MikeK
Asheville, NCNew Altamira M-30 D-Cedar, Gitane DG-320 John Jorgensen
What type of pickup/mic system are you currently using on your gypsy jazz guitar (and what do you like most about it)? I'll get it started:
Krivo micro manouche. I'm a huge fan of Krivo pickups and use them exclusively on my gypsy jazz guitars. The micro manouche is my favorite one yet (Jason knocked it out of the park with this one). I love how easily it goes on & off the guitar and how I never have to fret (pun intended) about feedback.
Comments
I'm using a Peche and contact mic (from Jokko) combo or just the Peche if I'm feeling lazy. I've posted about it before but having the combo basically eliminates any feedback issues even at high gain and the blended tone is substantially more "acousticy" sounding than just the Peche or another magnet pickup.
Also, and apologies for the thread drift, but has anyone heard how the new ALD Selmer reissues sound when amplified? The pickup/preamp combo looked pretty intriguing.
Currently the guitar I'm playing doesn't have a pickup.
But my plan is a Frankenstein combination of:
1) my removable humbucker insert on a stereo jack with:
2) either a k&k or bigtone style pickup run through a custom IR on a pedal
And in a separate jack:
3) an NVtone microphone.
As Yngvie said, more is more. Mostly just trying to figure out what works.
I bought a Dell’Arte bridge pickup off Reverb, put in on my Gitane John Jorgensen model, and it sounds great! It sounds like a mic pickup. Hot, and not like a Piezo at all. Really odd! And it's loud enough to play a gig through a Roland Mobile Cube 5-watt amp!
What's more bizarre I actually have a Dell’Arte guitar with the orriginal bridge pickup, and it sounds nothing like the other one. It's typical Piezo and not as loud.
I also have a Mueller magnetic pickup with works great with my Castellucia, as those have the higher bridge angle. I think this one sounds a bit less "electric guitar" than a Stimer.
I have the T-Bone Lucan System which I use whenever I want to record or amplify an acoustic guitar. It needs the 48V phantom power from the mixer or interface.