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Guitar Tips

Are You Too Loud???

I was running sound a few weeks ago and came across a situation where the guitar & bass amps were not miked and the vocalist was not singing loud enough. Yes, the guitarist's amp was too loud and was drowning out the other musicians in the band. Basically, it was an impossible thing to fix at the mixing board for the most part.  I was able to tweak the vocalist's channel but I was at the point of the PA feeding back... Here is the tip...  Before you perform your show, how ever long that may be, make sure that everyone's volume is balanced. Stand out about 20 or 30 feet from the stage and let everyone play a brief piece of music. "Please, very brief".  You will get a better idea of what the audience is hearing. Remember, the sound man cannot fix or adjust any amps that are not going through the PA. If you don't help the sound man out, he or she can't make you sound awesome...  Yup, pretty much...

Solid Rock Products ~ Best Stone Guitar Picks Out There...

Hi Everyone, I wanted to let you all know of a really cool guitar pick company that I had found about a year ago and am so into their guitar picks that I am using them exclusively.  I am not endorsed by them... I am just like you and use a good product when I come across it.

The company is called "Solid Rock Products" (solidrockproducts.com)  The owner, Darrel, is the nicest person to work with.  He e-mails people directly and has great customer service.  If you're not playing with a Solid Rock Product stone guitar pick then you're totally missing out.

When you do go please tell Darrel that I sent you.

Ed~

The Myth of True Bypass Revisited

Hi Folks, Been a while since I had posted last.  I wanted to share this really cool article with you all that I found from Pro Guitarshop.com.  Andy has a great column called "Andy's Corner".  He has some great info for all us gear heads out there.  So, here it is... Enjoy!!!

~Ed~

July 30, 2013

Welcome back to Andy’s Corner. This week we’re revisiting a subject that can’t be revisited enough in our line of work—if I had a $1 for every time the topic of “true bypass” has come up with a customer over the phone or email, I’d probably be able to buy myself a custom Cornish rig. With that said, I’m a firm believer that everyone’s mileage varies and that there’s no right answer in regard to gear—the important thing is to be knowledgeable and informed and let your ears make the choice for you. So without further adieu, here’s a blast from the past—Andy’s take on the Myth of True Bypass. Enjoy! – PGS Fitz

“Is this pedal true bypass?”

That’s a question we are literally asked daily from the 500+ stompbox demos we’ve put on the interwebs.  However, we find that few people actually know why they’re compelled to ask the question in the first place. No doubt, the importance of true bypass to the common guitarist has reached mythic proportions these days. It’s always touted as an improvement over buffered pedals which are the often described like Chupacabras of tone. So in this issue, I feel it’s necessary to explore the mystique of true bypass.

It’s been said many ways but to boil it down, the warped school of thought is if you want the purist tone, every pedal needs to be true bypass. Well, there is some truth in that your signal isn’t being ‘colored’ by extra circuitry because the guitar’s signal is routed straight to the output jack of the pedal. Certain pedals like the original MXR Phase 90 and vintage wahs are known for adding a ‘special’ quality to your tone because they are neither buffered nor true bypass.

You can clearly notice some change in high end from these units which is why people mod them. I think this and cheaper made 80’s pedals are what spawned a lot of hype about true bypass being the ultimate way to go. But the myth of true bypass gets busted hard when you talk about true bypass pedals and signal integrity over the length of stage sized cables. Without getting into capacitance and low/high impedance explanations, your signal goes through changes which will affect your tone and that’s one reason buffers were placed in pedals to begin with.

The buffered solution is still in use by big names like BossTC Electronic and EHX. By using an input and output buffer (a series of components like transistors) it allows your pickups to squeeze out their full range without the common high end roll off that’s the result of extra load on your pickups, a.k.a. “tone sucking”.

Buffers can also be used alone like the MI Audio Boost N’ Buff which allows for long cables to your guitar because of its high input impedance. So why isn’t everyone sticking to the buffered method? In short, the quality of components used for the buffer may affect the bypass sound, especially with a string of pedals. Since they affect the signal whether on or off, you’re basically adding extra components between the guitar and amp.  Personally, I had a cheap buffered tuner that clearly affected the high end of my amp. I recorded a quick A/B test to make sure and ended up with a true bypass tuner in its place.

Pedalboard Guru Pete Cornish, who does not use true bypass in any of his world famous systems, would be a good example of buffers done right. You’ve seen his custom creations used by David Gilmour, Jimmy Page, Andy Summers and more. Check out his website here.

Alan Durham, maker of the Sex Drive pedal says, “We tried true bypass, and we didn’t like it.” What’s important is that he let his ears decide, rather than worrying about a true bypass craze.

In the end it didn’t stop Charlie Sexton from using it or others like Eric Johnson who stated the buffered Sex Drive was “very transparent, hi-fi sounding, didn’t color my sound at all.” Other pedal makers give you the best of both worlds, true bypass and buffered modes. The analog delays from Malekko offer a switch for a high quality buffer or true bypass. When we demoed many of the delays at PGS, I almost always used the buffered mode because it brought the guitar signal back to life and gave a contrast between the sparkling clean tone and warm repeats. Plus, in the delay world if you want trails after you switch off the pedal, buffered is the only option for now.

Is your head spinning yet? Well, I can tell you after researching for this article I felt the same way but I had to step back and remember the most important part, does it sound good to you?  Ideally, a buffered pedal in the mix is a good idea to combat cable issues but If you like the way 10 boss pedals sound in line, go for it! If you need to have every pedal separated by a switcher to get your tube amp to respond a certain way, that’s a great way too. I certainly enjoy the boutique companies that wire exclusively in true bypass but even they know the importance of a buffer.  Look at the Line Driver from Lovepedal who is known for his silent true bypass switching (very smooth, by the way).

