Thank you for posting this. I used your EQ technique and took the wheels off of my Roland amp for an outdoor gig on a bandshell this past weekend and my bass KICKED ASS. I got so many compliments and the band sounded great. I’m wondering about your thoughts on going thru a compressor for live sound? or do you use it on recordings? Maybe in the future you can post your thoughts on compression for bass . Thank you Carlo Z.
@@ArtbyJoeH Thanks. I was able to talk to talk with S.G. Davis ("Scooter"). He has his own shop and he takes care of/maintains/mods all of Alex Webster's basses. Because there are 100 different brands/models of bass compressors out there I asked his suggestion (to save me hours of research/comparrison) and he highly recommended the Seymour Duncan bass compression pedal. I'm going to give that a shot and see how that sounds with my SansAmp Bass VT Character Series pedal. I think highly of his work & skill at his shop (Grannville Guitars in St. Petersburg, FL). You can see videos of him on TH-cam working on Alex's Modulus and Spector basses (as well as building amps from scratch) - he seems like a great guy.
I'm a little embarrassed to say that in 30 yrs of playing bass.. This is the single most informative and educational video on tone and EQ I've ever heard or read....
Again another video that actually gives us the right information to understand the factors going into your amp settings. So many videos just don't cover the important WHY while your videos do. Keep up the fantastic job.
You give some of the clearest and most useful info out there, but more than that I love the lack of ego in your videos. Honestly, so many of the bassist youtubers are getting too high off their own farts, but your channel definitely has it's focus and priorities in order. Keep up the awesome work.
Very informative video. I've playing the bass guitar for more than five years now and I still feel like an amateur because I never learned how to set my bass amp. I always feel embarrassed when I set up my amp, then someone comes and changes my settings saying it sounds bad. I never got it until today. Please make more videos on how to be a better bass player. I find your channel great. +1
Great advise! We used to spend all the effort practicing to be tight in a band but never knew much about working out the sound with each other! We would even book the same room weekly because "that" room just sound so good with our "go to" settings, lol!
i have this head along with the k115 and k410...its very powerful.i could easily rock the speakers out of the boxes...best sounding amp ive ever owned...25yr hartke user..
Great explanation! Mids are also very important in my experience, as well. 500-800hz gives you note definition, which definitely helps having presence in the mix. I think it's also very important to know how your own amp works and which frequencies it boosts/cuts. The Q & center frequencies of particular EQ bands can vary very dramatically from amp to amp
I have been playing for over 40 years and over this time amps and cabs have come and gone. Generally speaking I have found that removing the wheels does not decrease muddyness. Wooden stages are hollow and the more contact to it the worse low end response you will get, the floor becomes a cab extension if it were. Use a 410 instead of a 15 inch and try to get ot off the floor or use insulating material under niethe it and angle the cab up. These days I use a small rig and have a dedicated stand for it 2 feet off the ground and angled up towards my head /ears.. There is only so much you can do with an EQ due to room acoustics without room treatments, but keep your cab away from walls and corners. against a wall is + 3db and in a corner+6 db of low end.
I also use the eq to fix the sound of a speaker, like when you go from an 8x10 svt to a 1-15” or a cheap speaker with no highs to a speaker with a big frequency range. you can force the speaker to a decent sound with good eq.
Thank you so much. Just bought my first amp, Peavey Headliner 1000, and had no idea how to set the EQ up. Now I have a place to start. Love practical information. I subscribed. Thanks again.
Thanks for this video, Marcelo. Recently I had the reharsals of one of my bands on a boomy small studio room. I've lived exactly this problem you mentioned: the bass totally saturated, I had to cut almost all of it, and increase the treble, what made the bass excessively bright. I think my mistake was not had cut all the bass, and to had cut more than necessary the low mids. So I tried to compensate with high mids. It worked more or less. For a reharsal, ok. But for a recording, it would be a big failure. Next time I'm gonna follow your tips!
