Tonestack - it is my experience (and subsequent theory) that perceptions of compression usually come from the envelope qualities of the note as relayed by the pickups rather than actual compression. If you think of the note as "attack-sustain-decay-release" like in MIDI parlance, then you're in territory that can be easy to hear with a trained ear, but extremely hard to measure. Things like changing magnets, pickup proximity, magnet placement, and form factor can play huge roles. Guitar strings don't vibrate in the same way for all 360 degrees, and the direction perpendicular to the fingerboard tends to have more "pop" and volume, not unlike a "rest stroke" on a classical guitar. This tends to give the impression of broad dynamics, for example. So, take a strat pickup with A5 rod magnets. The "flux" goes largely perpendicular, is relatively strong, and is fairly sensitive to changes in distance. At the neck pickup (where the string moves a lot) the volume can change an awful lot based on pick attack, and the sound is often very percussive. This is consistent with those ideas, so it seems to work intellectually, but I am not sure how one would go about testing it empirically. Envelope is very difficult to measure, and when playing technique comes in as an important variable, it all becomes nearly impossible.
My guess is that pretty much any amplifier would compress hard long before the pickup. Any time I've had way too much "input" to a pickup (using a source other than a guitar string - a small speaker or a tuning fork for example) all of the distortion I hear is typical amplifier distortion. I don't hear anything new from the pickups. Then again, I don't quite know what I'm listening for, either.
My guess is that pretty much any amplifier would compress hard long before the pickup. Any time I've had way too much "input" to a pickup (using a source other than a guitar string - a small speaker or a tuning fork for example) all of the distortion I hear is typical amplifier distortion. I don't hear anything new from the pickups. Then again, I don't quite know what I'm listening for, either.
Comment