But it’s important to lose the mantra that the best tone comes from having all true bypass pedals because you’re just limiting yourself to new sounds in the end. Modeling pedals aren’t going to be true bypass nor are most loopers. Keep in mind that the ‘tone coloring’ of vintage wired pedals might be the secret ingredient to replicating sounds like in ‘Eruption.’ It only reminds me that none of my guitar heroes were fixated on this idea of true bypass so I won’t start either. Also, few pedals these days actually suck tone like back in the day because technology has come a long, long way. With my job, I see and play new products everyday and they all seem to deliver great tone with minimal noise and suckage.

Do experiments by taking boxes in and out of your signal chain, that’s how I discovered the weak signal coming from my old tuner. Also, I found that my personal needs require at least one buffer (FoxRox Wah Retrofit) so I can enjoy my fuzz face clones in conjunction with a wah. Plus it’s always a good idea to use good quality cables no matter what, to avoid capacitance and interference. Again, trust your ears and don’t let the idea of true bypass boss you around.

Gigging Outside? Mic Those Amps...

Hi Everyone, Been a while since I have posted a guitar tip so I thought I would post one on live sound.  I have been busy with shows and am gearing up for a large fireworks show on July 11th.  (see events)

So, this tip works for the entire band and not just for guitarists. You may, or may not, already know about this but here it goes.  When performing outside make sure you mic all the amps if they are not going directly into the PA board.  This will enable the entire band to hear everything that is being played.  Why?  When sound is projected, it bounces off walls etc.  So, when you're playing in that bar or club you hear more because the sound is projected from the amps, bounces off the walls and such, then comes right back at you.  However, when performing outside there is nothing for the sound to bounce off of.  So, once it leaves the amp's speakers, it just keeps going... and going... and going....  It almost seems like you're playing in a void.  Especially if your drummer is playing on acoustic drums.  The stage volume will be much louder and the musicians on one side of the drummer will not be able to hear the musicians on the other.

At least when miking all the amps you can hear the entire band from the monitor speakers.   It would be a good idea to mic the kick drum and maybe the snare drum too but keep these levels low with a little reverb to give the sound some studio quality.  If the drummer is playing with a good snare drum then only the kick should be miked because the snare will be loud enough on its own.

I hope this quick tip helps.  May your summer be filled with LOT's of gigs...  Both indoors and out.

Catch you next time...

Nature’s Sonics – Acoustic Tonewoods (Guitar Tip Article)

What up???  Here is a cool article by Daniel Brooks that I had found about acoustic guitar tone woods a while back.  It may help when you go to purchase your next acoustic guitar.   Knowledge is power...  Enjoy! ==============================================================

Regardless of what kind of guitar you play, or what you play on it, the quality of sound you have at your fingertips depends on only a handful of factors. The type of guitar, the model, your choice of pickups, pedals, amps, strings and picks, and your technique itself, all of these have an immediate effect on the sounds available to you, the sonic ingredients from which you create your music. You can experiment with any or all of these as part of a lifelong quest for the sound that matches your inspiration, but you may find the search much more rewarding when you understand how much of your guitar’s tone is a direct result of the kind of wood from which it is made.

Electric and acoustic guitars both rely on the natural resonance of their wood for the quality of their tone, but each achieves their sound in significantly different ways. An electric guitar’s wooden body resonates with the strings’ vibrations to reflect, reinforce and conduct a signature pattern of frequencies, and the acoustic character of the wood has a significant influence on this aspect of the overall sound. But the electric guitar’s sound is malleable, the instrument itself is ultimately a platform for the strings and pickups to create an electric signal, which can be manipulated by effects and amp settings to alter the sound far beyond the subtle influence of the guitar’s tonewoods.

Tonewoods play a much more important role in an acoustic guitar’s volume and tone. The vibrating top and resonating body work together to serve as a natural amplifier for the strings, but also as a substantial part of the sound itself. The size, shape and construction of an acoustic guitar does play a significant role in both the tone and volume of the instrument. The laws of physics dictate that a greater mass achieves motion with a proportionally greater amount of energy, so, if all other factors are equal, a larger guitar with a larger top will project its resonant frequencies with greater volume than a smaller one, especially those lower frequencies that tend to contain more energy. For the same reason, smaller, lighter, more flexible tops will tend to reinforce the higher frequencies, creating a brighter tone. When it comes to acoustic guitars, size matters. But the kind of wood matters at least as much, if not more.

As a living, organic material, all woods are layered composites of plant cells with stiff, durable walls composed primarily of cellulose fiber and lignin. The structure, density, weight, strength and flexibility of these composites vary considerably from one species to another, and aren’t necessarily uniform among individuals of a species, or even among the various, functionally different parts of any individual tree. Each variation will absorb some frequencies, conduct and even reinforce others to create its own complex acoustic signature. These acoustic characteristics make a qualitative difference in the sound of any musical instrument they construct. Stiffer woods will sound brighter, more trebly, while denser woods will reinforce the lower bass frequencies for a deeper, darker sound.

As the strings vibrate, the tension put on the guitar’s wooden structures increases and decreases hundreds or thousands of times per second. As the top and body flex, however microscopically, in response to these changes in tension, they compress and decompress the air around the guitar to create their own sound waves. You can experiment with this by putting your hand on the top of a guitar while someone else plays it. As your hand absorbs the vibrations from the wood, two things will be immediately perceptible, you’ll be able to physically feel the music, and the vibrations lost to your hand will leave the remaining tone of the guitar relatively muffled. The vibrating wood is making a substantial part of the sound. If you are a musician, or a luthier, it matters what kind of wood your guitar is made of.