Nice one .....simple and straight forward. If the beginners could see this video and start from there we might just get to enjoy those bands starting out. Thanks for doing this.
Great video. I have been setting the gain as instructed by a lot of people - master vol down, turn up the gain till the clip light shows then back it off slightly (that really may work well with passive basses but not mine). With those settings and very hot pickups the master vol stays at 1! I've always had to back the gain down and make adjustments. Turning the bass down etc also makes a lot of sense. I have a 2x15 cab and it is very easy to get the mud going. Thanks for the video - very good.
Finally. Very well explained, esp bass and mid use. Thank you! Under by cabs I used a Gramma Pad (a thick, insulating acoustical foam under a textile covered plywood top). I feel it improves a lot of things like 'bass suck' from having the cab on a hard floor like concrete or tile, and also to remove reverberation sometimes caused by a wood floor where the frequencies can move things around a bit (I also removed wheels from by lower cab). ...and yes, as Carlos Zanggrilli asked, "compression for live sound?" Rock on.
Great info, but to add for anyone else that was as stubborn as me when they first started playing, "listen to the sound guy at the club, and the audio engineer in the studio." They know the room/mix, and in most cases have quite a wealth of experience.
THANK YOU- best video on setting bass amp tone I’ve found! One question regarding setting the gain knob: I get how the gain affects a tube amp and getting overdrive distortion …. But what about solid state? How do you know where to set the gain if a solid state isn’t going to affect the sound like a tube amp? I’m especially confused how to set gain if there is no “clip” warning light, like on the fender rumble combo amps. Thanks!
I love the sound of a "Markus Miller" type sound / EQ... typically scooped, low mids and more highs and bass... my question for you is... does this make it harder for the bass to cut thru the mix? Is it muddy sounding in live venues?
From what I’ve been reading about this subject, scooped mids are almost always going to get you lost in the mix. Mids are essentially. It’s a good tone by yourself or solo. Usually those top musicians play in bigger venues which means they got sound people to tweak their tone. They also have in ear monitors.
Great advice about working in a place with its own sound system. I play for fun, but often in play in a place with front of house sound. I like to leave the decisions to the sound engineer, so I usually just leave the tone knobs at 12:00, keep the volume just loud enough to hear myself, and have them use a line out of my amp. I know I can't hear what it sounds like out in the room, so I just don't worry about it, and hope for the best. I use a TC electronics amp, smaller than what you're using in the video, but very similar. You talk about boosting the gain on a tube amp, but why then does a solid state amp like yours have that feature? And even more what does the "thrust" control really do? A very useful video, thanks.
thanks for this vid. I've been playing many years and kinda knew I had to EQ the room but never trusted to cut the low end past 9 o'clock for fear of my sound being to thin. next boomy room I play I will try cutting to zero if needed. there is one thing you mention that i disagree with.the master volume does slightly affect tone. I don't know how many times I've set what i thought to be the perfect sound only to have to adjust it once I turned up to performance level. Its not a big difference but I normally have to warm the sound up a bit..
A well earned like for demonstrating how different rooms sound differently. Just think how presence of a crowd of people in an auditorium changes the sound of that room! As a lad I had inadequate bass amps while we practiced in a garage or basement and I was the guy always cranking the Low EQ and lowering the rest - awful! It would also be nice to point out the concept of bass traps and how placing the sound source (speaker) in a corner of a room or even near a wall (or floor) may cause the reflections to clash with the sound and create mud. Don't put baby in a corner ;) That's why you see studios placing those foam muffles (bass traps) along walls and in corners. Just having carpet and upholstered furniture in a room may help, as well as breaking up the regular geometric shape of a room (put a chair in the corner, etc.) - just a few thoughts.
