Tell me what would happen if you ran a magnetic pickup into the input of a PA or recording console without using a direct box. That's going to put typically a 100 K or considerably less load on the guitar. "Weak and tinny" might be a appropriate response. If you do not interface a piezo...any piezo...into the proper buffer preamp stage, it will be weak and tinny. That's not the pickup; it's the impedance match that is bad. Piezos must be buffered to get out what they can deliver.
I've made piezos that I could see were tracking well down into subsonic ranges...using a fully DC coupled amplification with no capacitors in the signal path. You're not going to get that with magnetic pickups. Of course, below about 30 Hz is fairly unusable and just messes up power amps and loudspeakers, but it's nice to know you can get it if you need it.
Now for phase response...
Magnetic pickups divide the string by a ratio that is constantly changing as you play up and down the neck. You thus have nodes and antinodes swishing around with cancellations and reinforcements that have nothing much to do with what the string is actually doing. It's OK, we've gotten used to it; we even like it, but it's not an accurate representation of what the string is doing. Then there are group delay issues that I can hear but not adequately "scientifically" monitor...yet...but I know they are there.
A bridge saddle coupled piezo receives and transduces what the string is doing at the bridge quite accurately. In fact, it gets the same string signal that is then sent into the top of an acoustic instrument. And it gets that "information" before the rest of the guitar top and body gets it.
What magnetic pickups seem to do, and what acoustic instrument definitely do is to "time dis-align" stringed instrument string signals. That is not necessarily bad...this phase shifting adds interesting non-linearities. I just think we should understand that that is what's going on and then choose how to deal/work with it artistically.
I've made piezos that I could see were tracking well down into subsonic ranges...using a fully DC coupled amplification with no capacitors in the signal path. You're not going to get that with magnetic pickups. Of course, below about 30 Hz is fairly unusable and just messes up power amps and loudspeakers, but it's nice to know you can get it if you need it.
Now for phase response...
Magnetic pickups divide the string by a ratio that is constantly changing as you play up and down the neck. You thus have nodes and antinodes swishing around with cancellations and reinforcements that have nothing much to do with what the string is actually doing. It's OK, we've gotten used to it; we even like it, but it's not an accurate representation of what the string is doing. Then there are group delay issues that I can hear but not adequately "scientifically" monitor...yet...but I know they are there.
A bridge saddle coupled piezo receives and transduces what the string is doing at the bridge quite accurately. In fact, it gets the same string signal that is then sent into the top of an acoustic instrument. And it gets that "information" before the rest of the guitar top and body gets it.
What magnetic pickups seem to do, and what acoustic instrument definitely do is to "time dis-align" stringed instrument string signals. That is not necessarily bad...this phase shifting adds interesting non-linearities. I just think we should understand that that is what's going on and then choose how to deal/work with it artistically.
Comment