A high-quality, professional instrument will have a top made of solid wood. Many lower priced guitars will have a top and sides of laminated wood, a composite of two, three or more thin layers of cheaper wood glued together with a visually appealing veneer. Because of the glue and the conflicting acoustic properties of the layers, laminate wood rarely vibrates freely enough to create a good, open sound. You may find the occasional ply-top guitar with a sound worth buying, if the price is low-enough, but in the long run, it is worth the extra money to buy a solid top guitar. You will find ever-increasing satisfaction as the wood ages and the sound of the instrument continues to open up into a richer tone.

The most common tonewood is spruce. It is light, very strong for its weight and it conducts vibrations with high velocity for outstanding clarity and volume across a broad spectrum of frequencies, giving it a rich, balanced tone. It doesn’t add any overtones to the sound, so notes won’t necessarily bloom at lower volumes, but it will deliver all of the sound without getting in the way, even when strummed vigorously. Sitka Spruce, from Alaska, is most common, but Englemann, (or European Spruce) and Adirondack (or Eastern Red Spruce) are also well known. All three have a tight, regular grain, with a light cream color that tends to yellow slightly as it ages. Adirondack tends to be a little heavier and stiffer, and therefore slightly louder and brighter, than Sitka, which in turn is a little more so than Englemann, but each makes a fine top to any acoustic guitar intended for all-around use. Spruce continues to mature as it ages, developing its own extraordinarily harmonic tone as the decades unfold.

Cedar has long been the traditional tonewood for classical guitar tops, but it is growing in popularity for steel strung guitars, especially among fingerstyle players. Much less dense and stiff than spruce, Cedar responds nicely to less vigorous playing styles with rich overtones that lend considerable character to the fundamental notes for a warm, complex tone. With a very fine grain, a rich color that ranges from a honey brown to a red cinnamon, and a pleasant scent, Cedar has a deeply satisfying beauty to match its sound. It tends to get muddy if pushed too hard by intense strumming, so it isn’t as versatile, but it is strongly preferred by some guitarists who love its tonal quality. It matures very quickly as it ages, delivering the complex tones of an older, vintage guitar much more quickly than spruce.

Mahogany is usually used more for backs and sides, but you can find old guitars with mahogany tops nearly a hundred years old. It’s a stiff, dense, hard wood with a punchy attack and a rich, dark woody sound that lends itself well to folk, delta blues and roots music. It is also magnificently beautiful, with dark red-brown color and a short, complex and very dark grain pattern. It ages slowly, takes much longer to for its tone to bloom into maturity, but it continues to gain tonal depth with ever-increasing overtones, as anyone who has ever played an old mahogany-topped guitar will emphatically tell you. It is also ideal for back and sides where it lends substantial depth and volume.

Except for the occasional custom build, Rosewood is the most common wood used exclusively for backs and sides (and fretboards, of course). Like mahogany, it is a stiff, dense, hard wood with a high sound velocity, warm, rich overtones and powerful highs and lows that just make your guitar sound bigger. Among the most beautiful of the woods, rosewood has a rich, deep red or deep brown color with a dark dramatic grain. By far, the most common variety is East Indian Rosewood. Brazilian Rosewood has become nearly impossible to obtain, due to its rarity and the legal and financial difficulties of its trade, and has been elevated to near mythic status for its “legendary” quality of tone.

Maple is a light colored, very tight grained visual treat that is often chosen as much for its spectacular beauty as it is for its sound. It is a very heavy, dense wood with impressive sustain and virtually no overtones that lends a very bright, snappy, almost percussive sound to a guitar. Some find it ideal for live performances, especially for cutting through an ensemble with volume and clarity.

In addition to these traditional woods, some guitar makers have begun exploring alternatives, with some surprising results. Sapele can be found on an increasing number of guitars. Often referred to as African Mahogany, though it is not immediately related, Sapele has a look and sound that resembles mahogany with a bit of treble brightness. Koa is a tropical hardwood with an exotic look and all of the brightness of maple and the well-defined middle tone of mahogany. These, along with Ovangkol, Ebony, Blackwood, Cocobolo, Walnut and dozens of other exotic tonewoods will ensure that the rich variety of acoustic guitar tones will continue to be rewarding landscape ripe for exploration by the coming generations of both musicians and luthiers.

 

Guitar Tip #100

AcousticGuitarOnBlackWhen recording an acoustic guitar you would normally put the microphone right by the sound hole if there were no pickups mounted in the body.  The problem is that the sound will be too harsh and dark. It will have way too much bass in it... This is especially true if you have a big sounding acoustic such as a Gibson J200 or similar brand/model.  Here is the tip...   Put the microphone between the 17th to 20th frets about 2 to 5 inches away.  This will give a much more balanced signal.  You will hear the difference right away when the track is played back. Acoustic basses work the same way.  If the sound required needs less bass try the same tip.

If the guitar being recorded has either active (powered by battery) or passive (no batteries required) pickups installed then use the above miking technique as well as feeding the sound from the pickups into the board and mix them together.  This is the best way to get a really nice strong acoustic sound.

Guitar Tip #29

I found another really great article on speakers and recording that I wanted to follow up the "Amp" article with.  This is really detailed and a great read.  Especially, if you are a gear head like myself. Rock with fury...