Interesting and helpful video. One thing that I think might have been helpful when discussing the EQ section of the video is an explanation of the overtone series and how people actually hear pitches. (ie. why you think you can hear low notes on small cheap speakers). Even if you can't hear the root note, you may be able to hear the octave harmonic, or the perfect fifth harmonic above that, and all of the frequencies moving up from there. It's obvious in practice when adjusting the treble control on your amp affects even your lowest notes, but, in combination with your explanation of wavelengths and room resonances, it explains why killing some of the "bass" section in favor of "low mid" merely "tightens up" your sound rather than making it so your lowest pitches are inaudible.
I wish I saw this 20 sum odd years ago. I always struggled with the eq settings on my bass amp. Now, I can get it to sound exactly the way I want it to be. Thanks.
Thank you for actually saying to cut the bass. Heard so many stuoid bass players who just dime the bass all the time and then are surprised no one can hear what they're playing
Hi, thanks for the video! What do you set up first..the amp EQ or the bass knobs? I have an active lakland 44-01 and I use to set up first the amp and then I move the bass knobs to final adjustments during the songs
Man, this has helped drastically. I have a adjustable high pass filter on my Mesa D-800+ and have always wondered why I'd want to cut low frequencies. This totaly makes sense now. I need to start toying around with this a little more when I'm having issues with not hearing my tone. Also I use a Tech 21 SH-1 pedal. When it comes to a pedal with a preamp on it and the one on my head, what is the generous consensus on which one to work with? I've been told by a few people to leave my amp flat and just EQ the pedal and leave it at that. Others have told me the opposite. I'm new to pedals and it's really confusing now that I have two different EQ's in my set up.
Wow, this was super helpful! Thanks. Great demo too with the bathroom and closet. I was actually having trouble getting a boomy sound with a new Fender Rumble 200 I bought. I moved it to a different part of the room and got a different sound. Never even thought about the room itself.
Very very imformative and spot on...i love rhe way you present it.....it gives me more understanding about my frequencies....thank you so much Bass Wizard.
Thanks Marcelo, this video really helped me understand how a bass amp set up should be handled. I gotta tell you, i really like the way you explain things, it's clear, and easy to understand. You give a lot of details and i enjoy that. Keep it up !
Marcelo you are 100% correct my friend, see i am very lucky that when we are playing in town (not on the road) and each room on broadway has a GK bass amp head and an alike a signal direct box ( DI ) Directly into front of the house and like yourself i have a 2 12ax7 tube preamps and to get that warm bass sound that i like and you may two got this advice from Victor Wooten and his brother Reggie start everything flat turn the master down to 0 and input the same 0 than, bring up the master and channel up together equally and i get the warm tube transient together and clean as a bell and my touring rig is using one head that is Biamped and i run my chorus on the A Side and the bottom end is dry so i do not get that crazy rumble from the drummers snare or floor tom or the guitars players low end.......tada !!! Great Demo Marcelo Ernie back at ya my friend !!!
You seem to know your stuff. I just liked and subscribed. How about another video where you show the EQ settings and corresponding tone in different rooms: home, practice space, bar, outdoor, etc. Good video, thank you!
As important are the speaker cabinets. Outdoors->open cabinets (the best I had for this was an old Crate 150 / GK head). They do sound harsher, but sealed cabinets just never did it for me in outdoors conditions. Sealed cabinets sound great n the studio or small venues.
Correction... being a guitarist is what causes most guitarists to crank it up lol. Great video. Not something I've thought much on but I do adjust as needed. Makes perfect sense. Really dig your videos. Good info!
