Guitar Player

Stageworth­y Strategies, Pt. 2

Understand­ing acoustic preamps, D.I.s and digital enhancers.

- BY JIMMY LESLIE

LIVE GIGS ARE

suddenly coming back, and lots of players who’ve stripped down their sound during the pandemic are seeking ways to translate it faithfully to the stage. Last month we looked at saddling up an acoustic workhorse. This month, we’ll talk about how to assemble a stage-worthy signal chain. The rig can be as simple as a direct box or as complicate­d as NASA’s Mars Perseveran­ce Mission. Your own dedicated acoustic amplifier is the most reliable companion, but let’s back burner it for the sake of this discussion, since it represents the end of the signal chain, and you may not be able to use it for every gig. It all starts with a pickup, and since we addressed the pros and cons of piezos and magnetics in the March issue, this column will delve into the mystery of preamps, direct boxes and digital enhancers before moving onward.

PREAMP PRIMER

Preamps are key to fantastic acousticel­ectric tone. The ubiquitous piezo bridge pickup’s weak signal requires a preamp just to achieve line level, and most modern acoustic-electrics come with at least a basic onboard preamp. If your guitar uses a battery and has any controls, that’s the preamp. The higher the quality of the pickup and preamp, the better that simple setup will sound.

Adding an external preamp is the next step up, and it’s often the reason why a player achieves a robust tone that comes across more smooth and sculpted compared to another player that simply plugs into the venue’s beat-up direct box. Simply bringing a high-quality passive direct box such as a Radial JDI with its nice Jensen transforme­r will mitigate piezo quack and add harmonic content. Every acoustic guitar amp has a preamp section, but even if you’ve got a pretty good onboard guitar preamp and another in the amp, your tone can benefit from being bolstered and sculpted along the signal chain. If your onboard electronic­s aren’t top shelf or you’re not going to employ an amp, then a good external preamp can make all the difference in the world for achieving consistent sonic quality.

TRAMPLED UNDER FOOT

As manufactur­ers continue the trend toward stealth electronic­s for guitar, it naturally follows that there’s more tweaking left to do on the floor. The Pigtronix Bob Weir’s Real Deal acoustic preamp [reviewed in February 2019] is a tweaker’s delight built on a small platform. Larger compound direct box features are likely to include a low-noise preamp with multiple gain structure, fine equalizati­on and anti-feedback options, flexible I/O and perhaps compressio­n. Think of it like a channel strip for the stage. See our review of Radial’s dual-channel PZ-Pro in January 2021 for an excellent example. The brand-new Orange Acoustic Pedal is essentiall­y a speaker-less amp with a surprising­ly full feature set on a relatively small footprint. Fishman and L.R. Baggs offer floor models, from straightfo­rward to fancy, and both have been advancing acoustic electronic­s in the digital era.

DIG INTO DIGITAL ENHANCEMEN­T

Fishman changed the D.I. game in 2004 with Aura imaging technology, which the manufactur­er eventually integrated into everything from compound floor units to single stomp boxes to onboard guitar systems. The basic idea was to make a piezo pickup approximat­e a mic’d-up acoustic. The core technology is built on Impulse Response measuremen­ts, and the same stuff went on to be used in the Kemper Profiler amp and Audio

Sprockets’ ToneDexter pedal. Its customizat­ion options are awesome but require access to a studio with good mics to reach full potential. Baggs recently introduced the Voiceprint pedal, which democratiz­es customizat­ion via an iPhone app that uses its onboard mic for mapping, and its powerful processor to evaluate acoustic guitar properties compared to the pickup signal [see Meet Your Maker, page 24]. The app renders a custom filter, which it then sends to the pedal paired with Bluetooth. Look for a review in the next issue.

The bottom line for all acoustic electronic­s is sonic integrity and sculptabil­ity. It’s imperative to have a handle on one’s core tone before further processing. We’ll dig deep into effects and amps next on our way to postpandem­ic stage-worthiness.

 ??  ?? The Pigtronix Bob Weir’s Real Deal acoustic preamp is a tweaker’s delight.
The Pigtronix Bob Weir’s Real Deal acoustic preamp is a tweaker’s delight.

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