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Understanding & Recording Guitar Speakers

Tips & Techniques

Published in SOS February 2012 Printer-friendly version Technique : Recording / Mixing

 

Of all the factors that go into a great recorded guitar sound, the loudspeaker is the least well understood — but the right speaker can make all the difference.

David Greeves

 

When we talk about recording the electric guitar, we tend to focus first on things like mic selection, mic placement and how to position the guitar amp in the room, all crucially important parameters when it comes to capturing the sound we want. On the other side of the glass, meanwhile, guitarists have their own priorities. As the only group of people on the planet who can rival recording engineers for obsessing about their equipment, they will tweak and tinker with the settings on their amp, effects pedals and guitar in search of the perfect tone.

 

A loudspeaker is born in the Celestion factory. Here, the cone assembly is being constructed.

Yet in the centre of this little scene there is one crucial factor that is often completely overlooked by both parties: the loudspeaker that is actually making all the noise. In practical terms, the speaker is the voice of the instrument, the source of the sound we’re trying to capture. But how much do we really know about it? In this feature, we’ll be finding out how the speakers found in guitar cabs and combos actually work and discovering how much influence speaker choice has on the sound of the electric guitar. Hopefully, when we understand a little more about what makes guitar speakers tick, we can put this knowledge to good use in the studio.

Beyond simply looking at the theory, I want to find out what different speakers sound like in practice. To do this, I’ve had a rather unusual speaker cabinet built, equipped with four different drivers and a variety of input options, so I can directly compare their response when fed with the same signal. I used this cabinet to record a collection of audio examples, which can be found atwww.soundonsound.com/sos/feb12/articles/speakersmedia.htm and are described in the ‘Hear For Yourself’ box.

Speaker Basics

 

A voice coil being wound.

On the face of it, the speaker in a guitar amp operates just like any other dynamic loudspeaker. The speaker cone is attached to a cylindrical coil of wire — the ‘voice coil’ — which sits in a narrow gap surrounded by a permanent magnet. When an electrical current passes through this coil, it becomes an electromagnet and, depending on the direction of the current, is attracted to or repelled by the permanent magnet. This moves the speaker cone back and forth, which in turn moves the air in front of it, creating sound waves. It’s this simple principle that lets us turn the alternating current originally generated in the guitar’s magnetic pickups back into something we can hear.

However, the speaker’s role in the resulting guitar tone is much more fundamental than merely being the last stage in the process of making that original signal much, much louder. Try comparing the signal from an electric guitar amp’s direct output with the sound coming from its speaker. It’s a bit like comparing the output of an acoustic guitar’s pickup with the sound of it miked up: the same basic information is there, but the depth, detail and character are missing from the direct signal. If this seems a rather obvious point, ask yourself why the electric guitar signal sounds better through the amp’s speaker than the speakers in your headphones or studio monitors, even though the latter are technically superior.

As we are about to discover, while the basic operating principles might be the same, there is one crucial difference that sets guitar speakers apart from almost every other variety. The speakers in your headphones, hi-fi system, studio monitors or PA rig are designed to be as free as possible from distortion and tonal coloration, but in the case of a guitar speaker, these things are not just tolerated but actively encouraged. Just as the amplifier shapes, drives, compresses and colours the signal from the guitar, the speaker stamps its own indispensable personality on the sound.

I asked Ian White, Development Director for British speaker manufacturers Celestion (www.celestion.com), to explain more. “Designing guitar speakers is, in many ways, much more challenging than pro PA or hi-fi, because guitar speakers are so non-linear,” he says. “Hi-fi speakers are designed for linear operation mainly within what’s called their ‘pistonic band’, the region where the speaker is moving in and out in linear fashion. Above that band, the speaker goes into ‘break-up’ — instead of the whole thing acting coherently like a pump or piston, little bits of the cone are all doing their own thing — but then you’d typically move that part of the signal over to, say, a mid-range driver or tweeter. With guitar speakers, there’s almost no pistonic band. Within their usable frequency range, it’s almost all break-up.”

Given that, in a recording context, distortion is usually the sworn enemy, this concept might seem quite alien, but what we’re talking about here is not the nasty-sounding distortion you get from a fuzzbox or an overloaded channel. As Ian explains, it is the non-linear break-up of a guitar speaker and the complex modes and overtones this creates that give it its characteristic tone.

“Imagine I had a load of different panels made from wood, glass, polystyrene and so on,” he says. “If I got you to close your eyes and then hit each one in turn to make it resonate, you’d be able to hear immediately which was which. That’s because the different break-up pattern of each material gives a unique coloration to its sound. It’s the same with a guitar speaker: the break-up pattern gives the speaker its colour. Anywhere above, typically, 500Hz and certainly up in the higher registers, what you’re hearing as the character of the speaker is the tonal break-up. Your ear is latching on to that mess and interpreting colour, a flavour.”

Breaking Up Is Hard To Do

 

A completed speaker receives its edge treatment.

When designing a speaker, achieving the desired tone is a matter of encouraging the distortion modes that you want and suppressing those that you don’t. Given the complex resonant behaviour of the speaker, combined with the fact that the guitar signal itself is full of harmonics and overtones, this is a tricky business. According to Ian, the usual measurements of speaker performance are only of so much use.

“With hi-fi and pro PA speakers, we can develop finite element models and see on a screen what they’re going to be doing,” Ian says. “But that’s almost impossible with guitar speakers because they’re so non-linear. It’s difficult enough to predict how a guitar speaker is going to sound when you’re feeding it a clean guitar signal, but it’s the distorted stuff that really gets the cone modes going. It doesn’t need to be that loud to do that — just the complexity of the signal really gets the tone humming.