Thank you Marcelo for clearly stating this stuff. Those frequencies from the lowest lows to about 800 Hz are always the biggest PITA when trying to get a balanced sound at sound check, especially indoor small clubs & venues (really 90% of where everybody plays). Using full bass cabs onstage is one of the biggest culprits of out of control volume. You really gotta aim it in your face to hear it loud enough so you don't screw up the FOH mix. Really, the EQ you want to set for is FOH itself! I use a wireless for my bass setup. If I use a stage monitor, like a full range wedge, I EQ to that first (minus some of the lowest range punch), then I go out front and EQ my channel in the mixer for the FOH - if it actually needs it! If the mixer's final output EQ has already been set for a flat room response, then I may not need to tweek anything yet. When the FOH is at normal volume, I then hear the the lowest frequencies onstage along with my monitor's mix automatically. Then during sound check, I play out front to hear everything in the FOH mix. It's THEN I tweek any frequencies on my FOH channel or suggest the engineer tweek mine or anyone else's for the actual sound the audience hears. If I use In-Ear monitors onstage, I will EQ my amp to the FOH only (assuming it's flat already), then go onstage and EQ my monitor output from the mixer in my ear buds. It's very important you have ear buds that have low freq drivers and can completely seal off outside noise. I have to have mine way in my ears.
That could be a grounding issue with the electrical circuit. The wiring in some places is just completely messed up and will cause that issue. You can try a ground lift to see if that helps. It could also be a cable, especially if you’re using a pedalboard, you’d have to check every cable one by one to make sure that isn’t where the problem is originating. As a last resort, you can use a noise gate.
Marcelo Feldman - The Bass Wizard thank you so much for the in depth response. I’m mainly an upright classical bassist who is just now getting into the electric bass scene (getting bored of the repetitiveness that classical brings). I’ve found your videos to be truly helpful and I aspire to achieve a tone similar to yours. Last question, if you don’t mind, are amps supposed to be completely quiet when it is on and you are not playing your bass? Or is normal to have some sound?
Thank you for posting this. I used your EQ technique and took the wheels off of my Roland amp for an outdoor gig on a bandshell this past weekend and my bass KICKED ASS.
I got so many compliments and the band sounded great. I’m wondering about your thoughts on going thru a compressor for live sound? or do you use it on recordings? Maybe in the future you can post your thoughts on compression for bass .
Thank you
Carlo Z.
2 years later and you're still waiting for a response....
@@jackshittle don’t worry there’s lots of other channels talking about compression 😎
@@ArtbyJoeH Thanks. I was able to talk to talk with S.G. Davis ("Scooter"). He has his own shop and he takes care of/maintains/mods all of Alex Webster's basses. Because there are 100 different brands/models of bass compressors out there I asked his suggestion (to save me hours of research/comparrison) and he highly recommended the Seymour Duncan bass compression pedal. I'm going to give that a shot and see how that sounds with my SansAmp Bass VT Character Series pedal. I think highly of his work & skill at his shop (Grannville Guitars in St. Petersburg, FL). You can see videos of him on TH-cam working on Alex's Modulus and Spector basses (as well as building amps from scratch) - he seems like a great guy.
I wish you put this video out in 1982!!! Thanks for presenting this info so clearly & I hope every bass player watches this. 🤘💚👍
I hope every electric guitarist watches this too 😂
I'm a little embarrassed to say that in 30 yrs of playing bass.. This is the single most informative and educational video on tone and EQ I've ever heard or read....
Easily the best explanation of EQing your bass and band stage sound. Thanks!
Again another video that actually gives us the right information to understand the factors going into your amp settings. So many videos just don't cover the important WHY while your videos do. Keep up the fantastic job.
You give some of the clearest and most useful info out there, but more than that I love the lack of ego in your videos. Honestly, so many of the bassist youtubers are getting too high off their own farts, but your channel definitely has it's focus and priorities in order. Keep up the awesome work.
Boomy room. Turn bass down. Use low mid as bass instead. This is awesome. Thank you so much! Subscribed. X
Very informative video. I've playing the bass guitar for more than five years now and I still feel like an amateur because I never learned how to set my bass amp. I always feel embarrassed when I set up my amp, then someone comes and changes my settings saying it sounds bad. I never got it until today. Please make more videos on how to be a better bass player. I find your channel great. +1
Great advise! We used to spend all the effort practicing to be tight in a band but never knew much about working out the sound with each other! We would even book the same room weekly because "that" room just sound so good with our "go to" settings, lol!
