
garey77
Well-known member
Peavey 6534+
Primarily the hfs in an old PRS CE model.godgrinder":3fsw60cg said:What pickup do you use?
Skeeballcore":1ivoxwx5 said:Primarily the hfs in an old PRS CE model.godgrinder":1ivoxwx5 said:What pickup do you use?
I'm not familiar with the Peters stuff so I'll have to check it out. Anyone point me to some good examples of it in action?
Skeeballcore":3js5i5cw said:Primarily the hfs in an old PRS CE model.godgrinder":3js5i5cw said:What pickup do you use?
godgrinder":nvee8tz8 said:Skeeballcore":nvee8tz8 said:Primarily the hfs in an old PRS CE model.godgrinder":nvee8tz8 said:What pickup do you use?
I'm not familiar with those pickups, but if you find every amp you've owned so far sounding harsh, there might be something with the pickups.
I do recommend Peters amps too though. They are clear and smooth without sounding too "polite".
Exactly right. This technique is so effective, it can be used to dial out the harshness of Line 6 high gain patches and make them sound really good. Not that I'm suggesting Line 6 is the path the OP should go - just that the para EQ trick is amazingly effective. 5153 50w head and the EQ and you would be set. Also, it's probably your most economical path to the tone you seek.Rezamatix":35pbhuzq said:Velvetgeorge":35pbhuzq said:Use most any of those heads listed and patch a parametric EQ in the loop. Sweep around until you find the harsh frequency and make a deep cut. Then, narrow the width of the cut until only the harsh part is gone.
A graphic EQ can work also, but is limited to fixed frequencies. Fortunately, you will find harshness at the standard freq's: 3.1k, 4k and so on.
george
This is awesome advice.