“You can look at the frequency response curve for a speaker, but that will only give you a broad-brush account of what it sounds like. You can see how loud it is, roughly what the bandwidth is and whether there’s more emphasis on the high or low frequencies, but the subtle tonal effects are solely down to the break-up. You can see artifacts on the response curve — little wiggles — that are the result of break-up, and we might be able to say what a few of those are doing tonally. But if you showed us the response curve of a speaker we’d never heard before, we wouldn’t have a clue how it was really going to sound. Yet within a few milliseconds of listening to it we’d be able to give you chapter and verse on its construction.”

The measured frequency response of all four speakers used in our test appears very similar on paper: but, as Celestion’s Ian White points out, these charts do not tell the complete story!

So what are the key factors in the design of a speaker that dictate how it will sound?

“In broad-brush terms, the sound of a speaker is dictated by its basic geometry: the shape and size of the cone, the diameter of the voice coil, the size of the magnet,” Ian explains. “That sets the speaker’s overall bandwidth, but the break-up patterns that give it its colour, they happen because of the stiffness of the cone, the mass of it and the internal damping. We could make you four speakers that look identical and have the same basic geometry, and still make them sound very different by encouraging different break-up modes. When we’re designing speakers, that’s what we do.”

While the design of the speaker cone — which must be light in weight, yet stiff — is crucial to the performance of the speaker, this is far from the only factor in play.

“The cone is the ultimate principal radiator of the sound, and we can shape that sound to some extent by playing with things like the consistency of the pulp the paper is made from, the length of the fibres and what substances the cone is impregnated with,” says Ian. “But it’s important to remember that the cone is part of an assembly containing the surround element, voice coil, dust cap and rear suspensions, which all have an effect on the cone break-up modes.

“For example, even at the lower end of the guitar speaker’s frequency range, there are still a lot of distortion products that need to happen for it to sound right. Limiting the excursion of the cone in a particular way has the effect of producing distortion that we can use to help set the tone in the lower frequencies. By playing with that, you can get a relatively loose and soft bottom end or a very hard-sounding bottom end.”

Trying to isolate how individual elements of a speaker influence the sound would seem to be impossible, as all these factors are interactive. Change the diameter of the voice coil, for example, and you must also change the design of the magnet, cone, dust cap, surround and suspension. You will also have changed the mass of the whole assembly, which on its own will have big implications for the break-up modes.

On The Level

Amid all this discussion of frequency content, resonance and break-up modes, there’s one crucial factor we have not mentioned: volume level. In the world of valve-powered guitar amplification, many players become obsessed with finding their amp’s ‘sweet spot’, the operating range within which the amp’s preamp and power-amp stages are providing just the right amounts of compression and distortion for the optimum tone.

I’ve heard many guitarists discussing speakers in similar terms, the suggestion being that, like valve amps, speakers sound best when they’re really “cooking”. Some players will specifically swap out their speakers for replacements with a lower power rating in an effort to encourage “speaker break-up” or “speaker distortion”. But, as we’ve just discovered, break-up and distortion are very much the guitar speaker’s stock-in-trade. So how much does signal level actually influence the tone and behaviour of the speaker?

“The effect of signal level is not huge,” says Ian White, “and certainly not as big as it is on the amplifier. These cone break-up mechanisms happen at a few microvolts input. You don’t need to drive 20 Volts into the thing to make them happen. There are some level-related effects that come into play, but they’re not the ones we’ve been talking about up to now. As the level goes up, the voice coil does heat up naturally. That will cause some compression and it could cause some other things to change slightly as well, so the sound will change a little bit as the speaker is driven harder. But the sound character of the speaker is just as much there at low levels as it is at high levels.”

According to Ian, the effects of driving the speaker close to its limits are mostly undesirable. You may have encountered terms like “cone cry” and “edge yowl”. The noises they so eloquently describe are the result of the cone essentially being driven so hard that it can no longer be adequately restrained by the speaker’s internal damping and suspension system. Resonating out of control, it starts producing unpleasant harmonics and overtones that are often unrelated to the actual note being played.

“These effects are definitely not desirable, but they’re something that we have to tolerate,” says Ian. “They happen as a result of us walking the tightrope of trying to make the speaker robust enough to handle the power, while still wanting it to break up in a desirable way. If we set out to make a louder, more powerful speaker, using stronger suspensions and cones then, potentially, there won’t be as many break-up modes and the speaker won’t be tonally so complex. As designers, we have to be resourceful to avoid a more powerful speaker tending to be a cleaner-sounding speaker. If you simply took the guitar speaker right through the evolution of making it stiffer and stiffer to handle more power, ultimately you’d end up with a clean, linear PA speaker, which is a very different thing.”

So the reason why a 30 Watt speaker in a 30 Watt combo will generally produce a more tonally complex sound than a 100 Watt speaker is not so much to do with speaker distortion “sweet spots” as it is a product of each speaker’s construction. The lower-powered speaker does not need to be as sturdy and rigid, so is free to resonate its flimsy little heart out. So if a guitarist insists that his combo only sounds good when it’s turned up loud, he may well be right, but it will most likely be on account of the amp and not the speaker.

Speakers In The Studio

The picture we’re getting of guitar speaker behaviour is a fascinating one. As well as influencing volume and dynamics and dictating the range of frequencies reproduced, the speaker’s complex pattern of break-up modes actively colours the sound. Tonal character and performance vary widely from speaker to speaker. Add in the individual sonic signature of the guitar signal and the way this interacts with the speaker modes, and you have a lot of fertile ground for experimentation.