I`ve been playing bass for 1,5 year and this video has changed my life. Thanks
i have this head along with the k115 and k410...its very powerful.i could easily rock the speakers out of the boxes...best sounding amp ive ever owned...25yr hartke user..
Great explanation! Mids are also very important in my experience, as well. 500-800hz gives you note definition, which definitely helps having presence in the mix. I think it's also very important to know how your own amp works and which frequencies it boosts/cuts. The Q & center frequencies of particular EQ bands can vary very dramatically from amp to amp
most well spoken and articulated delivery of information! wizard is a fitting title for you, man
Thank you for this video, I just bought a new amp hartke HD 150 and I was just playing with the eqs, and this is very helpful to me! Thanks
Thank you for your amazing lesson, I never had any idea on what to do with eq ever.
I'm give this a go when I play live!
I have been playing for over 40 years and over this time amps and cabs have come and gone. Generally speaking I have found that removing the wheels does not decrease muddyness. Wooden stages are hollow and the more contact to it the worse low end response you will get, the floor becomes a cab extension if it were. Use a 410 instead of a 15 inch and try to get ot off the floor or use insulating material under niethe it and angle the cab up. These days I use a small rig and have a dedicated stand for it 2 feet off the ground and angled up towards my head /ears.. There is only so much you can do with an EQ due to room acoustics without room treatments, but keep your cab away from walls and corners. against a wall is + 3db and in a corner+6 db of low end.
This is great! No wonder our guitarist keeps telling me to cut the bass at practice. It's the damn room.
The guitarist probably needs to cut some bass frequencies, too.
I also use the eq to fix the sound of a speaker, like when you go from an 8x10 svt to a 1-15” or a cheap speaker with no highs to a speaker with a big frequency range. you can force the speaker to a decent sound with good eq.
Thank you so much. Just bought my first amp, Peavey Headliner 1000, and had no idea how to set the EQ up. Now I have a place to start. Love practical information. I subscribed. Thanks again.
Thanks for this video, Marcelo. Recently I had the reharsals of one of my bands on a boomy small studio room. I've lived exactly this problem you mentioned: the bass totally saturated, I had to cut almost all of it, and increase the treble, what made the bass excessively bright. I think my mistake was not had cut all the bass, and to had cut more than necessary the low mids. So I tried to compensate with high mids. It worked more or less. For a reharsal, ok. But for a recording, it would be a big failure. Next time I'm gonna follow your tips!
Mind blowing! Thank you, Marcelo. You are a legend.
Thankyou for this amazing lesson..I have no idea whats over on how to use bass amp.. I really learnt something here..thankyou very much..
This is the best explanation I've ever heard. Thank you!
nice advice! I´d add that it´s really important to take care of the high mids, they totally change the colour of your sound
Fantastic videos. Speaking with the confidence and articulation of a man that knows exactly what he's talking about.
Many thanks for this vidéo it ´s very helpfull .Could you make one about compression ?
I love this Marcelo I have been having issues with my bass amp and this helped a lot!
Nice one .....simple and straight forward. If the beginners could see this video and start from there we might just get to enjoy those bands starting out. Thanks for doing this.
Finally someone makes sense. Thanks for the update. I did what you suggested and it worked beautifully.
Great video. I have been setting the gain as instructed by a lot of people - master vol down, turn up the gain till the clip light shows then back it off slightly (that really may work well with passive basses but not mine). With those settings and very hot pickups the master vol stays at 1! I've always had to back the gain down and make adjustments. Turning the bass down etc also makes a lot of sense. I have a 2x15 cab and it is very easy to get the mud going. Thanks for the video - very good.
