www.michaelwattsguitar.com
Check out my YouTube channel for videos of luthier-built and vintage guitars!
Luthier Stories - My series of interviews with some of the world's greatest guitar makers
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I don't recall a time when I've ever been in a position to demand anything on stage!
On the couple of occasions a year when I play on a stage that has a sound engineer and a listening audience, I'll opt for a mic. Ideally my Ear Trumpet Myrtle covering both vocals and guitar, bluegrass single-mic style.
All other times, I plug in (always using the K&K pure mini and Pure XLR preamp). When I used to play Nationals with fingerpicks I used mics a lot more often because the overall loudness of the source is enough to make it practical in more settings.
I've tried clip on mics (K&K Meridian and DPA 4099G) and found that whilst they can sound great, the manufacturers' claims about feedback rejection are seriously overstated and they don't offer more in this regard than a mic on a stand. You can move around with them, obviously, but actually I think that the fixed position of the mic in relation to the instrument makes for a more two dimensional sound compared to a performer moving their instrument even slightly or unintentionally in relation to a fixed mic on a stand.
As for whether I'm happy with my plugged in sound or not - I'm happy enough with it for it to not throw me off playing-wise. The Pure Mini doesn't sound like "my guitar but louder" but it feels right. I'm not sure what's going on physically to make that happen but it seems to respond the same way my guitar does acoustically and that's good enough from me. Any other types I've tried - mag soundhole, piezo UST (*spits*) have all felt like it was harder to play.
Currently my plugged in setup is a K&K Pure Mini combined with an internal DPA 4061 which is then blended by a Felix preamp - I'm really happy with this sound. It's quite 'direct', by which I mean it sounds a bit like you've got your ear right next to the guitar, but, once it goes through a PA into a room the 'space' is added by the room if that makes sense?
Although it doesn't sound 'like my guitar but louder' it does sound and feel like an acoustic instrument and seems to work through a variety of setups.
I would imagine that your gigging situation is a bit different to a lot of us Michael - you have a name and reputation for acoustic fingerstyle and your audience is expecting a certain kind of performance and tone. I assume you rarely have to walk on stage at the beer tent stage at a folk festival and be setup and singing in less than five minutes through a Peavy PA with monitors from the 90s...
IMHO I would see the ATM 350 system your looking at as a get out of jail system for a live gig, far too inelegant and cumbersome to use as a permanent replacement for an installed system.
Nearly all the acoustic players I have worked with have installed systems on their guitars, those that haven’t have tended to play seated and I’ve put condensers round them on stands.
Yeah feedback rejection is so reliant on the context onstage that mic companies really should no better than to make claims like that. It might work on a silent stage at Carnegie Hall, but you will run into problems elsewhere!
To be honest the K+K is the backbone of any really great acoustic sound I've heard in the past decade or so. It's not the most natural sound but there's something really pleasing about the slightly spongey response (I grew up on piezos UST's so anything that works better than that is going to get my vote!) I've tried the newer DPA 4099 which is much better than the previous model, but as I play seated I'm much happier with a mic (or two) on a stand.
Check out my YouTube channel for videos of luthier-built and vintage guitars!
Luthier Stories - My series of interviews with some of the world's greatest guitar makers
Now, the Felix is a great piece of kit, I am very happy to hear you're getting on with one. I'm assuming you're also using it to feed phantom to the DPA? I can imagine that is a very pleasing combination. The K+K internal mic is good but not DPA good to my ears.
It's true, I do play in a variety of different contexts, some of which involve me dying inside when I see that the only sound reinforcement for me to use while demonstrating an instrument worth hundreds of thousands of pounds is a single dented Shure SM57. I used to take one of the old DPA 4099's around with me but they tend to fall off guitars with asymmetric bodies/Manzer Wedges like my Kostal MD and as such I now opt for the k+k mini and a pair of Gefell M300's on stage where possible.
Check out my YouTube channel for videos of luthier-built and vintage guitars!
Luthier Stories - My series of interviews with some of the world's greatest guitar makers
Check out my YouTube channel for videos of luthier-built and vintage guitars!
Luthier Stories - My series of interviews with some of the world's greatest guitar makers
Yeah the Felix is awesome - I am using it to power the DPA and then I split the two sources to individual channels before mixing them and sending a single XLR to the desk.
I've not heard the K&K internal mic to compare but I'm happy with the DPA (I managed to snag two for £170 on eBay!) - to be honest it sounds kind of awful on it's own (I guess it's not really designed to be inside a guitar), pretty boomy and a bit midrangey, but when it's combined with the K&K (and I've HPF'd out all the boom) it adds just enough 'realness' to the tone of the K&K to make a difference.
Check out my YouTube channel for videos of luthier-built and vintage guitars!
Luthier Stories - My series of interviews with some of the world's greatest guitar makers
Check out my YouTube channel for videos of luthier-built and vintage guitars!
Luthier Stories - My series of interviews with some of the world's greatest guitar makers
http://www.eartrumpetlabs.com/
They seem to be the de-facto choice these days for single-micing acoustic ensembles (Bluegrass style) and claim to be very feedback-resistant. I know a 3-piece old-time string band, and have seen a video of them using a single ETL Myrtle in a fairly noisy pub and getting good results. Looks really cool too!
Trading feedback here
Trading feedback here
Check out my YouTube channel for videos of luthier-built and vintage guitars!
Luthier Stories - My series of interviews with some of the world's greatest guitar makers
Indeed they do, and one shouldn't dismiss the presentational element from the audience point of view, or that settling down in front of one (or stepping up to it depending on your thing) does impart a certain vibe for the performer too.
Being clinical about it though, you could practically get similar performance from a Rode NT1a at a fraction of the cost - in fact two of the most ardent revivalists of single mic playing - Steve James and Del Ray - do use that cheap mic when they tour. They are masters of playing without needing foldback, though, and Steve James is also a master of telling people in the audience to STFU if they're making too much noise
Check out my YouTube channel for videos of luthier-built and vintage guitars!
Luthier Stories - My series of interviews with some of the world's greatest guitar makers
Here's a video (shot on an iPhone at the back of the venue):
Check out my YouTube channel for videos of luthier-built and vintage guitars!
Luthier Stories - My series of interviews with some of the world's greatest guitar makers