These revelations would seem to have particular significance for the positioning of close mics. As anyone who has ever experimented with close-miking a guitar cab can confirm, very small changes in the position and angle of the microphone can make a big difference in sound. We now have a new take on why this is the case.

“If the speaker were operating in a linear, pistonic fashion, the exact position of a close mic wouldn’t really matter, because a coherent wave would be coming out at all frequencies,” Ian White explains. “But as I’ve said, the guitar speaker is far from pistonic. At a few kHz you’ve literally got sections of cone about an inch in diameter each doing their own thing.

“Another way to look at this is to imagine you had a 12-inch-diameter rock and you dropped it into a pond. You’d get a nice wave travelling out in all directions. Now imagine you had a bucket of pebbles each one inch in diameter that constituted the same surface area as the 12-inch stone. What would happen if you dropped those in the pond? You’d get a mess, wouldn’t you, in terms of the waves going out. And that’s what happens with a 12-inch guitar speaker.”

While the human ear will smear this “mess” into a coherent whole, the narrow focus of a single close mic means that it will struggle to capture the full picture. That’s not to say there’s anything wrong with using just one close mic — indeed, there are many advantages in terms of rejecting other sound sources in the room and avoiding potential phase problems — but it’s important to be aware that you’ll only pick up part of the speaker’s repertoire. To get a more complete picture, some engineers favour placing a single mic a foot or more away from the grille, while others favour multi-mic techniques, combining close and distant mics or pairs of close mics on- and off-axis.

Custom Cabinet

This is certainly borne out by the audio examples recorded using the four-speaker cabinet I mentioned at the start of this article. It was built by Paul Gough, whose company Zilla Music specialise in making speaker cabinets to order. No stranger to this kind of unusual request — he recently built a custom recording cabinet for Skunk Anansie guitarist Ace, featuring four different 12-inch speakers plus a fifth 10-inch speaker — he was able to devise a wiring scheme that allowed independent use of each speaker, all four together or two pairs.

I’ve chosen four Celestion drivers for my cab, but there are obviously plenty of other speaker manufacturers, such as Fane in the UK and Eminence in the US. Although most offer a wide range of models designed for different playing styles and power requirements, some are closely associated with certain sounds: EV specialise in loud, clean, broad-bandwidth drivers, for example, while the US-made Weber speakers and the modern-day Jensen reissues made in Italy focus on recreating the sound of ’50s and ’60s guitar speakers. There is also a considerable number of small ‘boutique’ manufacturers offering handmade specialist speakers, so there’s a lot to choose from when looking to expand your palette of sounds.

The four different 10-inch Celestion drivers the cabinet is equipped with are the G10 Vintage, the G10 Greenback, the G10N-40 and the G10 Gold. Aside from the fact that the last of these uses an Alnico rather than a ceramic magnet, in terms of their “basic geometry”, as Ian White puts it, these four speakers are very similar, sharing a 10-inch cone diameter and 1.75-inch voice coil. As you might expect, their specifications in terms of frequency range, sensitivity and power handling are also very much alike.

If I’d really wanted to make the widest possible range of sounds available in one “ultimate recording cab”, I could certainly have gone further, incorporating eight-, 12- or 15-inch speakers with radically different specs. There are a couple of good reasons why I didn’t. For one thing, I wanted this cab to work not just as four individual speakers in a box, but as an actual 4x10. If any one speaker was much louder than the rest, that speaker would completely dominate the overall sound. But mainly, discovering that an eight-inch Alnico speaker rated at 15 Watts sounds different to a 12-inch, 100 Watt, ceramic-magnet speaker would not constitute much of a surprise! It seems a much more worthwhile exercise to find out how big a difference in sound there is among of group of ostensibly similar speakers.

As it turns out, the difference is considerable. Even to the naked ear, plugging into each speaker in turn reveals distinct variations in terms of volume and tonal character. When they’re miked up, the differences in the way each speaker handles the bass, mid-range and treble are even more marked. The G10 Vintage is loud, full and bright, with the familiar lift in the upper mid-range that, as with its bigger brother, the 12-inch Vintage 30, helps it to cut through the mix. The Greenback has a slightly warmer sound, with a more pronounced high-frequency roll-off. The G10N-40 is similar in some respects, but with the mid-range emphasis shifted lower, creating a somewhat darker sound. The Alnico-magnet G10 Gold, meanwhile, is bright and open-sounding.

In a studio context, this 4x10 cab really shows just how fundamental the contribution of the speaker is to the sound of the electric guitar and how much can be gained by exploiting this. Beyond the fact that the individual character of each speaker can be used to shape the sound at source, a multi-mic setup opens up a huge range of tonal options. Some really satisfying and well-rounded sounds can be achieved by combining individual close-miked speakers with a room mic or mixing the sound from two or more different speakers together.

Although financial and space constraints are obviously a factor, if you’re serious about electric guitar recording you should give some thought to how you’re using the speakers you have at your disposal, and whether the addition of an extra cab to your studio, equipped with one or two very different speakers, might expand your options.    0

 

Understanding Speaker Specs

I asked Celestion’s Development Director Ian White to explain the specifications typically listed by speaker manufacturers and what they mean in terms of sound.

Magnet type: Guitar speakers typically use ceramic, Alnico or neodymium magnets, with ceramic magnets being the most widely used.

Ian says: “It’s difficult to consider the three magnet types in isolation, because they each require a significantly different magnet-structure topology to be efficient magnetic assemblies. These different physical arrangements cause their own tonal differences due to motor inductance variation and eddy-current behaviour. So there are more things in play than just the magnet composition itself.

