Yep. You reach a point in every room where the vocal mics will feedback at all frequencies. No EQ magic can fix that. You just have to turn down.
As a guitarist I understand the need for sonic interaction between amp, speakers, strings, tonewoods and how it affects our tone and sustain. We depend on this interaction when we play. That is one of the reasons Jimi stood right in front of his Marshall stack and why Carlos Santana walks the stage during sound check and tapes an X on all the sonic sweet spots for singing sustain. What many don't realize is that you can get great sonic interaction, tone and sustain without playing at 130db. A small 20watt Fender Deluxe Reverb cranked wide open very close to the guitarist sounds awesome while a 200w stack only set on "2" sounds weak and lame. Different tools for different purposes. Remember that many of the greatest guitar tones of all time have been recorded with small combo amps like the Supro and Fender Champ. 5 watts wide open just sounds great when you have Jimmy Page, Alan Holdsworth, or EVH on the axe.
The same is true for drums. Many great drum tracks were recorded with a controlled or muted kit so the player could wail away without the snare bleeding all over the rest of the drums.
Excess within control.
As a guitarist I understand the need for sonic interaction between amp, speakers, strings, tonewoods and how it affects our tone and sustain. We depend on this interaction when we play. That is one of the reasons Jimi stood right in front of his Marshall stack and why Carlos Santana walks the stage during sound check and tapes an X on all the sonic sweet spots for singing sustain. What many don't realize is that you can get great sonic interaction, tone and sustain without playing at 130db. A small 20watt Fender Deluxe Reverb cranked wide open very close to the guitarist sounds awesome while a 200w stack only set on "2" sounds weak and lame. Different tools for different purposes. Remember that many of the greatest guitar tones of all time have been recorded with small combo amps like the Supro and Fender Champ. 5 watts wide open just sounds great when you have Jimmy Page, Alan Holdsworth, or EVH on the axe.
The same is true for drums. Many great drum tracks were recorded with a controlled or muted kit so the player could wail away without the snare bleeding all over the rest of the drums.
Excess within control.
Cajundaddy