Finally. Very well explained, esp bass and mid use. Thank you! Under by cabs I used a Gramma Pad (a thick, insulating acoustical foam under a textile covered plywood top). I feel it improves a lot of things like 'bass suck' from having the cab on a hard floor like concrete or tile, and also to remove reverberation sometimes caused by a wood floor where the frequencies can move things around a bit (I also removed wheels from by lower cab). ...and yes, as Carlos Zanggrilli asked, "compression for live sound?" Rock on.
Very good vid. I have been playing a long time and I have seen the volume war problem. I am guilty of a little too much bass on the amp. Thx for this.
THE most useful video on this subject I’ve seen. Thanks 👍🏼
Great info, but to add for anyone else that was as stubborn as me when they first started playing, "listen to the sound guy at the club, and the audio engineer in the studio." They know the room/mix, and in most cases have quite a wealth of experience.
Oh man.. This video is so important ! Thank you for that !
THANK YOU- best video on setting bass amp tone I’ve found!
One question regarding setting the gain knob: I get how the gain affects a tube amp and getting overdrive distortion …. But what about solid state? How do you know where to set the gain if a solid state isn’t going to affect the sound like a tube amp? I’m especially confused how to set gain if there is no “clip” warning light, like on the fender rumble combo amps. Thanks!
I love the sound of a "Markus Miller" type sound / EQ... typically scooped, low mids and more highs and bass... my question for you is... does this make it harder for the bass to cut thru the mix? Is it muddy sounding in live venues?
From what I’ve been reading about this subject, scooped mids are almost always going to get you lost in the mix. Mids are essentially. It’s a good tone by yourself or solo.
Usually those top musicians play in bigger venues which means they got sound people to tweak their tone. They also have in ear monitors.
Great advice about working in a place with its own sound system. I play for fun, but often in play in a place with front of house sound. I like to leave the decisions to the sound engineer, so I usually just leave the tone knobs at 12:00, keep the volume just loud enough to hear myself, and have them use a line out of my amp. I know I can't hear what it sounds like out in the room, so I just don't worry about it, and hope for the best.
I use a TC electronics amp, smaller than what you're using in the video, but very similar. You talk about boosting the gain on a tube amp, but why then does a solid state amp like yours have that feature? And even more what does the "thrust" control really do?
A very useful video, thanks.
Great video and EQ tips I learned something here today.
Thank you
thanks for this vid. I've been playing many years and kinda knew I had to EQ the room but never trusted to cut the low end past 9 o'clock for fear of my sound being to thin. next boomy room I play I will try cutting to zero if needed. there is one thing you mention that i disagree with.the master volume does slightly affect tone. I don't know how many times I've set what i thought to be the perfect sound only to have to adjust it once I turned up to performance level. Its not a big difference but I normally have to warm the sound up a bit..
A well earned like for demonstrating how different rooms sound differently. Just think how presence of a crowd of people in an auditorium changes the sound of that room! As a lad I had inadequate bass amps while we practiced in a garage or basement and I was the guy always cranking the Low EQ and lowering the rest - awful! It would also be nice to point out the concept of bass traps and how placing the sound source (speaker) in a corner of a room or even near a wall (or floor) may cause the reflections to clash with the sound and create mud. Don't put baby in a corner ;) That's why you see studios placing those foam muffles (bass traps) along walls and in corners. Just having carpet and upholstered furniture in a room may help, as well as breaking up the regular geometric shape of a room (put a chair in the corner, etc.) - just a few thoughts.
Interesting and helpful video. One thing that I think might have been helpful when discussing the EQ section of the video is an explanation of the overtone series and how people actually hear pitches. (ie. why you think you can hear low notes on small cheap speakers). Even if you can't hear the root note, you may be able to hear the octave harmonic, or the perfect fifth harmonic above that, and all of the frequencies moving up from there.
It's obvious in practice when adjusting the treble control on your amp affects even your lowest notes, but, in combination with your explanation of wavelengths and room resonances, it explains why killing some of the "bass" section in favor of "low mid" merely "tightens up" your sound rather than making it so your lowest pitches are inaudible.