“In practice, though, we can generalise in terms of sounds. Alnico-magnet speakers are characterised as ‘laid-back’, with a lazy feeling to the pick attack and an overall smooth response. You would expect to find a softer, less tight bottom end and clear, bell-like upper harmonics. Ceramic magnets are associated with a grainy upper-mid/treble character, adding punchy ‘attitude’ and detail, and a subjectively quicker response to note attack and damping. Neodymium combines some elements of both Alnico and ceramic, delivering a very fast attack and recovery and a feeling of precision.”

 

Speaker diameter: Though four-, six- and eight-inch drivers are available, most guitar combos and speaker cabinets house 12-, 10- or sometimes 15-inch speakers.

Ian says: “The 12-inch driver has effectively become the industry standard, setting the basic bandwidth and break-up characteristics we now expect from a guitar speaker. Once the 12-inch format was established, guitar pickups, amplifiers and other associated electronics were naturally optimised around this size of driver, cementing its dominance — it’s the most common size of speaker in use today, by some distance.

“Besides saving space, the 10-inch format naturally produces a higher frequency bandwidth, which can be useful both on stage and in the studio, because there’s less danger of booming bottom end. Fifteen-inch drivers produce a lower bandwidth and tend to exhibit a rich, deep tone with less high frequencies. Like both 10- and 12-inch speakers, the 15 can be complex harmonically but lower in frequency, making it sound more darkly ‘vocal’.”

Voice coil diameter: “The diameter of the voice coil is mainly chosen to best suit the thermal power handling required. However, larger diameters (1.5 to 2 inches) will naturally produce more inductance and mass than smaller ones (1 to 1.25 inches), which will have the effect of holding back the high frequencies. As the voice-coil diameter increases, there is a need to use a correspondingly higher-energy magnet to maintain the same speaker sensitivity. This explains why large-coil speakers generally have larger magnets.”

Power: Given in Watts, the power rating indicates the maximum amplifier power the speaker can safely handle.

Ian says: “The power rating and resultant tone are linked. Most of the things we do as design engineers to increase the power handling of a guitar speaker can, without care, result in a less tonally complex sound. A more robust design that can cope with more power normally requires components with increased mass and stiffness. This, together with changes to the internal damping, tend to discourage the desirable break-up modes from being excited in the cone.

“The choice of speaker should always be made on tonal grounds. It is perfectly acceptable, for example, to use a 100W speaker with a 50W amplifier if that brighter, cleaner tone suits the player. Conversely, if you want the complex harmonic tone of a 50W speaker but wish to use a 100W head, then you can use multiple 50W drivers to cope with the power.”

Sensitivity or SPL: Typically stated in dB for 1 Watt of power measured at 1 metre, the sensitivity figure rates the overall efficiency of the speaker.

Ian says: “The parameters that affect sensitivity, for a given size of speaker, are mass and motor strength. Increasing the mass of the moving assembly — the cone, coil, suspensions and so on — results in a reduction in sensitivity, while increasing the motor strength elevates sensitivity. There are tonal reasons for keeping the moving mass low, so in general sensitivity is mainly controlled by motor strength. The ‘motor’ in question is the voice coil and magnet assembly, and its strength is usually defined by the ‘BL’ factor, where ‘B’ is the magnetic flux density achieved in the voice-coil gap and ‘L’ is the length of the wire in the coil that is active in the gap.

“Highly sensitive 12-inch speakers (say, 98-100dB) utilising big magnets not only sound louder with the same amplifier power, but also tend to sound ‘faster’ and brighter. Since a higher BL factor means more electromagnetic damping of the voice coil, they also sound tighter at the bottom end, with less likelihood of sounding boomy. Less sensitive 12-inch models (say, 95-97dB) generally tend to sound warmer and can sound less tight at the bottom end.”

Frequency range: “The frequency range normally suited to electric guitars and amplifiers is generally regarded as around 70Hz to 6kHz. If the speaker strongly radiates significantly above 6kHz, it could have a tendency to sound overly harsh and offensive; significantly less than 6kHz and it will sound less bright or ‘dark’. The lower limit of the stated frequency range is normally a result of the natural resonance frequency of the moving cone assembly.”

Resonance frequency: “Typical values range between 50Hz and 150Hz. A speaker with a resonance frequency at the lower end will offer good bass extension but with a softer feel to the bass. A lower-resonance unit will also potentially sound better on de-tuned material but, having a greater ease of excursion, it comes with some risk of mechanical damage if the over-excursion is severe. When the resonance figure approaches the higher end, the bass will sound more ‘tubby’, perhaps even ‘boxy’. For most applications, a figure between 50Hz and 100Hz works well.”

Impedance: “Whether it’s a single unit, a pair or a four-by, the speakers ultimately become the load on the amplifier, and the resultant impedance must be appropriate for the amplifier used. Design engineers go to great lengths to make the 8Ω version sound the same as the 16Ω version of the same model, but there will be slight tonal variations as many factors, including the inductance and mass of the coil, will be different. As a general rule, 16Ω units sound slightly brighter than their 8Ω counterparts.”

 

Cabinet Construction

Paul Gough of Zilla assembles the special 4x10 cabinet described in this feature. The Tayden speaker visible in the photo unfortunately turned out to be defective, hence the eventual all-Celestion lineup.

As well as the speakers themselves, the cabinet that houses the speaker(s) also has a significant influence on the sound. When not accommodating bizarre custom orders like mine, Paul Gough of Zilla Music (www.zillacabs.com) offers a variety of more standard cabinets ranging from the light, compact and portable to the heavy-duty and oversized. So what difference do the cab’s dimensions make to its sound?

