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		<title> Getting the most out of rehearsal time </title>
		<link> http://www.rehearsalbarn.com/uniquecmsid </link>
		<language>en-us</language>
		<copyright>
		Copyright 2007 Rehearsal Barn. All Rights Reserved. 
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    	<pubDate>05-09-2010</pubDate>
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			<title> How to get the most out of rehearsal time </title>
			<link> http://www.rehearsalbarn.com/pages/getting-the-most-out-of-rehearsal-time.htm </link>
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							<td align='justify'> <font face="Verdana" size="4">Getting the most out of your rehearsal time and effort:<br /><br />Show up on time.  Showing up is 80% of the gig.  On time arrival eliminates issues.<br /><br />Know the songs.  Learn songs at home.  Rehearsal is for maximizing everyone's performance and is NOT the time or place to be learning the songs.<br /><br />EQ for high volumes:  The human ear hears more high end rat-blatt and low end boom-rumble as volume increases.  The old classic andquot;smileandquot; EQ will not work at high volumes.  You have to use midrange, and back off on highs and lows to get a nice fat tone at performance volumes.<br /><br />A word on volume:  Fill the room, don't kill it:  it is possible to just plain over-power a room.andnbsp;andnbsp;  That's fine if you want to sound like a Saturn 5 lifting off; but too much if you want to sound like music.<br /><br />Most andquot;soundandquot; problems are EQ problems.  Start with all sliders flat, then SLOWLY alter the settings.  3 dB is a lot of difference.  Maxing out any slider on the EQ is adds up to 12 dB... which is too much.<br /><br />Today's andquot;modelingandquot; amps/processors and such produce processed sound.  The sound tends to lack dynamics and andquot;cutandquot;, so guitar players compensate by kranking it up.  Like it or not, guys, less is more when it comes to effects and cutting through the mix.   Excessive compression gives a very narrow window to cut through.  Fat sound, just loud enough, comes through better.  How do your favorite pros solo?  Big, fat and sweet would be my guess.<br /><br />The same applies to keyboards.<br /><br />Time based effects, like echo, phase, delay and so forth, that may sound great at low volumes produce sonic mud at higher volumes.andnbsp;andnbsp;andnbsp; This is because multiple images of the sound are bouncing around (along with all their harmonics and dynamics).andnbsp; More volume just adds more mud.andnbsp; Turn the effect mix down at higher volumes for improved clarity.andnbsp;andnbsp; Get loud and hear yourself too, imagine that.<br /><br />EMG guys... do put in new 9 volt batteries when the pups sound ratty.<br /><br />Guitar guys.. try your guitar volume dials at about 6.5 - 8.  There is a narrow sweet spot in there somewhere that gives you the power and harmonics you crave, but not the high end racket you don't.andnbsp; Twiddle your tone knobs for fine tuning the sweet spot.<br /><br />On the PA, if you are getting a low end feedback.  Try backing off on the bass EQ.<br /><br />Keep all mics pointed AWAY from any PA speaker or monitor.  If the mic and speaker get talking to each other directly, the result is a feedback loop.<br /><br />Use a bass amp for bass.  Guitar speakers don't have the travel or the thump for the job so they sound crappy, and it beats on them.<br /><br />Don't mic drums in a small room.  It does not help, and the singer will have a harder time hearing himself.<br /><br />If the drummer can't hear his own set, the band is playing too loud.<br /></font> </td>
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