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"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
Super simple and bloody marvellous.
My old acoustic that I've had for years has a Headway undersaddle, which is good. Sounds as natural as any undersaddle I've heard. That has an active preamp to go with it.
I have two guitars with Fishman Rare Earth humbuckers. These have their own sound but I don't think it sounds particularly natural. I have tried a guitar with the blender version of these (with a mic) and that sounder really good. The mic seems to add the bits the magnetic misses and it sounds a lot more natural. They do sound good but they have an slightly electric type of sound.
I have one guitar with a factory fitted Fishman Ellipse Blender. This is very good and has been my main live acoustic for a number of years but this would cost a lot to get retro-fitted.
I've had K&K pure mini fitted to my most recent acquisition and I have to say I'm very impressed with it. It has a very natural sound - I'd put it up there with the blender - it's definitely better than the Rare Earth's and the Headway. It's also passive so you don't have to faff around inside the guitar changing batteries. It's got enough oomph to go direct without a preamp.
Yep, same username as the old MR days
I find the Lyric to be pretty plug and play - the key is taking time to properly set the Lyric's presence control (once set, you just leave it forever but it does affect the sound a lot).
I've gigged with M1a's and Rare Earths and whilst they can sound good on the wound strings I find playing something like a bluegrass lick on the top strings with a flatpick just sounds horrible (to me) - harsh and brittle and nothing like an acoustic guitar. Same with slide - they just sound like a weedy electric DI'd. The Lyric sounds natural enough to make plugging-in something I happily do now rather than only doing begrudgingly as an absolute last resort (and then hating the gig because I hate my guitar sound!).
Check out this video for a very good illustration of the difference between the Lyric and Baggs' top of the range soundhole pickup (M80....said to be even more acoustic sounding than the M1a). The fist guy is using an Anthem (with WAY too much of the UST blended in imho), second guy is using the Lyric and the other two are using M80s :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWWrumsoP8k
"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
I'm actually encouraged by the snap, helps it cut through. There's a big thread on acoustic guitar forum where some folks say the lyric is not immediate enough and in a live situation you might not actually want a completely true acoustic sound as it won't cut through so I'm glad it doesn't sound lost.
But it does sound great, things have really come on since I got my last pickup installed 10 years or so ago.
Well this is a very relevant point - in many cases people aren't looking for a real acoustic guitar sound at all - they want beefed up frequencies here and there, or clearer body percussion, or they want to use .011's and still get a strong sound, or whatever above and beyond what mic'ing an acoustic guitar would give them. So the "your guitar but louder" ideal isn't what everyone wants.
Interesting about the immediacy thing...I've not encountered it even playing quick bluegrass. I figure if Ricky Skaggs uses it and it can keep up with his picking it's probably not a concern for mortals like me
(btw - if you end up looking for an M1a I've got one I'd sell, just as an aside).
Unfortunately funds for the lyric needed to be redirected towards something more mundane but as a short term measure I picked up a fishman Neo D Humbucker for £40. I've just plugged it in and it sounds okay, not very acoustic sounding but pretty balanced and a smooth electric top end. I'm going to try wiring it into my Fishman Matrix natural preamp for a basic dual source, hopefully each pickup will help mask some of the shortcomings of the other. If I can stretch to the Lyric at a later date I will and I'd be tempted to keep the magnetic side as it is a nice sound and suits some styles.
Why Fishman insist on moulding the main cable into the pickup, I don't know, a small mini jack would be much more professional.
I'm in the process of having an Anthem SL installed in my GS Mini, needless to say I will be having much more of the mic in the mix than the first guy had in that video.
My band - Crimson on Silver For sale - Blackstar HT-5S
Gear - Guitars, amps, effects and shizz. Edited for Phil_aka_Pip, who is allergic to big long lists.
My YouTube Channel
"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
My YouTube Channel
Still got a Lyric in my J45TV though. It suits that guitar really well.
My YouTube Channel
I agree the Lryic sounds better than anything else. It can be a struggle at volume if you don't have the time to EQ it probably, and you also have to keep in mind that it's a shit-in, shit-out kind of deal.
So if, for example, a lot of players (and sound guys) give a plugged in guitar an artificial bass boost. It's become the sound that is synonymous with a plugged-in acoustic. Trying to replicate that at high volume with the Lyric is likely to push it beyond what it can handle.
My YouTube Channel
Couple of clips (which also feature the Lyric in real life settings). In the second one, Jason is playing virtually the same guitar but with a K&K Trinity (I think....the one that's the pure mini plus an internal condenser mic).
My YouTube Channel
"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
I'm liking using the Fishman REB (wired in stereo) and a K&K Pure Mini at the moment.
I've also got another guitar with a K&K Trinity and Dimarzio Black Angel in - Also quite nice!
If you're after a passive sound hole pickup the Dimarzio is a good one - Adjustable pole pieces and a phase switch as well as sounding nice
What's the view on real-world feedback rejection on those? My experience of internal gooseneck mics is that claims of feedback rejection are usually overstated. The Donnell sounds awesome on the youtubes I've watched though.