“Generally speaking, the bigger the cab the bigger it sounds,” he says. “Assuming you’re using decent materials and all things being equal, if you have a cab that’s slightly bigger, it’s going to sound slightly fuller.”

However, this is not just a question of size. The density, thickness and rigidity of the woods that make up the cabinet’s back, sides and baffle — the front panel on which the speakers are mounted — all exert an influence. As with speaker design, it seems that the cab builder must balance a number of interacting factors to achieve the desired sound.

“If you increase the depth of the cab, that will usually give you more bottom end,” Paul continues. “Increasing the thickness of the wood also tends to fill out the sound a little bit. A trick that a lot of American companies use to make smaller cabinets sound bigger is to use thicker, denser wood. The trouble is, if you keep increasing the thickness and density of the wood, you can stray towards a boomy sound in larger cabinets and a boxy sound in smaller ones.”

The construction of the baffle has probably the largest individual effect on how the speakers perform. A more rigid baffle will hold the speaker more firmly in place, generally giving you more punch and projection, but a less rigid baffle is not necessarily a bad thing. Assuming the cab is properly constructed from the right materials, allowing it to resonate and colour the sound can produce a more characterful and lively tone.

“You can always make the baffle more rigid by making it thicker or bracing it more securely,” says Paul, “and you can always lessen the effect by using a thinner baffle, or by not securing it so strongly, like old Fender ‘tweed’ amps, which effectively just had four nuts and bolts holding the baffle on.

“On 2x12 and 4x12 cabs, one thing a lot of people ignore is the actual amount of wood in the baffle once you’ve cut holes in it to mount the speakers,” Paul continues. “In a standard-sized 4x12, you’ve got a baffle that’s more hole than it is wood! Because there’s not a massive amount of wood there, the baffle can move a lot. That’s why in almost all 4x12 cabinets the baffle is braced against the backboard. If you take that support out, you lose low end and a bit of projection as well — it will sound like a totally different cab.”

A common feature on Zilla cabinets is a removable rear panel, allowing for both open-backed and closed-backed operation. “A closed back tends to help with the bass response,” Paul explains. “Because the air that’s trapped inside the cabinet is pushing back against the speakers, the speaker damping doesn’t come into play as much. The response will change in other, more subtle ways, but the most marked difference will be a tighter low end and, often, subjectively less treble.

“Opening up the back helps a cab to ‘fill the room’. You may lose a little bit of your bottom end and lower mid-range, but in most cabs that’s not really a problem — you can just dial it back in on your amp if you want it. The sound will be a little less intense: it’s what you’d explain as a ‘nicer’ sound. It’s a bit more chilled-out. If you’re playing death metal with lots of chugging low riffs, you’d use a closed back, but if you’re just after a nice open guitar sound, an open-backed cab is something to consider.

“When I’m recording, I tend to go for a closed back because the sound is a bit more controlled — and controllable. With an open-backed cab, you’re going to get more reflections off the walls. A closed back makes the sound much more directional, so it’s easier to isolate and screen off. I also find that it’s easier to predict what a closed-back cab is going to do when you’re trying to recreate sounds and use mic placements that you’ve used before. But then open-backed cabs are more interesting in many ways — you can get a wider variety of sounds by doing things like miking up the rear of the cab, or even the inside.”

Hear For Yourself

The most commonly used microphone for recording electric guitar amps is undoubtedly the Shure SM57, so in order to see how the speakers in David’s unique 4x10 cabinet would differ, we decided to use four SM57s in a variety of close-miked arrangements repeated as closely as possible across the four speakers. The design of the cabinet makes it possible to connect the speakers individually, in pairs or all at once; had we been using a transistor amp, we could perhaps have used a re-amping device to record each speaker in turn, which would have made the differences more obvious because of the lack of spill. However, we didn’t want to be constantly powering valve amps on and off in order to switch speakers, so we opted to have David playing guitar ‘live’ and record the output from each speaker simultaneously.

To place the results into context, and pick up the sound of the cab as a whole, I also put up a Bang & Olufsen BM5 stereo ribbon as a room mic, about eight feet away. Bearing in mind that the SM57 isn’t the most neutral of microphones, we planned to repeat some of the tests using four AKG D224Es (a long-discontinued but very high-quality dynamic mic that has minimal proximity effect and a relatively uncoloured sound), but the rigours of close-miking a loud amp proved too much for one of them, and it lost its high-frequency element. All mics were recorded through a Focusrite ISA828 preamp, feeding the line inputs on a Steinberg UR824 audio interface.

We recorded short examples in different musical styles, mainly using an American Standard Fender Stratocaster fitted with Bare Knuckle Apache vintage-style pickups and an Eastwood Airline reissue with Iron Gear Blues Engine “PAF-style” pickups and retrofitted Bigsby vibrato, through David’s Dr Z Maz 18 Jr and Cornell Plexi 7 amps, for clean and dirty sounds respectively. No effects were used, and the amp controls were carefully reset so that the Strat and Airline sounds were repeatable. Once I had placed the mics for the first set of examples, we fed noise through the amp in order to match the preamp gains. After recording, the examples were also normalised so as to match their levels as precisely as possible, with the exception of the room mic samples. Four main close-miking configurations were used:

Half an inch from the grille cloth, pointing directly at the centre of the loudspeaker cone;

Seven inches from the grille cloth, pointing directly at the centre of the cone;

Half an inch from the grille cloth, pointing directly at the edge of the cone;

An inch from the grille cloth, at a 45-degree angle pointing outwards just past the centre of the cone.