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson

    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 2reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • StuckfastStuckfast Frets: 2124
    Agree with all of this but I think there's another issue too, which is that the classic edgy percussive piezo sound is much easier for the performer to hear in the monitors. I remember being part of a PA demo once where I was playing an acoustic guitar through a Fishman Aura. When the Aura was switched on it suddenly started to sound like an acoustic guitar, but it was much more difficult for me to pick out of the monitor mix.
    1reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • TanninTannin Frets: 4394
    Acoustic guitars sound bad live in the UK because the bloody Brits haven't discovered Maton. 
    4reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • guitarjack66guitarjack66 Frets: 1397
    Tannin said:
    Acoustic guitars sound bad live in the UK because the bloody Brits haven't discovered Maton. 
    There is/was one for sale in the Classifieds section of the site, here.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • ICBMICBM Frets: 69426
    Tannin said:
    Acoustic guitars sound bad live in the UK because the bloody Brits haven't discovered Maton. 
    A friend of mine has one - can’t remember the model, but it’s one with a satin finish - it does sound very good, much better than the Takamine and piezo-only Taylor he had before, but I wouldn’t say it’s better than something like a Martin with the Fishman Aura system, and possibly not better than one of the new Taylors, although I haven’t compared them directly. It’s still got a bit of that ’electro-acoustic’ sound.

    "Take these three items, some WD-40, a vise grip, and a roll of duct tape. Any man worth his salt can fix almost any problem with this stuff alone." - Walt Kowalski

    "Just because I don't care, doesn't mean I don't understand." - Homer Simpson

    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • crunchmancrunchman Frets: 10961
    Tannin said:
    Acoustic guitars sound bad live in the UK because the bloody Brits haven't discovered Maton. 

    Guitar Village stock them.  I tried a few but wasn't very impressed with the acoustic sound on them.  I much prefer a Martin or a Furch.

    I don't know what they sound like plugged in, but if you are buying purely for the plugged in sound (because I wouldn't buy for the unplugged sound) then these days you are better off getting a Fender Acoustasonic.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • SupportactSupportact Frets: 665
    I agree with what people have said so far about the limitations of the equipment. In particular I think a 'real' sounding acoustic is hard because you're trying to replicate a sound with many variables. That said with some effort it should be possible to achieve a 'usable' sound, which is a different thing. 

    This has made me think. Is a bad acoustic sound more noticeable/offensive than a bad electric guitar sound? I think it is, although I'm not sure I can explain why. 
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • TheBigDipperTheBigDipper Frets: 4501
    I've been at the Dart Music Festival this weekend. Yesterday found me sitting in a beer garden listening to Phil Dewhurst doing his covers set extremely well with a nice natural guitar tone. Didn't get close enough to see what the pickup was in the guitar before he went on a break, but there was something in the sound hole. The preamp on the floor was a Boss AD-10 and he was running voice and guitar through an AER Compact 60. It all sounded great to me.
    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • TanninTannin Frets: 4394
    crunchman said:

    I don't know what they sound like plugged in, but if you are buying purely for the plugged in sound (because I wouldn't buy for the unplugged sound) then these days you are better off getting a Fender Acoustasonic.
    Oh no, no, no. What an appallingly horrible thing they are. I wouldn't have one if you gave it to me. Seriously, I'd just sell it. If I wasn't allowed to sell it, then I'd chuck it in the shed and let the mice nest in it. 

    Don't get me wrong - I don't hate Fender, not by any means. I like Strats, I love Teles, and my 59 Fender bass was by far the best bass guitar I've ever played in my life. But those Acoustasonic things ... just no. 

    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 3reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • nikharrisonnikharrison Frets: 92
    edited May 2022
    A lot of the time, there are massively contrasting opinions as to what an acoustic guitar ‘should’ sound like.

    I play a lot of acoustic/classical stuff, and the options are comparable with the electric world, there is also context which has a huge bearing on what you would want to hear.

    With the classical guitar, essentially I want it to sound as close as possible to its unamplified tone, and a K&K pickup and pre-amp into a Trace Acoustic TA50R or an AER Compact 60 is pretty close. It will never be perfect because that kind of sound isn’t in ‘straight lines’ by its nature, and any amplified sound invariably will be. 

    With the acoustic guitar, there is significant gulf between the sounds that many of us would want to hear. I’ve always loved Ovations in terms of both their playability and their acoustic (and amplified) tones. Some people hate them! For me, they are perfect acoustic sound for playing certain solo stuff, and for contributing to a band (with really useable on board eq to make it properly fit into a mix). For most of my solo stuff I use a Taylor 414CE just with the stock Expression 2 system and while it’s not a perfect replica of its sound when not amplified, it’s a strong representation of the instrument in an amplified sense. Again, with amplification it’s back to sound being in straight lines again rather than the authentic nature of an acoustic instrument’s natural tone. In a band setting, this tone can be a bit too much and take up too much of the frequency range so it would need reigning in somewhat with a bit of eq so context is important. 

    Stu Clark is a friend of mine and he generally uses a Taylor GS mini but because he prefers a more ‘zingy’ (I would call it ‘trebly’) tone, he uses a headway pickup system, and that really transforms the guitar into a powerful live tool. I prefer a bit of a more mellow tone, but I can understand how Stu’s tone is more suited to the way he plays. I guess it’s all back to that entire concept which underpins every internet form on any topic, the old ‘matter of opinion’:

    https://youtu.be/06rbQBOH5AA


    Teacher, musician, corporate trainer, researcher, freelance human being, cultural explorer, self-styled 'progressive thinker', and generally an enthusiastic, peaceful idealist. Run the Contemporary Guitar Performance Workshop education project and the Audio Design Workshop studio. Online guitar and piano/keyboard lessons available over Zoom/Skype. 
    0reaction image LOL 2reaction image Wow! 0reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
  • bermudianbritbermudianbrit Frets: 159
    The first time I tried a Maton, it was already plugged in and I was blown away. It really did sound beautiful through the test amp I was playing into...it wasn't an Aer either - it was a Loudbox or something fairly mid-range pricewise.
    But when the amp was turned off and I just played the guitar itself...it was quite bland and uninspiring to me. I know that people play them for their plugged in tone, but the majority of my playing is done acoustically and I need to love that first and foremost. Maybe I tried a dud and I'd be willing to revisit them but on the strength of what I heard that day I wouldn't purchase one unless I was gigging all the time and needed that.


    0reaction image LOL 0reaction image Wow! 1reaction image Wisdom · Share on Twitter
Sign In or Register to comment.