You explained this well sir!!!! Makes so much sense…
I learned so much thankyou for this useful info
Awesome info for someone that’s just learning how to set up their gear.
I wish I saw this 20 sum odd years ago. I always struggled with the eq settings on my bass amp. Now, I can get it to sound exactly the way I want it to be. Thanks.
Thank you for actually saying to cut the bass. Heard so many stuoid bass players who just dime the bass all the time and then are surprised no one can hear what they're playing
Hi, thanks for the video! What do you set up first..the amp EQ or the bass knobs? I have an active lakland 44-01 and I use to set up first the amp and then I move the bass knobs to final adjustments during the songs
Thank you! This was extremely helpful in improving my bass eq.
Thanks Marcelo - your explanation was anything but muddy. I have just that amp, so really good, clear, sensible advice.
Very informative. So how do we balance the bass and electric guitars?
Oh God bless you for this one
Excellent video !! The best that i've seen in a long time, thanks!
Thank you, you explained this situation very clearly wish I seen this year's ago when I was gigging.
Set and adjust your rig to the playing environment. Solid approach and great tips Marcelo! Thanks
Man, this has helped drastically. I have a adjustable high pass filter on my Mesa D-800+ and have always wondered why I'd want to cut low frequencies. This totaly makes sense now. I need to start toying around with this a little more when I'm having issues with not hearing my tone. Also I use a Tech 21 SH-1 pedal. When it comes to a pedal with a preamp on it and the one on my head, what is the generous consensus on which one to work with? I've been told by a few people to leave my amp flat and just EQ the pedal and leave it at that. Others have told me the opposite. I'm new to pedals and it's really confusing now that I have two different EQ's in my set up.
Wow, this was super helpful! Thanks. Great demo too with the bathroom and closet. I was actually having trouble getting a boomy sound with a new Fender Rumble 200 I bought. I moved it to a different part of the room and got a different sound. Never even thought about the room itself.
At last, sound EQ advice (no pun intended). Thank you Marcelo.
Very informative. Been playing in a punk band for many years where i just plug and play. Lol. Now i know what to do on my eq. Thank you very much.
Very very imformative and spot on...i love rhe way you present it.....it gives me more understanding about my frequencies....thank you so much Bass Wizard.
Thanks Marcelo, this video really helped me understand how a bass amp set up should be handled. I gotta tell you, i really like the way you explain things, it's clear, and easy to understand. You give a lot of details and i enjoy that. Keep it up !
Good info. Now I have something to think about next time I'm together with the band.Thank you✌️😊
Thanks for a great vid brother...really appreciate it.
This vid has changed my life! haha! Thank you
Thanks for this video ! very helpful ! I am not a bass player yet. This information helps me a lot !
You are the best Marcelo!!
this was very helpful. thank you very much.
Thanks Marcelo! Just the info I needed. I have the same TC amp too.
What is the best way to set gain on a non tube preamp? Excellent video!
This was sucha great vid, bro - just what I needed! 💙💙
Great video as usual. Thanks Marcelo.
I have the exact amp head, there fantastic, sounds great 👍
Marcelo you are 100% correct my friend, see i am very lucky that when we are playing in town (not on the road) and each room on broadway has a GK bass amp head and an alike a signal direct box ( DI ) Directly into front of the house and like yourself i have a 2 12ax7 tube preamps and to get that warm bass sound that i like and you may two got this advice from Victor Wooten and his brother Reggie start everything flat turn the master down to 0 and input the same 0 than, bring up the master and channel up together equally and i get the warm tube transient together and clean as a bell and my touring rig is using one head that is Biamped and i run my chorus on the A Side and the bottom end is dry so i do not get that crazy rumble from the drummers snare or floor tom or the guitars players low end.......tada !!! Great Demo Marcelo Ernie back at ya my friend !!!
great stuff Marcelo!
