This isn't as simple a question as you'd think. Back in the late 70s EVH got rid of his guitar tone controls which led to a more pure-tone signal from his pickup. Since I was starting to build electric guitars of my own not long after that I tried it and it seemed to help with certain pickups and bodies. Don't misunderstand, I know there are times when you'd want to roll off bass or treble to get a certain effect but something recently got me re-thinking the tone controls of an amp.
What is the purpose? To remove or dampen certain frequency ranges with a passive design, we know that. But why do that unless it's to make up for design flaws or inconsistencies of speakers and other parts? It seems to me the audio purists strive for the flattest EQ they can get in hopes of reproducing the truest sound replication so why don't we do that with our guitar amps? Every musician I know personally sets their tone controls to their liking and leaves them alone for the most part after that. I can't remember the last time I touched mine unless they get bumped.
I could probably answer my own question with the fact that each instrument has its own frequency response, some sound better than others off the rack and tone controls help us compensate for that. Also, even though I have always had outstanding hearing until recent years (the upper highs are slowly fading), I can still hear nuances that other people around me can't, but I'm not trained to understand why. Is this yet another case of overthinking or is there some merit to removing tone controls completely?
What is the purpose? To remove or dampen certain frequency ranges with a passive design, we know that. But why do that unless it's to make up for design flaws or inconsistencies of speakers and other parts? It seems to me the audio purists strive for the flattest EQ they can get in hopes of reproducing the truest sound replication so why don't we do that with our guitar amps? Every musician I know personally sets their tone controls to their liking and leaves them alone for the most part after that. I can't remember the last time I touched mine unless they get bumped.
I could probably answer my own question with the fact that each instrument has its own frequency response, some sound better than others off the rack and tone controls help us compensate for that. Also, even though I have always had outstanding hearing until recent years (the upper highs are slowly fading), I can still hear nuances that other people around me can't, but I'm not trained to understand why. Is this yet another case of overthinking or is there some merit to removing tone controls completely?
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