The real deals and modelers and gain - Rock festival lesson
Posted: Mon Aug 02, 2021 12:43 am
Last weekend I spent three days at a rock festival and saw quite a few bands. The headliner was Nightwish...never realized how great a show and how good they can be. That wasn't the post point, however.
A lot of the bands used modern high-gain amps, and some probably modelers as I never saw an amp or at least a head on stage. Some, like Nightwish, can't see them anyway. And for Nightwish, for the most part, guitars have a supporting role really anyway.
Some notions I made included that
a.) it was a delight to see so many bands still hauling full Marshall or whatever stacks to stage
b.) most of the 'younger' bands played with far too much gain, making the sound basically quite a feeble buzz or mush rather than hard it was supposed to be
c.) for many, again 'young' bands, and partially becuse of the point b. two guitars were unnecessary and only making the guitars a mess with each sound struggling to be heard.
d.) EASILY the best sounding bands all used a classic simple amp/stack with sensible gain.
There was one band that was just a trio, and the singer/guitarist played into a Marshall 2203 pretty much straight it seemed, employing the volume knob a lot for sound change, and the bassist played a Rickenbacker which had the signature clanky yet deep sound. And it was waaaaayy above any other band for how good they sounded. Everything came through crystal clear - tiny mistakes as well - but the sound was simply marvellous and strong and at best even hair-raisingly hard and raunchy.
They were followed by a metal act that played really well, and it looked like they used modelers because the guitarists were stomping on something quite fervently changing sounds for different parts of the song (I later heard at least one of them was a Line6 Helix)...and it sounded absolutely terrible in comparison. Of course, I don't know if they simply picked the most mushy and ball-less gain sounds in the devices, but it simply had zero dynamics, everything was just a steady nice mush of lots of gain.
Some bands were somewhere in between there, one trash/grunge act had two guitarists both with Marshall JVM halfstacks, and boy I had an itch to go and turn down their gain knobs down a little. They sounded good, but I could not help thinking how much better and hard-hitting it would have been with a little less gain so you could have had some more dynamics and clarity too.
Well anyway what I took home about it was that I'm gonna stick with my low gain approach and it's obviously a good thing, and I need not worry about hauling my Marshall onto gigs, obviously it will work fine even today...and also that I'm gonna further reduce my guitar playing while the other guitarist also plays. I don't need to play all the time, it will only be better for clarity and dynamics if only one guitar plays during verses for instance, and I'll join only for choruses on many songs. And definitely we never have to play the exact same thing with two guitars simultaneously.
A lot of the bands used modern high-gain amps, and some probably modelers as I never saw an amp or at least a head on stage. Some, like Nightwish, can't see them anyway. And for Nightwish, for the most part, guitars have a supporting role really anyway.
Some notions I made included that
a.) it was a delight to see so many bands still hauling full Marshall or whatever stacks to stage
b.) most of the 'younger' bands played with far too much gain, making the sound basically quite a feeble buzz or mush rather than hard it was supposed to be
c.) for many, again 'young' bands, and partially becuse of the point b. two guitars were unnecessary and only making the guitars a mess with each sound struggling to be heard.
d.) EASILY the best sounding bands all used a classic simple amp/stack with sensible gain.
There was one band that was just a trio, and the singer/guitarist played into a Marshall 2203 pretty much straight it seemed, employing the volume knob a lot for sound change, and the bassist played a Rickenbacker which had the signature clanky yet deep sound. And it was waaaaayy above any other band for how good they sounded. Everything came through crystal clear - tiny mistakes as well - but the sound was simply marvellous and strong and at best even hair-raisingly hard and raunchy.
They were followed by a metal act that played really well, and it looked like they used modelers because the guitarists were stomping on something quite fervently changing sounds for different parts of the song (I later heard at least one of them was a Line6 Helix)...and it sounded absolutely terrible in comparison. Of course, I don't know if they simply picked the most mushy and ball-less gain sounds in the devices, but it simply had zero dynamics, everything was just a steady nice mush of lots of gain.
Some bands were somewhere in between there, one trash/grunge act had two guitarists both with Marshall JVM halfstacks, and boy I had an itch to go and turn down their gain knobs down a little. They sounded good, but I could not help thinking how much better and hard-hitting it would have been with a little less gain so you could have had some more dynamics and clarity too.
Well anyway what I took home about it was that I'm gonna stick with my low gain approach and it's obviously a good thing, and I need not worry about hauling my Marshall onto gigs, obviously it will work fine even today...and also that I'm gonna further reduce my guitar playing while the other guitarist also plays. I don't need to play all the time, it will only be better for clarity and dynamics if only one guitar plays during verses for instance, and I'll join only for choruses on many songs. And definitely we never have to play the exact same thing with two guitars simultaneously.