You seem to know your stuff. I just liked and subscribed. How about another video where you show the EQ settings and corresponding tone in different rooms: home, practice space, bar, outdoor, etc. Good video, thank you!
Yes! This would be great
Thanks for sharing 😊 this really helped me out big time; 🙏🏾 the app is amazing!!! 🤩
thanks Marc its about time someone explains like you did
Seriously a great video. Really really good.
Exactly what I need right now. Cheers and more power
Justin from the Philippines
8:35 Or the reverse. Sometimes the on stage bass amp is in opposite phase as the PA speakers. And people on some rows, can't hear the bass at all.
Great video. Should have more views
Wish I had seen this video 20 years ago.. all those hard walled echoey clubs where I could have dialled out some bass! Onwards and upwards!
Could you talk about adjusting the tweeter speaker.wat is the best position when playing slap bass?should the tweeter be up high?thanks bass wizard.
Great video! I’m sending this to everyone I play with. Thank you
As important are the speaker cabinets. Outdoors->open cabinets (the best I had for this was an old Crate 150 / GK head). They do sound harsher, but sealed cabinets just never did it for me in outdoors conditions. Sealed cabinets sound great n the studio or small venues.
good informative one. thumbs up!
Such good content! Thank you so much for this!
Great video Marcelo !! , very instructive , thanks
Love your videos man ❤️🤘
Thanks - simple common sense advise. Great stuff!
Thanks ! Simple and clear ! Efficient...
Correction... being a guitarist is what causes most guitarists to crank it up lol. Great video. Not something I've thought much on but I do adjust as needed. Makes perfect sense. Really dig your videos. Good info!
Thank you, man.. This helps a lot
Thank you Marcelo for clearly stating this stuff. Those frequencies from the lowest lows to about 800 Hz are always the biggest PITA when trying to get a balanced sound at sound check, especially indoor small clubs & venues (really 90% of where everybody plays). Using full bass cabs onstage is one of the biggest culprits of out of control volume. You really gotta aim it in your face to hear it loud enough so you don't screw up the FOH mix. Really, the EQ you want to set for is FOH itself! I use a wireless for my bass setup. If I use a stage monitor, like a full range wedge, I EQ to that first (minus some of the lowest range punch), then I go out front and EQ my channel in the mixer for the FOH - if it actually needs it! If the mixer's final output EQ has already been set for a flat room response, then I may not need to tweek anything yet. When the FOH is at normal volume, I then hear the the lowest frequencies onstage along with my monitor's mix automatically. Then during sound check, I play out front to hear everything in the FOH mix. It's THEN I tweek any frequencies on my FOH channel or suggest the engineer tweek mine or anyone else's for the actual sound the audience hears. If I use In-Ear monitors onstage, I will EQ my amp to the FOH only (assuming it's flat already), then go onstage and EQ my monitor output from the mixer in my ear buds. It's very important you have ear buds that have low freq drivers and can completely seal off outside noise. I have to have mine way in my ears.
Great Video! Thanks for the info!
Wow. So much information in here
Great video. How can you stop excess noise from amps? Such as buzzing etc. Thank you!
That could be a grounding issue with the electrical circuit. The wiring in some places is just completely messed up and will cause that issue. You can try a ground lift to see if that helps.
It could also be a cable, especially if you’re using a pedalboard, you’d have to check every cable one by one to make sure that isn’t where the problem is originating.
As a last resort, you can use a noise gate.
Marcelo Feldman - The Bass Wizard thank you so much for the in depth response. I’m mainly an upright classical bassist who is just now getting into the electric bass scene (getting bored of the repetitiveness that classical brings). I’ve found your videos to be truly helpful and I aspire to achieve a tone similar to yours.
Last question, if you don’t mind, are amps supposed to be completely quiet when it is on and you are not playing your bass? Or is normal to have some sound?
Super helpful, brother! Thank you!!!
Great video as always
Thank you bro, i was searching this video for a while