Quote:
Originally Posted by Jim Carr I am advocating that you have enough power to be heard in a wide variety of spaces without PA support |
I agree with this 100%.
I also acknowledge that there's a couple formulas that are in common usage as a rule of thumb for power, I've heard yours before and another says 4x the guitar amp.
Frankly I don't buy into either one. I know my opinion is minority, in fact I may be the only one with this mentality but:
I believe in having enough power for the bass to sound good in the room. The trickiest situations I've encountered have been the medium sized rooms with no PA support. There, I bring enough to get the job done but I NEVER (repeat NEVER) base my rig on what the other players are bringing. So what if the guitarist has three Marshall stacks? I'm gonna play to the room and audience, not his amp.
I'll put on the flame retardant suit for what will likely follow, but my philosophy is this:
1) experience has taught me that most guitar players bring too much. Just like the OP described. There's absolutely no reason why a guitarist needs 100watts in a medium sized room. I'll go further with, given today's technology and equipment there's no need for more than 30watts for the majority of guitar players. With very few exceptions an overamped guitar player will be frustrated the entire gig. Every time he starts getting close to hitting the sweet spot on the amp, it's gonna be in ear bleed, too loud territory. There will be complaints about being too loud.
Book it. I have no desire in contributing to the cacophony.
2) the louder your stage volume the less you hear the other players and vocals. It's not just the monitors. It's cumulative.
I prefer to play as a group, not a bunch of individuals.
3) every medium+ size venue I've ever played has had PA support.
If it didn't the gig is a bust anyway.
With PA support all I need is enough for the stage at most, my personal monitor in the least. 300, 400 watts with adequate speaker coverage has never been NOT enough.
4) I don't play the volume war thing. I did, long ago but I grew up.
5) the bigger/better venues are going (almost all I've been in) if not already gone to In ear Monitors.
My order of preference:
a) My pedal board/DI to the PA with IEM's. This works in any size room and I guarantee you, my bass will sound good.
b) A kickback amp (like the OP's or similar) in front of me for my monitor with a line to the PA. This will work on almost any stage in any size room.
c) A little more power and speakers for stage fill, PA support for the room. Again, this is getting into tricky territory. As the stage volume increases you will constantly battle the can't hear vs being too loud.
Lastly, d) Backline for the room. I can do it but I hate it.
The last time I had to do this was an outdoor gig. I had no PA support. I used my pedalboard/preamp to a 650watt head with a two 10" cabinet. The soundman gave me the hand signal when my volume was good - it stayed there the entire time. My 300watt head would have worked equally as well.
I have no interest in playing with immature players and situations where I "need" to outdo somebody else. It's silly and I won't participate.
Again, I'm a firm believer in having a rig that's adequate but I never base my gear on what the other players are bringing. I base it on what I need for the bass to sound good. Let the stupid guitar player be frustrated all night long. I'm too old for that game. If I had to I could bring a 650watt head, a 300watt head, four 10"s a 15" and an 18". I've yet to play that gig.
IMHO YMMV tax tag and title sold separately..
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